The Herald on Sunday

New poll: SNP and Greens could lose pro-indy majority

Just a small swing from the party towards Labour could result in significan­t further erosion

- By Paul Hutcheon

THE pro- independen­ce majority at Holyrood could be lost at the next Scottish election, according to a poll.

The SNP remains the most popular party in Scotland, but a Survation poll for the Daily Record found an 8.5 per cent drop in the party’s constituen­cy vote and a 9.7 per cent decline in the regional vote ahead of the 2021 Scottish election.

The SNP won 63 seats in 2016, two short of an overall majority, while the independen­ce- supporting Scottish Greens won six seats. A seat projection from the latest poll put the SNP down 11 seats to 52, the Conservati­ves down two on 29, Labour up five seats to 29, the LibDems up five to 10, and the Scottish Greens up to nine representa­tives.

Such an outcome would mean even with the support of the Greens, the SNP could not rely on a pro-independen­ce majority. The poll of 1,000 people also looked at Westminste­r and found the SNP vote remains at 36 per cent support, compared with Tories on 27 per cent and Labour on 26 per cent.

Election expert John Curtice told the Record: “Today’s poll underlines the potential fragility of the SNP’s position. Just a small swing f rom the party towards Labour could result in significan­t further erosion of their representa­tion at Westminste­r. Anything other than the smallest drop in the party’s support at Holyrood could easily mean that there would not be a pro-independen­ce majority in Edinburgh.”

An SNP spokesman said: “The SNP, with our record of building a better Scotland and a message of hope for the future, holds a commanding 12-point lead over the nearest opposition.

“Meanwhile, Labour can’t even outpoll a Tory party in complete meltdown – showing that only the SNP can stand up against the Tories.”

The survey also found that support for Scottish independen­ce remains at 45 per cent, while those in favour of remaining in the EU has increased by three per cent to 66 per cent since the referendum in 2016.

Labour MSP Neil Findlay said: “On schools and hospitals, the SNP are failing on the basics.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom