Date-57c9aa06dd6457 24301773 PDF
Date-57c9aa06dd6457 24301773 PDF
Date-57c9aa06dd6457 24301773 PDF
"While I take nothing for granted, I suspect support for independence will be even higher if it
becomes clear that it is the best or only way to protect our interests," she said.
Some doubt Scotland would now opt for independence given that it rachets up economic uncertainty
during an already clouded outlook due to Brexit.
But in a nod to her critics, Sturgeon vowed not to skirt the difficult economic questions and said a
specially commissioned SNP group would consider an independence policy programme aimed at
expanding the economy, cutting fiscal deficit and deciding a monetary strategy.
Scotland's fiscal deficit hit 9.5 percent of GDP in the year to March, more than twice that of Britain
as a whole, hindered by a low oil price. That makes balancing the books tough without unpopular
austerity measures which the SNP opposes.
The offer to keep the pound at the 2014 referendum and a dependence on oil as an asset were
widely seen as weak points in the independence argument last time.
The party will have a deep trove of information on which to base its next steps by the time the shape
of the Brexit negotiations in London and Brussels become clearer.
A YouGov poll published a week after the Brexit vote however showed most Scots still wanted to
remain a part of Britain, by 53 to 47 percent. A YouGov poll in the Times newspaper on Friday put