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Daily Record
Daily Record
Politics
Peter Davidson

Scottish independence: Scots back separation in fifth consecutive poll

Scots have backed breaking away from the United Kingdom in a fifth straight independence poll as dismay was voiced by the performance of the Westminster government.

The Scottish opinion monitor - a survey of 1,210 Scots done by YouGov on behalf of the Scottish Election Study - was published on Wednesday.

The poll found that, when undecided voters were removed, 50.2 per cent backed separation from the rest of the UK in what appears to be a trend towards independence since the ruling of the UK Supreme Court that the Scottish Parliament does not have the powers to hold another vote.

Support for independence has risen from the last opinion monitor, when it was logged at 47.6 per cent.

The data also shows that 76 per cent of respondents felt that the UK Government had done a bad job since the 2019 election and just 5% felt they had done a good job, with 11 per cent saying the government's record had been neither good nor bad and a further 8% saying they did not know.

In contrast, 37 per cent said they believed the Scottish Government had done a good job since last year's election - although just 8 per cent answered "very good" to the question, while 34 per cent disapproved of its record.

Following the Supreme Court ruling, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said the SNP would fight the next general election as a de facto referendum. But the new poll shows that, among decided voters, 41 per cent backed the SNP - shy of the 50 per cent required to win such a vote.

Dr Fraser McMillan, a researcher with the Scottish Election Survey, said: "It's quite clear that support for independence has increased in recent months.

"However, our data suggest that, as was the case at the height of the pandemic, recent Yes gains are probably more to do with diverging perceptions of UK and Scottish government performance than more abstract procedural arguments.

"This raises big questions around what might happen to public opinion on independence in the event that Labour win a majority at the next UK general election."

A UK Government spokesperson said: "People in Scotland want both their governments to be concentrating on the issues that matter most to them - like growing our economy, getting people the help they need with their energy bills, and supporting our NHS.

"As the Prime Minister has been clear, we will continue to work constructively with the Scottish Government to tackle our shared challenges."

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