
First Minister John Swinney has refused to say what will happen to the Scottish independence movement if the SNP loses its majority in Scotland on July 4.
The SNP leader fulfilled the promise both he and his predecessor Humza Yousaf made by putting the push for independence on the first page of the party’s General Election manifesto, which was launched in Edinburgh on Wednesday.
The document states: “Vote SNP for Scotland to become an independent country.”
The party’s position is to seek to give “democratic effect” to the will of the Scottish people if the SNP wins a majority of Scottish seats at Westminster, which Mr Swinney said on Wednesday means negotiating for another referendum to be held.
There is “no other way” to get to independence than through the ballot box, the First Minister added, saying: “We must never lose faith in the power of the democratic voice of the people of Scotland.”
But with polls suggesting Labour could be pulling ahead of the SNP, he refused to say what losing its majority would mean for the independence movement.
Despite being repeatedly asked about the possibility, Mr Swinney said he would not seek to “predict” the outcome of the July 4 vote.
The SNP leader also appeared to suggest the result of the 2021 Holyrood election, which saw a majority of pro-independence MSPs elected, is enough of a mandate to seek another referendum regardless of what happens next month.
“I think people in Scotland should have their democratic wishes respected,” he said.
We have just published the #SNPManifesto.
— The SNP (@theSNP) June 19, 2024
Deliver independence
End 14 years of austerity
Reverse the damage of Brexit and rejoin the EU
Introduce a Bill to keep the NHS in public hands
Scrap the cruel two-child benefit cap
Read it here: https://t.co/x3uhAdoZ3a
“In 2021 they called for there to be a referendum on the question of independence as a consequence of electing a parliamentary majority committed to that particular objective.
“In this election, if people want to intensify the pressure for that to be the case, then their opportunity is to vote for the Scottish National Party to make that happen.
“I stress, that can only happen if votes for the SNP are cast, because votes for the SNP will be capable of delivering independence.”
In his speech to activists and journalists, the First Minister said: “Never let anyone tell you that independence is separate from people’s daily lives and concerns.
“It is fundamental to those lives and concerns.
“It is about where decisions about Scotland are made, decisions over our economy, our health service, our living standards.”
Mr Swinney said his party is not seeking “independence for its own sake”.
He continued: “Independence for the powers to protect our NHS and to help people through tough times. Independence for a stronger economy and happier, healthier lives. Independence for a better future for Scotland – made in Scotland – for Scotland.”
The SNP has spent the campaign accusing a future Labour government of needing to cut public services, by sticking to strict fiscal rules.
Mr Swinney’s party, however, proposes three new rules, including multi-year spending plans, a “net worth rule” which sought to take stock of the value of infrastructure investments rather than just the cost, and an upper limit on debt servicing costs.
Responding to the manifesto, Scottish Conservative chairman Craig Hoy said: “The SNP’s entire manifesto can be summed up in one word – independence. The first page is dedicated solely to splitting up Scotland from the rest of the United Kingdom.
“None of Scotland’s urgent priorities will get any focus from the SNP. For John Swinney, independence comes before the economy, the NHS and everything else.”

