The Scotsman

SNP hopes of majority fade as Greens support grows

●Disappoint­ment for Salmond and Sarwar in latest pre-election polling

- By CONOR MATCHETT

SNP hopes of a majority at the Holyrood elections in May continue to fade as another poll shows the party is set to narrowly miss out on returning more than 65 MSPS.

The latest findings from Savanta Comres for The Scotsman suggest the SNP will miss out on a majority by two seats and be reliant on the Scottish Greens to pass major legislatio­n and the budget.

They are also the lowest figures seen for the SNP during this series of polling since December.

The figures are remarkable for a party which has governed for 14 years but will be a disappoint­ment to those within the SNP hoping for a clear majority in Holyrood post May 6.

The survey interviewe­d 1,001 Scottish adults aged 16 or over between April 16 and 20.

Scots remain broadly split on independen­ce, however support for No has grown since the last poll in this series at the start of April.

Support for the Union is now on 48 per cent with those stating they would vote Yes now sitting at 45 per cent with a further 8 per cent stating they did not know.

With don’t knows excluded, support for No sits at 52 per cent and Yes

at 48 per cent. Figures from the poll put SNP support in the constituen­cy vote at the same level as their final result in 2016 with 46 per cent of the vote.

Alongside their regional list vote of 38 per cent, which is three percentage points lower than the result five years ago for Nicola Sturgeon’s party, the SNP would return a total of 63 MSPS.

The Scottish Conservati­ves have one of their strongest showings in recent polls with 25 per cent of the constituen­cy vote and 23 per cent of the regional list.

Such a result would see Douglas Ross’ party return a total of 32 MSPS in May, one higher than their surprise result in 2016 and enough to keep them as the main opposition to the SNP.

Positive approval ratings for Anas Sarwar is yet to translate into votes for Scottish Labour, however, with support for the party remaining at 20 per cent on the constituen­cy, in line with previous polls.

However, more worrying for the former dominant force in Scottish politics is their failure to gain ground on the regional list with just 17 per cent of the vote.

If the result on May 6 was the same, Mr Sarwar would see his cohort of MSPS reduced by three to just 17 MSPS.

This could be down to prounion voters switching their allegiance to the Conservati­ves.

The poll show one in six (18 per cent) of Labour voters saying they trust Mr Ross’ party the most on the union compared to just four per cent of Conservati­ve voters who would say the same about Labour.

Mr Sarwar is however the most popular opposition leader with a net favourabil­ity rating of +6, with Ms Sturgeon well ahead on +15 net favourabil­ity and Mr Ross on -13 net favourabil­ity.

The Scottish Greens also have one of their lowest results in this series of polls and sit at just 7 per cent, down two points from a poll earlier in April and down four percentage points from their high in December.

Patrick Harvie and Lorna Slater’s party would still, however, return a record number of eight MSPS with that result.

Such a result would also see Holyrood return another proindepen­dence majority, albeit one almost identical to the one the Scottish Parliament saw between 2016 and 2021.

The Scottish Liberal Democrats’ voting share is also steady with 6 per cent in constituen­cies and 5 per cent on the regional list.

This would see Willie Rennie’s party return five MSPS, the same number as in 2016.

Support for Alex Salmond’s new venture, the Alba Party, is at its lowest since it was establishe­d with just 1 per cent of voters stating they are planning to vote for the pro-independen­ce party.

Such a result would see the former first minister miss out on a return to Holyrood and would destroy any hopes of a pro-independen­ce “supermajor­ity” without a single Alba party MSP being elected.

Mr Salmond’s party is receiving a similar level of support to the Abolish the Scottish Parliament party, George Galloway’s All for Unity party, the Scottish Libertaria­ns and UKIP.

This poll also saw a higher number of people stating they would vote for other parties on the regional list with the figure sitting at 7 per cent.

This is most likely due to an increased number of “list only” parties standing at this year’s election.

Chris Hopkins, associate director at Savanta Comres, said an “sizable shift” of regional list voters could still yet provide a route to a majority for the SNP.

He said: “These latest figures show the SNP potentiall­y missing out on a majority, but there are still plenty of routes for them to get one.

"While ‘both votes SNP’ has never made the most of the SNP’S dominance, increasing their vote on the List could top up the seats they need, but they’d require a sizable shift in their favour from these latest figures.

"Instead, squeezing the soft Labour constituen­cy vote in seats in South Scotland, for example, could help them overtake the Conservati­ves and give the SNP the majority they crave.

"That could be easier said than done, though; with the Conservati­ves up in this poll, and a healthy proportion of Labour voters more likely to trust the Conservati­ves than their own party to protect the union, the Conservati­ves will also be trying to squeeze Labour in an attempt to hold off an SNP challenge.”

A poll by Ipsos MORI earlier this month put the SNP on course to win a majority.

The Scottish Political Monitor, run in partnershi­p with STV News, found that 53 per cent of Scots planned to vote for Nicola Sturgeon’s party on the constituen­cy ballot – one point higher than polling from mid-february.

The survey, conducted between March 29 and April 4, also showed the Scottish Conservati­ves in a distant second place in the constituen­cy race – down three points to 20 per cent – while Scottish Labour gained three points, sitting on 18 per cent.

The Scottish Liberal Democrats trailed on 6 per cent and the Scottish Greens on 2 per cent. Just 1 per cent of voters saidtheywe­replanning­toback “Other” parties or candidates.

 ?? Picture: Andrew Milligan/pa Wire ?? 3 Alba Party leader Alex Salmond at the party manifesto launch at the Falkirk Wheel in Falkirk
Picture: Andrew Milligan/pa Wire 3 Alba Party leader Alex Salmond at the party manifesto launch at the Falkirk Wheel in Falkirk
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