Yorkshire Post

Scotland ‘will get right to decide its own future’, insists Sturgeon

Premier ramps up pressure on Johnson for referendum

- GERI SCOTT WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

NICOLA STURGEON has said Scotland “will get the right to decide our own future”, despite Prime Minister Boris Johnson rejecting her plea for a second independen­ce referendum.

Scotland’s First Minister wrote to the Tory leader days after his victory in last month’s General Election, claiming there was a “democratic case” for a fresh vote on the constituti­on.

But her call for the powers to hold such a vote to be transferre­d to Holyrood was flatly rejected by Mr Johnson, who claimed a second ballot on independen­ce would lead to continued “political stagnation” in Scotland.

Ms Sturgeon, who has previously refused to rule out legal action in a bid to force a second independen­ce vote, said the Scottish Government would set out the next steps it will take before the end of the month.

She said the Scottish Government would again ask MSPs at Holyrood to endorse “Scotland’s right to choose”.

“The people of Scotland will get the right to decide our own future in an independen­ce referendum,” the SNP leader said.

“The Westminste­r union cannot be sustained without consent. Democracy will prevail.

“The only question is how long it will take the Tories and the rest of the Westminste­r establishm­ent to accept that inevitabil­ity.”

Scots voted by 55 per cent to 45 per cent to stay in the UK in a referendum in 2014.

In his letter to Ms Sturgeon, the PM said he had “carefully considered” the arguments made but both she and her predecesso­r, Alex Salmond, had made a “personal commitment” that the 2014 referendum would be a “once in a generation” event.

He wrote: “The UK Government will continue to uphold the democratic decision of the Scottish people and the promise that you made to them.

“For that reason I cannot agree to any request for a transfer of power that would lead to further independen­ce referendum­s.”

He went on to say: “Another independen­ce referendum would continue the political stagnation that Scotland has seen for the last decade, with Scottish schools, hospitals and jobs again left behind because of a campaign to separate the UK. It is time that we all worked to bring the whole of the United Kingdom together and unleash the potential of this great country.”

At yesterday’s Cabinet meeting, the PM told Ministers his Government “has an optimistic vision for Scotland and our whole country in 2020”, adding: “We do not want the 2020s in Scotland to repeat the previous SNP’s lost decade when Scottish schools, hospitals and jobs were left behind because of their campaign to separate the United Kingdom”.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said there was “full support” for his decision.

Interim Scottish Tory leader Jackson Carlaw said the PM’s letter was a “clear call to the Scottish Government to invest its energies in the domestic agenda and respect the result of the 2014 vote”.

Ms Sturgeon said the PM’s stance was “not surprising” as she claimed the Tories were “terrified of Scotland having the right to choose our own future”.

“They know that given the choice the overwhelmi­ng likelihood is that people will choose the positive option of independen­ce,” she said.

“The Tories – and their allies in the leadership­s of Labour and the Lib Dems – lack any positive case for the union so all they can do is try to block democracy.

“It shows utter contempt for the votes, views and interests of the people of Scotland and it is a strategy that is doomed to failure.”

The First Minister added: “It is not politicall­y sustainabl­e for any Westminste­r Government to stand in the way of the right of the people of Scotland to decide their own future and to seek to block the clear democratic mandate for an independen­ce referendum.

“The problem for the UK Government is that the longer they try to block a referendum, the more they demonstrat­e that the Westminste­r union is not a partnershi­p of equals and the more support for independen­ce will grow.”

The Tories and their allies lack any positive case for the union. Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon.

 ?? PICTURE: NEIL HANNA/GETTY IMAGES ?? NICOLA STURGEON: Said the Scottish Government would again ask MSPs to endorse Scotland ‘right to choose’.
PICTURE: NEIL HANNA/GETTY IMAGES NICOLA STURGEON: Said the Scottish Government would again ask MSPs to endorse Scotland ‘right to choose’.

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