The Scotsman

Sturgeon says Indyref2 could come during recovery phase

- By KATRINE BUSSEY

Nicola Sturgeon has come under fire after she conceded a second Scottish independen­ce vote could be held while the country is still trying to recover from the coronaviru­s pandemic. First Minister and SNP leader ruled out having a fresh ballot on the issue during the “acute phase of the pandemic”.

But having said already she would like to see a referendum take place in the first half of the next Holyrood term, Ms Sturgeon said that could happen “when we are clearly in the recovery phase”.

Her comments attracted criticism from the leaders of the pro-uk parties, with Scottish Conservati­ve leader Douglas Ross saying: “This is the clearest sign yet that the SNP will put another referendum before Scotland’s recovery.”

He said: “Nicola Sturgeon talks of Alex Salmond being a betting man but she’s willing to gamble Scotland’s recovery on a reckless plan to break up the country. The SNP’S obsession with independen­ce is clouding her judgment.

“The last thing Scotland needs is more uncertaint­y and a new constituti­onal crisis on top of the health and economic crisis we’re facing.

“The Covid crisis will not end the day lockdown ends or when we finally defeat the virus.”

Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar argued that “holding a referendum during the recovery would be irresponsi­ble”.

He stated: “Alongside the tragic death toll, we have taken an economic hit harder and deeper than the banking crisis.”

And he claimed that the SNP leader “has a blind spot when it comes to the constituti­on”.

Meanwhile Scottish Liberal Democrat campaign chairman Alistair Carmichael said that the SNP leader had “once again made it very clear that her only priority this election is another independen­ce referendum”.

He added: “This is not what Scotland needs. Scotland

needs a needle-sharp focus on green and secure jobs, a plan to help education bounce back and supporting the NHS and mental health.”

Ms Sturgeon, speaking on BBC Radio Scotland’s Good Morning Scotland programme, insisted that her “first priority” if she is re-elected first minister after May’s Holyrood election would be to “continue to lead the country through the Covid crisis”.

However she stated: “When we come out of that crisis yes I do think the country should have a choice of independth­e

ence, so that decisions about our future lie here, not in the hands of Westminste­r government­s led by politician­s like Boris Johnson.”

Asked when a second independen­ce referendum could be held, she said: “We have to come out of this crisis. I can’t, no more than anybody else across the globe can right now, give you a fixed date for when Covid will be over.

“Getting us though Covid has to be my priority.

“If we are out of the Covid crisis I would want to see an independen­ce referendum be in

the first half of this Parliament, because as we recover from Covid it’s really important we have the powers and the decision making here in Scotland to ensure we have the kind of recovery a majority want.

“That will be when we are not in the acute phase of the pandemic, when people like me are not having to stand up every day and report deaths and hospitalis­ations, when we are clearly in the recovery phase.”

Ms Sturgeon insisted yesterday that she wants to win a “simple majority” for the SNP in May’s Holyrood election –

rather than the “super-majority” for independen­ce her predecesso­r Alex Salmond is bidding for.

The SNP leader and First Minister described her predecesso­r as a “gambler”, saying Mr Salmond was “seeking to ask people to gamble on the outcome of this election”.

Ms Sturgeon stressed the former first minister was trying to “game the system” with the launch of his Alba Party.

She said: “I am concentrat­ing on winning hopefully a simple majority for the SNP.

“If you want an SNP government,

if you want to have me re-elected as First Minister, if you want both those things voting SNP is the only way to bring it about.”

Hitting out at her former friend and mentor, she said: “When Alex Salmond was leader of the SNP he didn’t say what he is saying now.

“What he said then, and he was right then, is the only way to get the government that you want is to vote for the party that will be that government.”

 ??  ?? 0 ‘Blindspot’ – Anas Sarwar
0 ‘Blindspot’ – Anas Sarwar
 ??  ?? 0 The SNP’S prescripti­on for government - Nicola Sturgeon was on a campaign visit to a Burnside chemist in Rutherglen
0 The SNP’S prescripti­on for government - Nicola Sturgeon was on a campaign visit to a Burnside chemist in Rutherglen

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