Commenting on the Donald Dewar lecture by former Prime Minister Gordon
Brown MP at the Edinburgh Book Festival today, SNP Westminster
Treasury spokesperson Stewart Hosie MP said:
“Gordon Brown is right to say that the constitutional debate must
start from first principles, and the very first principle is that it
is fundamentally better for us all if decisions about Scotland’s
future are taken by the people who care most about Scotland, that is
by the people of Scotland. That is why we want a nation that speaks
with her own voice and makes her own unique contribution to the world
– an independent Scotland that stands alongside the other nations on
these islands in a social union of equals.
“Gordon Brown is wrong, however, with his figures. Scotland’s GDP per
head is actually 15 per cent higher than the UK’s – which is why an
independent Scotland would be the sixth-richest nation in the
developed world in terms of GDP per head, compared to the UK’s
sixteenth place.
“What Scotland needs is the job-creating powers of an independent
Parliament, so that we can take the key decisions needed to boost
growth and employment in the Scottish economy.
“The question that Gordon Brown and the anti-independence parties need
to answer is why they prefer these key powers over jobs and the
economy being held by a Tory-led government at Westminster – which has
used them to create the double-dip recession – rather than by the
Scottish Parliament which is 100 per cent accountable to the people of
Scotland.
“Mr Brown must have written his speech before this weekend’s Panelbase
poll was published in the Sunday Times – which shows that 12 per cent
of Scots are more likely to support independence in the aftermath of
the Olympics, compared to just 8 per cent who are less likely. And 58
per cent think Scotland should represent itself at the Olympics,
compared to 29 per cent who disagree.
“The gap between support for an independent Scotland and the Union is
now down to only 9 points – requiring just a 4.5 per cent swing to
bridge.
“Scotland’s interests are best served by becoming an equal and
independent nation so that we have the powers needed to realise the
potential of every single person who lives here – and by maintaining
the social union with our friends and neighbours south of the Border,
including the Queen as our joint head of state.
“That is the winning argument for Scotland, and we are confident of
achieving a successful Yes vote for independence in autumn 2014.”
