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Nicola Sturgeon to publish second paper in Scottish independence prospectus

The First Minister will detail a document titled Renewing Democracy Through Independence.

Neil Pooran
Thursday 14 July 2022 00:01 BST
Nicola Sturgeon will publish a new paper on Thursday (Russell Cheyne)
Nicola Sturgeon will publish a new paper on Thursday (Russell Cheyne) (PA Wire)

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Nicola Sturgeon is to publish the second paper in her prospectus for Scottish independence.

The Scottish First Minister will on Thursday set out the next part of her ā€œdetailed prospectusā€ with a paper titled Renewing Democracy Through Independence.

The first of these reports was described as a ā€œscene setterā€ document, and it was revealed at Bute House in Edinburgh last month.

The Scottish Government paper highlighted economic areas where the UK is outperformed by a group of other European countries.

Since then, Ms Sturgeon has said she wants a second independence referendum to take place on October 19, 2023, though the Supreme Court has been asked to rule on the legality of the Scottish Governmentā€™s plans.

If it rules against the First Minister, she says she will consider the next general election to be a ā€œde facto referendumā€.

Ms Sturgeon is expected to say: ā€œThis discussion could not be more timely or urgent ā€“ the democratic deficit Scotland faces is not a recent phenomenon, but the evidence of it now is starker than ever.

ā€œA Prime Minister with no democratic endorsement from Scotland is about to be replaced by yet another Prime Minister that Scotland hasnā€™t voted for ā€“ and wouldnā€™t vote for even if we were given the chance.

ā€œAll Scotland ever hears from UK politicians these days is democracy denial. They trade opinions on how many years it should be before Westminster might ā€˜allowā€™ us to make a democratic choice about our own future.

ā€œThe fact that the Scottish people have repeatedly elected a majority in the Scottish Parliament committed to an independence referendum is treated as immaterial.

ā€œYou donā€™t have to be a supporter of independence to know thatā€™s not democracy.

ā€œThat attitude is not surprising from Tories ā€“ but these days, where the Tories go, Labour seem obliged to follow.

ā€œJust as in 2014, they are teaming up with the Tories to frustrate the will of the Scottish people.

ā€œLabourā€™s positions are nothing to do with the interests, let alone the democratic wishes, of people inĀ Scotland.

ā€œThey are just cynical political calculations, based on the deeply misguided belief that the way back to power is to adopt wholesale the policies of the Tory Government they claim to oppose.

ā€œWhat Scotland is hearing and seeing, on a daily basis, from Westminster parties encapsulates the democratic deficit that we face as part of the UK.ā€

She will say that only independence offers a ā€œreal and permanent alternativeā€ to Tory Government.

However, the Conservatives accused the First Minister of ā€œstubbornly ignoring the real priorities of people across Scotland and instead talking about her usual obsessionā€ of independence.

Donald Cameron, the partyā€™s constitution spokesman at Holyrood, said: ā€œIn the week that Scotlandā€™s NHS recorded the worst A&E waiting times on record, people will be outraged to see Nicola Sturgeon continuing to campaign for an independence referendum next year.

ā€œThis SNP Government are once again focused on the wrong priority at the worst possible time.ā€

He insisted: ā€œThe vast majority of Scots donā€™t want a divisive second referendum next year, yet it seems that the SNP are only too happy to ignore democracy when it doesnā€™t go their way.ā€

Scottish Labourā€™s constitution spokesperson Sarah Boyack also hit out, saying: ā€œWhen people across Scotland are crying out for help with the cost-of-living crisis, precious government time and energy is being poured into the SNPā€™s endless attempts to whip up division.ā€

Ms Boyack added: ā€œThe last paper was nothing but fantasy economics and baseless promises of jam tomorrow, without a shred of clarity on the unanswered questions plaguing the SNPā€™s reckless plans or any attempt to use the powers they have now.ā€

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