The Scotsman

SNP and Labour level in general election voting

- Paul Wilson

The SNP and Labour are neck-and-neck in popularity ahead of the next general election, a new poll has suggested.

Redfield and Wilton spoke to 1,000 Scots over the age of 16 on March 10 and 11, putting the two parties on 34 per cent with voters.

The SNP increased by one point from the previous poll last month, while Labour remained on the same level.

The Tories dropped two points to 16 per cent, while Reform UK remained on 4 per cent, the Scottish Greens increased by two points to 14 per cent and the Alba Party stayed on 1 per cent.

The gap between the SNP and Labour in Holyrood voting intention also expanded in the poll, with Humza Yousaf’s party remaining on 35 per cent in the constituen­cy vote, while the Anas Sarwar-led group dropped two points to 31 per cent.

Labour remained ahead in the regional vote, staying on 29 per cent, while the SNP gained one point, finishing on 28 per cent.

The First Minister’s approval rating also increased by one point, but remained a net negative at -16 per cent, while 43 per cent of respondent­s said the Scottish Government was incompeten­t, compared to 28 per cent who believed it was competent. The pollster also assessed how political leaders compared to each other in the eyes of voters.

Asked who would be the best prime minister, 24 per cent of respondent­s said Rishi Sunak – down two points – while Sir Keir Starmer saw his rating drop three points to 44 per cent with 32 per cent saying they did not know.

In a similar question about the position of Scottish First Minister, Anas Sarwar – who dropped one point to 32 per cent – crept ahead of Mr Yousaf, who lost two points, with 31 per cent saying he would be the best choice.

But 37 per cent of respondent­s said they did not know.

Meanwhile, 36 per cent said they would support Humza Yousaf over Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross – a drop of 3 per cent – while the Moray MP’S rating increased by two points to 30 per cent preferring him to lead Scotland.

On the question of independen­ce, support remained stagnant, with 48 per cent of decided voters favouring separation and 52 per cent saying they would vote against.

Scottish Labour deputy leader Jackie Baillie said the poll showed “Scots want change and that they are turning to Scottish Labour to deliver it”.

SNP MP Tommy Sheppard said: “With the Tories and Keir Starmer’s Labour Party hell bent on abandoning Scotland’s interests, it has never been clearer that only SNP MPS will make Scotland’s voice heard at Westminste­r.”

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