Sturgeon firm on Scottish independence vow

Nicola Sturgeon has insisted the SNP is not “changing its tune” on Scottish independence after her predecessor Alex Salmond said the party’s landslide general election victory had brought it closer.

Sturgeon firm on Scottish independence vow

Nicola Sturgeon has insisted the SNP is not “changing its tune” on Scottish independence after her predecessor Alex Salmond said the party’s landslide general election victory had brought it closer.

The SNP leader and Scotland’s First Minister insisted that her promise during the campaign that the vote was not about independence still stood and said she was determined to unite the country.

She was speaking after former first minister Alex Salmond said he believed independence would “absolutely” happen in his lifetime following the SNP securing all but three of Scotland’s Westminster constituencies.

Asked how close Scotland was to independence after the result, Mr Salmond said: “Scotland has seen a number of days that many people thought we would never see.

“People thought there would never be a Scottish parliament; then some people thought there would never be an SNP government, some people thought there would never be a majority SNP government.

“So this is the latest staging post in what seems progress for Scottish people.”

Responding to the remarks, Ms Sturgeon told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show: “What Alex said, and I don’t think it’s a particularly controversial statement, is that he thinks Scotland will become an independent country.

“I think Scotland will become an independent country one day. He said he thinks it will be in his lifetime, I hope that’s the case.”

Ms Sturgeon denied that the general election had moved the country closer to that result or that her that the party was “changing its tune”.

She said: “There’s no disagreement between Alex and I on this, this general election campaign was not about independence.

“I said that repeatedly, I said it consistently and I said expressly to people in Scotland that if they voted SNP, and half of the Scottish population did, I would not take that as an endorsement of independence. I stick to that position.

“I’m a great believer in what you say before an election should be what you say after. Many people who voted no for independence in the referendum, who would vote no if the referendum was tomorrow, voted SNP on Thursday.

“I’ve got a responsibility to make sure that we represent all of them but also that we represent those who didn’t vote for us and seek to win their trust.

“As First Minister, as leader of the SNP, I’ve got a responsibility to try to unite Scotland and I’m determined that I do that.”

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