The Scotsman

Gove’s ‘Trumpian’ rejection of independen­ce ‘will boost support’

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

M i c h a e l G o v e ’s “Tr u m p i - an” rejection of rising support for Scottish independen­ce will only boost the cause, according to the SNP.

The Cabinet Office minis - ter was peppered with questions from SNP MPS asking him about why opinion polls suggest Scots favour separation ahead of remaining in the union.

R e s p o n d i n g t o S N P C a b i - n e t O f f i c e s p o ke s ma n Pe t e Wi s h a r t ' s q u e s t i o n s a b o u t why independen­ce is the "settled will" of the Scottish people, Mr Gove replied: "Sadly I fear his reliance on opinion polls is no substitute for his aversion to hard arguments. Why won't he engage with the facts?"

Mr Gove highlighte­d Westmi n s t e r ' s s u p p o r t f o r N H S funding in S cotland and the UK Government-led Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme, with Mr Wishart countering: "Let me tr y to give him a few reasons and see if he agrees with any of these - the disastrous Brexit Scotland didn't vote for, the attacks on our democracy, the underminin­g of our parliament, the Prime Minister, him?

"Maybe they're some sort of reasons as to why we're now in the lead. But the main one, and see if he agrees with this, is the way he arrogantly Trumpian says no to a majority in a democracy."

Mr Wishart asked if saying no to independen­ce would drive support for the issue down or up, with Mr Gove noting the Scottish Parliament elections take place next year and he argued voters will ask questions about the "decline in educationa­l achievemen­t" in the country's schools under the SNP.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom