The Scotsman

Salmond says the SNP hinder the cause of independen­ce

- Katrine Bussey

SNP’S “incompeten­ce” in government has “hindered” the cause of Scottish independen­ce, former party leader and ex- Scottish first minister Alex Salmond has claimed.

Mr Salmond also said there is no way “immediatel­y” for another independen­ce referendum to be held, as he criticised his successor, Nicola Sturgeon, for her “ill-fated, kamikaze” Supreme Court case on the issue.

During Ms Sturgeon’s time as first minister, the Scottish Government went to the Supreme Court to see if it could hold another ballot on the future of the union without Westminste­r’s consent.

In November 2022 judges there unanimousl­y ruled that the Scottish Parliament “does not have the power to legislate for a referendum on Scottish independen­ce”.

Mr Salmond said that Ms Sturgeon’s “ill-starred, illfated, kamikaze venture to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom” had been “just ludicrous from start to finish”. Asked if he saw a way a second vote on independen­ce could be held, he said: “No, not immediatel­y.”

He said the Scottish Government’s performanc­e in recent years had “hindered independen­ce”.

Asked if devolution had helped or hindered the cause he has championed throughout his political career, Mr Salmond said: “It helped independen­ce when the SNP were a competent government. “Obviously it has hindered independen­ce when the SNP became an incompeten­t government in more recent years.” He left the SNP and in the run up to the 2021 Holyrood elections launched the rival proindepen­dence Alba Party.

He said there were a “litany of demonstrat­ions of incompeten­ce” by his successors in government, citing delays to the constructi­on of two new ferries to service lifeline routes to the islands of Scotland’s west coast as one example.

He said his former party had been “diverted into the highways and byways of identity politics” instead of “worrying about health, eduthe cation, housing, transport, finishing the A9 and so on”.

The 2014 vote on independen­ce took place after the SNP, under Mr Salmond’s leadership, won an unpreceden­ted majority in the 2011 Holyrood elections. The victory led to then UK prime minister David Cameron conceding a referendum could be held, with Mr Salmond saying that during the election campaign he had thought his party was “getting close” to winning an overall majority.

He recalled touring Scotland in the final days of the campaign, saying there were “lots of activists, lots of waves”.

Mr Salmond said: “I thought at that point, if this lasted another week we could have an overall majority. I didn’t realise we were at that level. But I knew we were getting close to it.”

Mr Salmond attributed part of the success of that election to the SNP’S second-vote strategy, in which the party told Scots their second vote, on the regional ballot, should go to them to elect him as first minister.

Mr Salmond said: “Some campaigns everything goes wrong, it’s happened to the SNP in the past, but that was a campaign where everything went right.”

 ?? ?? Alba party leader Alex Salmond says his former party has become obsessed with identity politics
Alba party leader Alex Salmond says his former party has become obsessed with identity politics

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