The Scotsman

Independen­ce, not education is

● Polls reveal only one in 20 voters think First Minister has schools and the NHS at the forefront of her agenda

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS

Nicola Sturgeon has failed to convince voters that education and public services are her “defining mission” in government, with most believing her priority is securing independen­ce.

New figures suggest only one in 20 voters think the First Minister has the NHS and schools at the forefront of her mind, highlighti­ng the SNP’S struggle to deliver a general election message beyond its core supporters.

Voters go to the polls on Thursday, with the Nationalis­ts expected to lose seats to the Conservati­ves and other unionist parties also hopeful of making gains.

Ms Sturgeon said education would be her “defining mission” when she formed a minority government after winning the 2016 Scottish election.

But polling commission­ed by the Scottish Labour Party suggests most voters think the SNP’S real priority is independen­ce.

Last night Scottish Labour’s party election broadcast accused the nationalis­ts of sounding like a “broken record” with their demands for a second independen­ce referendum.

A Yougov poll commission­ed by Labour found 62 per cent of Scots believe Ms Sturgeon’s “defining mission” was achieving Scottish independen­ce, compared to just 6 per cent who said “helping the NHS”, 5 per cent who chose “bringing more jobs to Scotland”, 4 per cent who said “protecting local government services”, and 3 per cent who thought it was “improving Scotland’s schools”.

People who voted Yes in the 2014 independen­ce referendum were more likely to believe the Scottish Government was prioritisi­ng public services, with 53 per cent saying independen­ce was Ms Sturgeon’s defining mission compared to 73 per cent of No voters.

A majority of supporters of all parties think independen­ce is the First Minister’s priority, running from 55 per cent for those who voted SNP in 2015, to 85 per cent for Lib Dem supporters.

Yougov questioned 1,105 adults in Scotland online between Tuesday and Friday last week.

Scottish Labour’s general election campaign manager, James Kelly MSP, claimed the “tide has turned” against Ms Sturgeon.

“This poll clearly shows that her popularity is in freefall because voters want her to get on with the day job,” he said.

“Quite simply they do not believe Ms Sturgeon when she claims her ‘defining mission’ is education, and they know that all she cares about is a divisive second independen­ce referendum. The result of her obsession with independen­ce is 4,000 fewer teachers under the SNP, more than 90,000 patients waiting longer than four hours at A&E last year, and local services like care for the elderly and schools facing nearly £170m of cuts this year alone.”

An SNP spokespers­on said: “Labour’s defining mission appears to be to continue their decline into irrelevanc­e by copying anything the Tories say or do.

“Only the SNP can beat the Tories in Scotland – and voting Labour just risks letting Tory MPS in the back door. Now more than ever, it is vital to have strong SNP voices standing up for Scotland at Westminste­r.”

Opposition parties pointed to Ms Sturgeon’s demands for a second independen­ce referendum after the approval ratings for party leaders revealed a big fall in the First Minister’s popularity.

Last week’s Ipsos/mori survey saw net satisfacti­on with how Ms Sturgeon is doing her job dip into negative territory for the first time, with 50 per cent of respondent­s saying they were dissatisfi­ed compared to 46 per cent who were satisfied.

Her net score has fallen by 18 points since September, the last time the question was asked. The latest survey made Ms Sturgeon the least popular Scottish leader, with Labour’s Kezia Dugdale seeing an improvemen­t of 8 points to -2 in the past eight months.

Last week Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie claimed voters were “spitting mad” over the insistence that the Scottish Government be allowed to hold a new independen­ce referendum, while Ms Dugdale claimed Ms Sturgeon had squandered her status as “mother of the nation”.

The SNP leader denied her popularity was on the slide in an appearance on Women’s Hour on BBC Radio 4. She insisted her approval ratings “compare pretty favourably” to those of other UK political leaders and said the SNP was on course to win the election

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