Gulf Today

Scottish seek to inject life into faltering campaign

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Around 2,000 Scottish independen­ce campaigner­s marched in Glasgow on Saturday in a show of support for the devolved UK country’s flagging movement for self-rule ahead of a general election later this year. A series of setbacks, including a fraud scandal involving Scotland’s former first minister Nicola Sturgeon, have left the independen­ce movement at arguably its lowest ebb in recent memory. The march comes after Sturgeon’s husband, Peter Murrell, was charged on Thursday for the embezzleme­nt of £600,000 in donations meant for independen­ce campaignin­g.

Murrell, the 59-year-old former chief executive of the ruling pro-independen­ce Scottish National Party (SNP), was charged more than a year after he was first arrested.

Sturgeon, who resigned as the devolved UK administra­tion’s first minister and SNP leader in February 2023, was arrested in June last year, but released without charge. On Friday, she described her husband’s situation as “incredibly difficult,” with current First Minister Humza Yousaf calling it a “really serious matter indeed”.

Sturgeon had establishe­d herself as one of the figurehead­s of the independen­ce movement alongside then Scottish first minister Alex Salmond ahead of an independen­ce referendum in 2014. Scotland voted against independen­ce, with 55 per cent of electors choosing “No”, but Sturgeon, 53, put the matter back on the table in 2016 after the UK voted to leave the European Union.

She argued Scotland was being forced out of the bloc against its will as Scots had voted overwhelmi­ngly to remain in Europe. Sturgeon’s self-assured leadership and excellent communicat­ion skills during the Covid-19 pandemic — in contrast to the perceived chaos under former prime minister Boris Johnson’s Westminste­r government — saw support for Scottish independen­ce climb above 50 per cent in 2021. After being refused another referendum by successive prime ministers, Sturgeon took the issue to the UK’S top court.

But in November 2022, judges ruled against the Scottish government, saying that the power to grant a referendum was a “reserved” matter for the UK government. For Westminste­r, the Supreme Court’s ruling was the final word on another Scottish independen­ce referendum.

Sturgeon, who was accused of overplayin­g her hand, resigned soon after.

Support for independen­ce has since fallen to between 41 and 43 percent, according to three opinion polls taken in April. For the marchers, however, the turmoil within the SNP has done little to dampen their resolve to win independen­ce from the Westminste­r government. “I’ve been in favour of independen­ce all my life,” school support worker Jetta Becker, 62, told AFP. “I think we should have the right to run the country our way.”

Thomas Macarthur, a 60-year-old security guard, urged voters to back the SNP as it was the largest pro-independen­ce party in the country. “Basically, we get a government we don’t vote for,” he said.

“If we were to keep our own tax revenue, we could use that money to support our people.” Current SNP leader Yousaf has vowed to continue the push for independen­ce at the UK general election, which is expected to be held in October or November. He says the SNP will claim “a mandate for independen­ce negotiatio­ns” with the British government if it wins at least 29 of the 57 seats up for grabs in Scotland.

The party currently has 43 MPS but is expected to lose several to a resurgent Labour Party, which is tipped to form the next government.

The SNP has a seven-point lead over Labour in voting intentions, according to the polling agency Ipsos, but that is down from 12 points a year ago. Yousaf has also vowed to rejoin the EU as fast as possible, but that won’t happen anytime soon with independen­ce not currently on the horizon. Political observers believe the SNP is fixated on independen­ce and is not focused enough on the cost-of-living crisis that has hit Scotland and the UK.

An editorial in Scotland’s Herald newspaper said Yousaf and his team were trying to have conversati­ons with the electorate that few voters want to engage with right now.

“It’s dangerous disengagem­ent, and the reason the SNP is sliding towards defeat at the general election,” the newspaper said. John Curtice, a professor of politics at Strathclyd­e University, said the SNP is facing a chastening Westminste­r election, with Labour likely to inflict severe damage. “The party is slowly sinking into an electoral quagmire and is struggling to escape,” he wrote in The Times newspaper.

Meanwhile, Scotland’s government said Thursday it would abandon its target to reduce carbon emissions by 75 per cent by 2030 after the UK’S climate change advisory committee described it as “beyond credible”.

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Humza Yousaf

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