The Scotsman

Westminste­r is ‘scared’ of indyref says SNP depute

- By ALEXANDER BROWN

The UK Government is “scared” of allowing a referendum on Scottish independen­ce because it knows it will lose, the depute leader of the SNP has claimed.

Keith Brown made the claim after the Supreme Court ruled the Scottish Parliament could not legislate for another independen­ce vote without express consent from Westminste­r. Nicola Sturgeon has reiterated her plans to treat the next general election as a “de facto” referendum.

Mr Brown said the UK government feared it could lose Scotland if it accedes to the demands of the independen­ce movement.

He said: “I think they know they’re going to lose this, that’s why they are doing everything they can to twist democracy, to refuse the opportunit­y for the people of Scotland, because they know they’re going to lose.”

Mr Brown pointed to a

snap poll by Find Out Now for Channel 4 of 1,006 Scots, which suggested 51 per cent would vote for the SNP if they knew their vote would be used to negotiate independen­ce.

He added: “(The UK Government are) scared, that’s the point.”

Mr Brown also sought to damp down talk of dissolving Holyrood and using the subsequent election as a de facto referendum. To force a Holyrood election, two-thirds of MSPS would have to vote in favour or the post of First Minister would have to be vacant for 28 days.

Mr Brown said: “We do want to have a referendum next year, and we could do that still if the UK Government just agreed to the proper route they’ve agreed in the past. That’s the reasonable way to do it, that’s the democratic way to do it.”

Ms Sturgeon has previously said she is willing to speak to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak about the possibilit­y of a Section 30 order which would grant Holyrood the necessary powers to stage a vote.

The scottish government has said it accepts the outcome of the Supreme Court case, but stressed “Scottish ministers remain ready to engage with the U kg over nm en tat any point on delivering that referendum.”

Speaking immediatel­y after the verdict, a spokesman added: “The Scottish Government will continue to set out, through the Building a New Scotland prospectus series, what could be done with the full powers of independen­ce, reflecting clear Programme for Government commitment­s.”

The depute leader’s comments come after he said the Yes movement would hit “new heights” following the Supreme Court decision, which he claimed “shattered forever the notion of the UK as a voluntary union of nations”.

Responding to his claims, Scotland in Union dismissed the idea of a “so-called ‘de facto referendum’.

She said: “Keith Brown doesn’t get to decide the issues on which people vote for in a General Election.

“Rather than trying to dictate the terms of a democratic election, the SNP and the Greens should focus on what really matters – the cost-of-living crisis, the emergency in our NHS, and the climate disaster.”

It came as new figures showed more than £1.5 million of public money will be spent annually on civil servants who have been tasked to work on the independen­ce campaign.

Data obtained by the Scottish Conservati­ves using freedom of informatio­n legislatio­n shows there are 25 officials working on the prospectus.

Using the maximum annual salary of civil servants in each of the pay bands, the Tories calculated the Scottish Government will spend a total of £1,532,664 on staff working on the independen­ce prospectus.

One official, a senior civil servant, is in the highest pay band where the maximum salary is £83,233, the figures show.

Scottish Conservati­ve constituti­on spokesman Donald Cameron condemned the government for using taxpayers’ money on its “pet project”.

 ?? ?? ↑ Keith Brown said the UK Government was scared of a second vote
↑ Keith Brown said the UK Government was scared of a second vote

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom