Ash Regan outlines Scottish independence plan as
SNP nominations close
Candidate to replace Nicola Sturgeon also pledges to
scrap gender recognition bill in campaign launch
Severin
Carrell Scotland editor
@severincarrell
Fri 24 Feb
2023 15.46 GMT
Ash Regan,
the third candidate competing to become the Scottish National party leader and
first minister, has said she believes Scotland will be allowed its independence
without a referendum if enough voters support pro-independence parties in an
election.
Regan’s
campaign launch took place on Friday before the midday deadline for
nominations. The Scottish health secretary, Humza Yousaf, and the finance
secretary, Kate Forbes, are the other two candidates in the race.
She denied
that this strategy was a rehash of the “de facto referendum” plan that was
shelved by the SNP last week after Nicola Sturgeon announced she was stepping
down as leader.
Regan’s
campaign team confirmed she had received more than 100 nominations, from at
least 20 party branches, pitting her against Yousaf, widely seen as Sturgeon’s
preferred candidate, and Forbes.
At an event
in North Queensferry that was short on domestic policy proposals, Regan said
she would in effect scrap the gender recognition reform bill, which has been
blocked by the UK government, by refusing to appeal against Westminster’s
decision.
Regan had
resigned as community safety minister under Sturgeon in protest against the
bill, becoming a flag-carrier on the issue for SNP rebels at Holyrood.
The
pro-independence Scottish Green party, which is in coalition with the SNP in
government, has warned that its two ministers will resign in protest if the
bill is dropped as it is a “red line” policy in their cooperation agreement.
Regan said
she would also accelerate Scotland’s road-widening programme and slow down the
move away from North Sea oil and gas extraction – two other policies the Greens
would oppose.
Regan
described her independence mandate plan as a “voter empowerment mechanism” that
would be placed as “line one” of an SNP manifesto at the next election,
although she later said she would first put her proposal to a party conference
if she became leader.
Under her
policy, if pro-independence parties won a majority of seats and votes at a
general election “the international community will see that and I think that
clear instruction should be enough to trigger those negotiations”, she said.
Her
proposal is in opposition to the stances taken by Yousaf and Forbes, and has
been heavily criticised by SNP MPs. A number of opinion polls show it is
disliked by voters, which suggests the SNP would fail to win an election if
that was the central theme of its campaign.
Rishi
Sunak, as well as his predecessors and Keir Starmer, have all said the approach
misunderstands the purpose of a general election, which is based on a slate of
ideas. The Spanish government has repeatedly said it would only recognise a
legally founded referendum supported by the UK government.
For the SNP
and the yes movement, those positions highlight the paradox they face in trying
to achieve independence. Since opinion polls show a lack of consistent majority
support for independence, with the no vote currently in the lead, Yousaf argues
independence can only be gained through a legally secure route.
With Jo
Cherry as the only SNP MP in Westminster to have backed Regan’s campaign, the
new candidate acknowledged she was “definitely the outsider” in the contest.
Regan said
she wanted to build a fresh mass movement with every other pro-independence
group, including Alex Salmond’s breakaway Alba party, but agreed her stance on
gender recognition, roadbuilding and oil drilling risked alienating the
pro-independence Greens.
Sturgeon
negotiated the government cooperation agreement with the Scottish Greens
largely because it cemented a pro-independence majority in Holyrood, where the
Greens have seven MSPs. Without them, the SNP would be one vote short of a
majority.
“The Greens
have already said they might not want to work with a candidate such as myself,
or a candidate such as Kate Forbes,” Regan said. “So it’s for the Greens to
decide what they want to do next. We need to sit down with them, have a
conversation and see where that goes.”
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