Yousaf confident of Scottish general election win and potential IndyRef2

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Yousaf Confident Of Scottish General Election Win And Potential Indyref2
The SNP’s deputy Westminster leader said on Saturday the party would extract another vote on independence, along with dragging Labour to the left. Photo: PA Images
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Craig Paton, PA Scotland Deputy Political Editor

Scotland’s first finister is confident the Scottish National Party (SNP) party can win next year’s general election and any subsequent independence referendum the party can extract in a hung parliament.

Projections last week following the local elections in England suggested Labour could struggle to gain an overall majority at Westminster in the UK-wide vote expected next year, if the result was to be repeated, with the SNP keen to make clear its negotiating position in a hung parliament.

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Over the weekend, the party’s deputy Westminster leader Mhairi Black said Labour would have to give up an independence referendum for SNP support after the election – a long held position for the party – while claiming her MPs would work to pull Labour to the left.

 

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Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, however, has repeatedly said there will be no deals with the SNP after an election.

Mr Yousaf’s confidence comes after six weeks of turmoil at the top of his party, with former chief executive – and Nicola Sturgeon’s husband – Peter Murrell and then-treasurer Colin Beattie arrested in connection with a police probe into the SNP’s finances, along with the search of Mr Murrell and Ms Sturgeon’s home and party headquarters.

Speaking in Dundee on Monday, Mr Yousaf said: “I’d be confident of both winning the general election and confident, of course, of winning an independence referendum.

“We have the arguments, the positive vision, even with all the real challenges the party has had over the last six weeks.

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“I’m not going to pretend it’s been anything other than very, very difficult, maybe some of the most difficult weeks the SNP has faced, certainly in modern history.”

He added: “Even with that, support for independence, we know, is still by and large rock solid, and we’re going to continue to build on that.”

A recent poll by Redfield and Wilton, done towards the end of last month, suggested support for independence was around 45 per cent – the same as the 2014 referendum.

The Scottish first minister went on to say he was “pretty disturbed” by what he described as “lurching more and more to the right”, adding that the SNP could obtain the “prize” of an independence referendum, as well as “kicking the Tories out of Scotland”.

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Asked about Labour’s steadfast refusal to countenance a deal with the SNP, he said: “I think what is said before a general election and in the midst of a campaign is very different when the realpolitik kicks in.

“I would work, frankly, with any progressive party to see the back of the Tories, that price for cooperating with Labour undoubtedly, from our perspective, would be demanding that Section 30, which is of course our right given our mandates that we’ve won, but it will also be to put firmly the progressive agenda front and centre of not just Scottish politics but UK politics.”

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