Sturgeon: Tories want to ‘take over country’
TORY “hard-liners” want to “take over the country” by winning more power in the general election, according to the First Minister.
Nicola Sturgeon will tell trade union members that the Conservative Party’s vision for the country “should be ringing alarm bells” across Scotland, casting the June ballot as a two-party battle north of the border.
Ms Sturgeon is due to address the Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC) in Aviemore today.
The speech comes less than a week on from the announcement that an election will be held on June 8.
“We are at the start of an election campaign where competing visions will be put before the people and one of those visions, the Tory vision, should be ringing alarm bells loud and clear across Scotland,” Ms Sturgeon is expected to say.
“The hard-liners have taken over the Tory Party.
“And now the Tory hard-liners want to take over the country.
“Scotland knows there has always been a cost to voting Conservative, but the price of voting Tory at this election has never been higher.
“Our relationship with the European Union is of central importance to the kind of country we will be but the hard-line Tory plans for post-Brexit Britain are about far more than EU relations.”
The SNP leader is seeking to hold on to 56 Westminster seats it won in 2015 while targeting the remaining three occupied by the Tories, Labour and the Lib Dems.
She is looking for another vote in the wake of Brexit after the majority of Scots voted to stay in the EU, contrary to the eventual referendum outcome.
The Scottish Conservatives are focussing their campaign on op- posing another independence referendum, announced by Ms Sturgeon earlier this year.
Murdo Fraser, Tory finance spokesman, said: “This biggest threat to prosperity in Scotland is not from a Conservative government, but from Nicola Sturgeon’s obsession with cutting us off from our biggest market, the rest of the UK.
“Just yesterday, we heard from the respected Fraser of Allander Institute that more than 500,000 jobs depend on barrier-free trade with other parts of Britain.
“An independent Scotland would also face a gaping deficit that would have to be addressed through a combination of higher taxes, spending cuts and increased borrowing.
“The choice at this election is very clear, and it is only the Scottish Conservatives that can be trusted to preserve the Union.”
Scottish Labour’s James Kelly said: “Nicola Sturgeon is attempting to pull the wool over voters’ eyes. Her only priority on June 8 is finding an excuse for another divisive referendum.”