Western Morning News

Sturgeon refuses to give up on independen­ce

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N REPORTERS

NICOLA Sturgeon has vowed to use the next general election to try to win Scottish independen­ce – after the Supreme Court ruled another referendum cannot be held without the backing of Westminste­r.

Judges at the UK’s highest court announced their unanimous ruling yesterday, making clear the Scottish Parliament “does not have the power to legislate for a referendum on Scottish independen­ce”.

Following the judgment, the Scottish First Minister vowed to continuing pushing for independen­ce, saying: “As long as there is breath in my body, I refuse to give up on the basic principle of democracy.”

She said a special SNP conference will be held in the new year “to discuss and agree the detail of a proposed de facto referendum”, using the next UK election.

She said: “No party can dictate the basis on which people cast their votes. But a party can be, indeed should be, crystal clear about the purpose for which it is seeking popular support. In this case, for the SNP that will be to establish – just as in a referendum – majority support in Scotland for independen­ce so that we can then achieve independen­ce.”

She said the SNP will also “launch and mobilise a major campaign in defence of Scottish democracy”.

Speaking to journalist­s in Edinburgh, she declared: “We should be in no doubt, as of today democracy is what is at stake. “This is no longer about whether Scotland becomes independen­t, vital though that decision is. It is now more fundamenta­l.

“It is now about whether or not we even have the basic democratic right to choose our own future. Indeed, from today the independen­ce movement is as much about democracy as it is about independen­ce.”

The First Minister said she has dedicated much of her life to the cause of independen­ce, saying a de facto referendum is not her preferred option.

She added: “Anybody who says ‘we can’t do this because we might not win’, well, if we can’t win, then we don’t deserve to be independen­t.”

She had earlier said the Supreme Court ruling “exposes as myth” that the UK is a voluntary union.

In the judgment, Supreme Court president Lord Reed stressed the court was not being asked to express “a view on the political question of whether Scotland should become an independen­t country”. Instead, he said the task of the judges was “solely to interpret the relevant provisions of the Scotland Act” and decide if the Scottish Government’s proposed referendum Bill related to reserved matters – which are under the control of Westminste­r and not Holyrood.

The Lord Advocate – Scotland’s most senior law officer – had argued this did not apply because a referendum would not automatica­lly bring about the end of the union, but Lord Reed said the court did not agree with this interpreta­tion, saying a referendum would have “practical” as well as legal effects.

The Supreme Court president said: “A lawfully held referendum would have important political consequenc­es relating to the union and the United Kingdom Parliament.

“Its outcome would possess the authority, in a constituti­on and political culture founded upon democracy, of a democratic expression of the view of the Scottish electorate.”

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak welcomed the “clear and definitive” ruling from the Supreme Court. At Prime Minister’s Questions he said: “Now is the time for politician­s to work together, and that’s what this Government will do.”

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