Tag: SNP

  • PRESS RELEASE : Scotland is the only UK nation that is reducing child poverty [April 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Scotland is the only UK nation that is reducing child poverty [April 2025]

    The press release issued by the SNP on 4 April 2025.

    Rachel Reeves could use her latest budget to match the Scottish Child Payment UK-wide, after research from the Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) found that child poverty rates in Scotland have fallen compared to the rest of the UK.

    The question is, will she? And will Scotland’s Labour MPs also challenge her to do so?

    According to the CPAG, child poverty fell in Scotland, with the three-year average poverty rate falling in Scotland from 24% to 23% – with the latest one-year data showing a fall from 26% to 22%.

    Meanwhile in England it has risen from 30% to 31%, from 23% to 24% in Northern Ireland, and from 29% to 31% in Wales

    The CPAG states that “the key reason for this divergence is the introduction of the Scottish Child Payment” and that “this shows the impact investment in social security has on child poverty”.

    It also warns the Westminster government that child poverty is set to rise even higher in the absence of any poverty-reducing reforms, reaching 4.8 million by the end of this parliament in 2029.

    The report by the CPAG was soon followed by another, published by the Changing Realities study of the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), which concluded that Labour could lift 700,000 children out of poverty if it adopted the SNP policy.

    These warnings come after the Westminster government’s own impact assessment revealed that the latest benefit cuts announced by Rachel Reeves will push 50,000 more children into poverty.

    The SNP has consistently called for the UK government to match the Scottish Government’s action on child poverty by matching the Scottish Child Payment.

    Instead of scapegoating struggling families on benefits for the UK’s ills the Chancellor should be using her spring budget to deliver the real and long-overdue action needed to tackle the increasing levels of child poverty in the rest of the UK.

    It is a mark of shame on a Westminster Labour government that child poverty is rising and expected to hit record highs by the end of this parliament.

    Westminster Labour government policies are now actively pushing children into poverty and holding Scotland back.

    Rachel Reeves could deliver emergency action now by matching the Scottish Child Payment UK-wide. As the Child Poverty Action Group and LSE have revealed it has made a difference by reducing child poverty in Scotland.

    As a result of the SNP government’s leadership, Scotland is the only part of the UK where child poverty is expected to fall – it’s time the Westminster Labour government matched this action.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Brexit impact on Scotland’s food and drink is making the cost of living crisis even worse [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Brexit impact on Scotland’s food and drink is making the cost of living crisis even worse [December 2022]

    The press release issued by the SNP on 14 December 2022.

    By Mairi Gougeon.

    The cost-of-living and energy crisis caused by the war in Ukraine, rising inflation and the aftermath of the Covid pandemic is written about and discussed often.

    Some of these are hopefully short-term issues and can be recovered from.

    Another problem, however, is contributing to the hardship faced by Scottish households and will do so for the long term: Brexit.

    A recent study, by Centre for Economic Performance at the London School of Economics, suggests that household food bills have gone up by £210 – primarily driven by extra checks and requirements on goods due to Brexit, with much of the cost passed onto consumers.

    That’s a cost Scotland should not have to bear, not least because this hard Brexit was imposed on us against our democratic will.

    It’s not just individual households. Brexit continues to pose huge challenges to Scotland’s food-and-drink industry with the loss of free trade and new obstacles to the movement of goods.

    This sector is one of the key drivers of the economy with an annual turnover worth £15 billion and overseas export sales of more than £6 billion, representing nearly a third of all UK food exports.

    We are fortunate to have some of the most amazing and delicious products and pure natural resources of anywhere in the world: our beef, our lamb, our venison and in our waters we have salmon and seafood, like langoustines, lobsters and crab.

    Along with our cheese, baked goods, craft beer and spirits, including of course, whisky, these are world-class products in demand across the globe.

    Producers benefit from the very features Scotland is known for: beautiful rugged landscapes, fertile land, clear waters and clean air.

    I am extremely proud of the international reputation for quality and provenance that this country’s talented farmers, fishermen, manufacturers, and processors have built.

    During my recent trip to Paris, in the run-up to St Andrew’s Day, I saw first-hand how sought-after Scottish produce is in that market.

    Little wonder that France is the largest food-and-drink export market for Scotland, valued at just over £1 billion last year, which was up 12 per cent from pre-pandemic levels, despite significant hurdles and bottlenecks caused by Brexit.

    France is also the largest export destination by volume for Scotch whisky and Atlantic Scottish salmon.

    To mark St Andrew’s Day, the Scottish Government and the Scottish Development International offices in Paris partnered with Salmon Scotland to celebrate 30 years of Scottish salmon’s ‘label rouge’ status.

    It was also an opportunity to promote the excellence of Scotland’s food-and-drink products to more than 250 key French and other stakeholders, customers and politicians.

    The 10,000 people in Scotland whose jobs depend on the salmon industry understand the crucial importance of such powerful advocacy.

    France is not only the second biggest general export market for Scotland, but with more than 160 French-owned companies and 28,000-plus employees, it is also the second largest investor and foreign employer after the US.

    Unsurprisingly, the Scottish Government has recognised France as one of Scotland’s most important and strategic economic partners.

    We also face common challenges with France, notably on food security and a sustainable green transition.

    We value ongoing collaboration with the French government on matters including low-carbon farming and soil preservation, but again Brexit threatens to stand in the way of progress.

    Westminster’s Retained EU Law bill threatens to remove 47 years of EU law from our statute books in a reckless move to de-regulate, putting at risk the high environmental standards that are already in place in Scotland.

    But the Scottish Government will continue to look EU-wards for solutions to shared challenges and we are following with interest the EU’s actions on food security.

    I have written to the European Commissioner for Agriculture, asking if it is possible for Scotland to join the European Food Security Crisis Preparedness and Response Mechanism (EFSCM) as a group member, or explore other means of co-operation with the EU.

    Engaging with the EU and the UK Government was one of the recommendations of a task force established with the food-and-drink sector earlier this year to monitor and identify potential disruption to the food-and-drink supply chain as a result of the war in Ukraine and the cost-of-living crisis.

    We are already doing all we can within our resources and powers to help the sector.

    We will continue to support the Scotland Food & Drink Recovery Plan with £15 million of Scottish Government funding over 2020-2023.

    Led by trade association Scotland Food & Drink, the plan aims to mitigate the damage inflicted by the pandemic and Brexit.

    We recently awarded 33 food-and-drink businesses grants worth £10 million as part of our food processing, marketing and cooperation grant scheme.

    We are providing £2.7 million funding over 2019-2024 towards the Scottish Development International-led Scotland Food & Drink Export Plan to help the industry identify opportunities across key markets globally.

    We have also invested £190,000 in the Scottish Grocers’ Federation’s “Go Local” grant scheme this year to support convenience stores throughout Scotland to provide dedicated, long-term display space for locally sourced Scottish products.

    We can all help our food-and-drink sector, and the jobs and businesses it supports, by buying local and Scottish whenever we can.

    Supermarket shelves are filled with great Scottish produce right now, including festive essentials like carrots, potatoes, cream, bread, ham and, of course, brussels sprouts.

    Brexit also hampers domestic production, with labour shortages caused by the loss of freedom of movement.

    These affect cafes, restaurants and hotels too where so many great Scottish products are turned into excellent meals.

    The hospitality industry, especially in rural and island areas, has struggled and is continuing to struggle, due to a lack of people to live and work in their communities.

    No matter how innovative the industry is or how wonderful our produce, if we cannot get it to markets, the sector will face challenges.

    Now, with clear evidence of Brexit causing food bills to rocket, we are all affected.

    There are many factors influencing food inflation, but other countries and citizens don’t have to contend with Brexit.

    It is only with independence and a return to the EU that these key barriers – to trade and to labour – will be reversed.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The UK Government needs a robust social security system for children [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : The UK Government needs a robust social security system for children [December 2022]

    The press release issued by the SNP on 6 December 2022.

    By Anum Qaisar.

    Over the last twelve years of Conservative rule and financial chaos, it has been children that have sadly paid the price. Children are often collateral damage in the UK Government’s on-going war against the poorest in society.

    The UK’s Government’s crumbling social security system is failing families across the four nations and is not fit to withstand the financial crises that we are facing.

    I recently secured my first Westminster Hall debate and I took the opportunity to raise these critical issues that are causing untold harm to children, young people, and their families.

    We are currently in a position where around four million children in the past month have experienced food insecurity – and with the rising cost of food and energy, children and their families are being pushed further and further into poverty, with little to no hand to help them up from the UK Government.

    We know that childhood poverty has both short and long-term social and economic consequences, and this is something that has been sorely overlooked by the UK Government.

    Last week in my opening speech I said that raising an issue such as social security for children provides a voice for the voiceless – as children and young people are often largely underrepresented in political debate. When debating social security provisions, our minds generally associate this with the working age population, and what support is in place for such a group.

    However, I would argue that a robust social security system ensures everyone, regardless of age and of course other characteristics, are considered equally.

    It has been said that an investment in our children, is an investment in our future – and being a Scottish Member of Parliament in Westminster provides me with a unique perspective both on policy and legislation.

    As an SNP MP, I will often speak about a “tale of two governments” when discussing the vastly different policy approaches the UK and Scottish Government take in comparison to each other. What we are currently witnessing is a Scottish Government producing bold and progressive policy across the board, using the limited economic and legislative power it has to make meaningful change to its citizens lives.

    This is in stark contrast to the regressive and punitive policy Westminster is currently producing such as the benefit cap, two-child limit and five week wait for Universal Credit – these policies are inherently poverty inducing.

    It is imperative that social security, particularly in the case of children, is seen as an investment, which is why I am proud that the Scottish Government has followed the lead of its Nordic neighbours, framing children’s social security in this way. OECD research has shown that investing in the early years can make a significant social and economic, ensuring an equal playing field for children.

    To ensure every child has the best possible start in life, the Scottish Government has rolled out several bold policies such as the The Scottish Child Payment, The Baby Box that has a 98% uptake rate, and fully funded high quality childcare hours.

    The Scottish Child Payment has recently increased to £25 per week for those already in receipt, and based on recent modelling, this increase in payment is set to lift 50,000 children out of poverty. This is a piece of game-changing progressive that will make a real difference to children and families across Scotland.

    We must not only consider the immediate impact of robust social security for children, we must also think about the issue as a societal one, and how targeted policy can actually diffuse throughout society.

    There are long term economic and social benefits by investing in the early years and a robust social security system for children can also have positive outcomes for other societal issues such as gender inequality.

    By providing free childcare hours in Scotland, this not only ensure children have the best start in high quality early years education, it also allows for mothers – who are often burdened with the majority of childcare – to return to work or education earlier.

    The UK Government is at a crossroads. It has a choice to deliver meaningful policy for children living in poverty across the UK. Poverty is a political – not personal – choice.

    As the cost of living crisis continues to spiral, UK Government Ministers must act quickly and follow the lead of the progressive path the Scottish Government has taken to alleviate child poverty – building a longstanding social security system that works for the next generation, the generation after that, and the generation after that.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The devolution settlement isn’t good enough – Scotland has outgrown it [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : The devolution settlement isn’t good enough – Scotland has outgrown it [December 2022]

    The press release issued by the SNP on 2 December 2022.

    By Alyn Smith.

    The UK Supreme Court did us all a favour last week, and I applaud the Scottish Government for taking it to and the SNP who between them took it to the Court.

    They’ve taken a legal issue, settled it, and left us all with a far bigger, more interesting and existential democratic one full of far more opportunities and challenges. Challenges for the UK Government especially, and for all politicians of all views.

    There were three submissions before the Court, from the two governments, Scottish and UK, and from the SNP.

    The Scottish Lord Advocate invited the Court to rule, hypothetically but still not entirely in abstract, on the right of Scotland’s national Parliament to legislate to hold a referendum, even an advisory one – and in the SNP submission in addition to giving a view on what the right to self-determination actually means in the UK and in our interconnected modern world.

    The Court could have sided with the UK submission and said all of this is hypothetical and premature, absent a bill passed by Holyrood to hold a poll, nothing to do with us, lads.

    It did not, and this is a significant win for the Scottish Government.

    It could also, perfectly fairly, have refused to say anything about the right to self-determination, a long-established (though seldom examined in any senior Court) warm and fuzzy feel-good principle of UN and EU law.

    Instead, it gave a clear and unanimous view. It also debunked the widespread and genuinely held view that the UK is a voluntary union.

    I’m biased, I’m a lawyer myself, and I like things to be binary, black and white, for things to exist, or not.

    I watched Catalan friends and colleagues for years agonise about rights that did not exist and support that would not (indeed, did not) come, and I want to see Scotland saved the same torment.

    The ruling of the UK Supreme Court on the right to self-determination is of global significance and is a hard blast of chilly reality for a lot of Scots who honestly believed that the UK was a voluntary partnership of equals (and in 2014 voted accordingly).

    Under the current devolved settlement, I’m sorry to say, it is not. The UK is not a voluntary union.

    That will be a hard learning for a lot of people and we in the Yes movement should be respectful of that.

    Because the world is a club of states, the EU is a club of states.

    Despite the interconnected and messily overlapping nature of regional and global human society, commerce, data and trade, it is states that make the rules of the clubs they have formed and they’ve written them to suit themselves.

    All the warm and fuzzy rhetorical window-dressing about democracy and the rights to self-determination in the UN’s case, or the “ever closer union” of the peoples of Europe in the EU’s, is and has always been a self-serving legal fiction.

    This is why we in the Yes movement want Scotland to join that club as a state.

    The right to self-determination was always qualified. It existed in a post-colonial context, or in the case of oppression or occupation.

    It gave a fig leaf of legality when the international community decided to intervene in failed or failing states like the former Yugoslavia or South Sudan, or invaded ones like Kuwait or Ukraine.

    It has never really been meant to empower people.

    My predecessor in the European Parliament, the much-missed Professor Neil McCormick, as a member of the European Constitutional Convention, proposed articles to the draft EU Constitution (that eventually became the Lisbon Treaty) specifically to create a right to self-determination in EU law.

    The proposals were voted down by all sides. The EU does not have any meaningful right to self-determination, not by accident but by conscious design.

    The states will deal with such matters at the time in whatever way best suits them. The UN and international law have the same deliberate fuzziness.

    Sovereignty pooled is sovereignty retained, as we know from Brexit, and power devolved is power retained, as we now know, in cold hard black and white, within the UK, under the current constitutional settlement.

    And that’s why the current devolved settlement isn’t good enough. Scotland has outgrown it.

    Scotland has come a long way politically since 1997 – and the independence referendum, the EU referendum, the aftermath of both and the collapse of integrity and credibility at Westminster leaves the UK with an indefensible and unsustainable democratic deficit.

    73% of Scots want back into the EU. 50% or so of Scots want independence. Only 22% of Scots trust the UK Government to act in their interests.

    The next electoral event that we know of is the upcoming Westminster election.

    That is the next opportunity for the people of Scotland to give their view on how fit for purpose their governance arrangements are, and who is best placed to make decisions for Scotland. A de-facto referendum on Scotland’s right to choose.

    The SNP have a clear vision of Scotland’s best future, and that is independence in Europe.

    It is up to the SNP to harness that de-facto referendum into achievable change, by defining what we seek and building a consensus for that achievable change, however incremental it may need to be, to build a credible momentum.

    We have some thinking yet to do on this, but it is an argument that we can win, and win big for Scotland.

  • FACTS AND FIGURES : Leaders of the SNP at Westminster

    FACTS AND FIGURES : Leaders of the SNP at Westminster

    The list of SNP Leaders at Westminster.


    Westminster Leader : Start – End

    Donald Stewart : 1974 – 1987

    Margaret Ewing : 1987 – 1999

    Alasdair Morgan : 1999 – 2001

    Alex Salmond : 2001 – 2007

    Angus Robertson : 2007 – 2017

    Ian Blackford : 2017 – 2022

    Stephen Flynn : 2022 –

  • PRESS RELEASE : Scotland can lead the green industrial revolution through independence, new report shows [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Scotland can lead the green industrial revolution through independence, new report shows [October 2022]

    The press release issued by SNP on 7 October 2022.

    A new report into Scotland’s green energy and renewables industry has said that Scotland has the potential to become a green energy powerhouse, creating up to 385,000 jobs, boosting Scotland’s economy by up to £34billion a year by 2050 and lowering energy bills permanently.

    The report, by economist Dr David Skilling, suggests that Scotland can increase its green energy output by over five times the currrent rate, increasing from Scotland’s current capacity of 12GW to over 80GW by 2050.

    With estimates showing that Scotland has the potential to generate around 10% of Europe’s wave power and posses 25% of the potential European offshore wind and tidal resource, it’s clear that Scotland has the energy to lead the renewables revolution but now we need the powers to make it a reality.

    For too long, Westminster has held Scotland’s energy potential back. This has had a devastating impact on our economy and jobs, as well as selling Scotland short in the current energy crisis.

    Decision after decision taken by Westminster governments has lost Scotland progress in our drive towards a green, sustainable future. With the scrapping of promised investment in projects like carbon capture and storage, creating a transmission charges system that negative affects Scottish energy producers and pursuing a recklessly damaging Brexit, it’s clear Scotland is being held back by Westminster.

    Scotland has a golden opportunity to lead an energy transition that secures net zero, enhances energy security and lowers energy costs for consumers. But to take that opportunity Scotland needs the powers to take action that can only be achieved through independence.

    Here’s a breakdown of Scotland’s potential green industrial revolution outlined in the new report. You can read the full report here.


    Scotland’s full energy potential

    Scotland is an energy-rich nation, and we have the potential to achieve the green equivalent of a new oil boom. The new report illustrates how Scotland is already a green energy powerhouse across the British Isles and can expand on our potential to be a leading European producer of green and renewable energy.

    • Already in Scotland we produce over 60% of the UK’s onshore wind energy capacity, leading the way on renewable energy production.
    • Renewable electricity accounted for 99% of Scotland’s gross electricity consumption in 2020, up from 24% in 2010. This is one of the highest shares across advanced economies, demonstrating Scotland’s potential as a renewable energy powerhouse.
    • Scotland is already a net exporter of electricity. In 2020, 31.8TWh of renewable electricity was generated in Scotland – equivalent of powering all households in Scotland for almost three and a half years.
    • The report shows that Scotland has the potential to boost our renewable energy output by more than five times. Rocketing from 12GW of installed renewable capacity to over 80GW by 2050, delivering roughly £14.5billion to Scotland’s economy and 110,000 jobs.
    • Scotland has the potential to generate around 10% of Europe’s wave power and posses 25% of the potential European offshore wind and tidal resource. Offshore wind costs are estimated to be lower than new nuclear generation and are already close to being competitive with other fuels like natural gas illustating the future of energy is in renewables.

    By unleashing a green industrial revolution Scotland’s economy can flourish

    By investing in the renewables revolution, Scotland will be able to reap the benefits across wider society and the economy. Scotland’s rich natural resources mean that we can generate enough cheap green electricity to power Scotland’s economy, and also export electricity to our neighbours. All the while, supporting jobs in Scotland and our net zero decarbonisation ambitions.

    • Access to low cost, renewable energy can give Scottish businesses a competitive advantage and encourage companies to expand their operations across Scotland. Scotland’s foreign direct investment (FDI) performance is already outpacing Europe and the rest of the UK and can be further enhanced amongst energy companies looking for long-term investment in renewables.
    • Leveraging our leading position in offshore wind and our pioneering reputation in tidal technology, Scotland can attract economic growth in advisory and services firms serving global markets.
    • With estimates of green hydrogen exports to Europe in the region of £48 billion annually by 2050, Scotland can become a substantial green hydrogen exporter delivering thousands of jobs and boosting Scotland’s economy.
    • A boom in our renewable and hydrogen potential will help in delivering Scotland’s Just Transition, ensuring that highly skilled jobs from the oil and gas sector are maintained through the transition to our growing renewables sector.

    Westminster is holding Scotland back, we need to take the handbrake off our potential with independence

    In an energy-rich nation like Scotland, it is simply unacceptable that almost half of households are struggling to afford energy bills when Scotland produces more electricity than it uses because of the failure of Westminster. The scandal of the current crisis is that renewable electricity is already relatively cheap and yet because the power over energy policy lies with Westminster, Scotland is forced to suffer the consquences of inaction and ideological politics from Tory government’s we never voted for. The effects of Scotland’s lack of control over energy policy are plain to see.

    • After Westminster’s deeply damaging Brexit, limits on Scotland’s labour supply has led to negative impacts for Scottish businesses not faced by European counterparts. However, with independence, Scotland can position itself as an attractive location for high-skilled workers in the energy sector like it always has before.
    • With limited financial and borrowing powers, Scotland is dependent on the actions of the UK government for investment to unleash our full potential in renewable energies. Yet Westminster has already proven time after time that it is not willing to invest in Scotland’s energy sector, meaning that it is only with independence that we can fully unlock Scotland’s renewables potential.
    • The UK’s energy system isn’t fit for purpose. While Scotland’s offshore and onshore wind can able provide electricity at a lower cost than nuclear or gas-fired power, the UK’s wholesale energy prices are driven up because of Westminster’s decision to rely on gas – the most expensive form of energy generation. Under Westminster control, Scotland is powerless to break the link between the cost of gas and the price of renewable and low-carbon electricity meaning energy prices will continue to rise.
    • Scotland’s energy producers continue to be put at a major financial disadvantage by Westminster’s the disastrous transmission pricing system, with Scottish Renewables noting the that alone the Westminster system “makes Scottish offshore wind farms 20% more expensive than those in English waters”.

    For too long, Westminster has held energy-rich Scotland back and our communities are now facing the devastating consequences. We cannot allow Westminster to squander Scotland’s renewable energy potential, just as it squandered our oil wealth.

    Scotland has a golden opportunity to lead an energy transition that secures net zero, enhances energy security and lowers energy costs for consumers. It is now time to grasp that opportunity and time to choose that independent green future.

  • SNP – 2022 Submission to Supreme Court on Independence Referendum

    SNP – 2022 Submission to Supreme Court on Independence Referendum

    The SNP’s formal submission to the Supreme Court on an independence referendum, submitted on 2 August 2022.

    Text (in .pdf format)