Daily Mail

Sturgeon: I don’t like my party’s name

- By Michael Blackley

NICOLA Sturgeon admitted yesterday that she dislikes the name of her party because she is uncomforta­ble at being branded a ‘nationalis­t’.

Despite her lifelong mission for Scottish independen­ce, the country’s First Minister said she was unhappy at being linked to other nationalis­t movements.

If she could return to before the Scottish National Party was formed, she would remove the ‘negative’ word from its name, she added.

In a wide-ranging discussion with the Turkish author Elif Shafak at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Book Festival, the party leader also claimed that ‘being surrounded by middle-aged men’ in her earlier days in politics affected the way she dressed and behaved.

She said the dominance of men had made her more aggressive and adversaria­l, traits which she believed were responsibl­e for her reputation as a ‘nippy sweetie’.

Miss Shafak had told the audience the word nationalis­m has ‘ a very negative meaning’ because she has seen ‘how ugly it can get’.

Responding, Miss Sturgeon said: ‘The word is difficult. If I could turn the clock back – what, 90 years – to the establishm­ent of my party and choose its name all over again, I wouldn’t choose the name it has got just now.

‘People say why don’t you change its name now? Well, that would be far too complicate­d. Because what those of us who do support Scottish independen­ce are all about could not be further removed from some of what you would recognise as nationalis­m in other parts of the world.’

She claimed that the pro-independen­ce movement in Scotland has ‘a civic, open, inclusive view of the world that is so far removed from what you would rightly fear’.

She added: ‘One of the great motivators for those of us who support Scottish independen­ce is wanting to have a bigger voice in the world – it’s about being outward looking and internatio­nalist, not inward looking and insular. So the word is hugely problemati­c sometimes.’

A Scottish Conservati­ve spokesman said: ‘The SNP’s problem with nationalis­m isn’t the name, it’s the whole attitude of the party. Coming up with a more cuddly name wouldn’t change a jot.

‘At heart, it would still be a movement seeking to break up Britain at all costs, and Nicola Sturgeon knows it.’

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