THE SNP have warned Boris Johnson that he will "get swept away" after he ruled out a second independence referendum until 2055.
Depute leader Keith Brown joined the Scottish Greens in condemning the Prime Minister's hardened position which he set out in a TV interview this morning.
Brown said: "It may be a new year but it's the same old incoherent bluster from Boris Johnson. The Prime Minister pretends otherwise but he knows he can't keep on denying democracy.
"Even his American pal Donald Trump has learned that if you try to stand in the way of the democratic choice of a nation you get swept away.
"The people who will decide our future are the people of Scotland, not Boris Johnson and the Westminster Tories."
Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr show, Johnson said that the gap between referendums on Europe - the first in 1975 and the second in 2016 - was "a good sort of gap".
However, Marr suggested that now "things had changed" for Scotland, after leaving the European Union and the coronavirus pandemic.
He asked Johnson what a voter in Scotland should do if they decided that a second independence referendum was now something they wanted, what were "the democratic tools in my hands to now do that?"
The Prime Minister said: "Referendums in my experience, direct experience, in this country are not particularly jolly events.
"They don't have a notably unifying force in the national mood, they should be only once in a generation."
Asked what the difference was between a referendum on EU membership being granted and one on Scottish independence being requested, he said: "The difference is we had a referendum in 1975 and we then had another one in 2016.
"That seems to be about the right sort of gap."
READ MORE Scottish independence: Boris Johnson rules out new vote until 2055
Some 17 polls have given a majority to independence with the most recent from The Scotsman/Savanta ComRes, results showed support for a second independence referendum growing.
With "don't knows" excluded, 58% of voters said they would now vote yes for independence, with 42% voting no.
The 2014 referendum resulted in a 55.3% vote against independence.
On Hogmanay, Nicola Sturgeon said Europe should "keep a light on" as Scotland will be "back soon".
The First Minister tweeted just after the Brexit transition period formally ended at 11pm on December 31.
Scotland's trading and travel relationships with EU countries will now be governed by the agreement announced by the UK Government on Christmas Eve.
Sturgeon reiterated the SNP's call for an independent Scotland to join the EU.
Nicola Sturgeon pictured in Brussels with the European Commission's chief negotiator Michel Barnier in 2019.
Tweeting a picture of the words Europe and Scotland joined by a love heart, she wrote: "Scotland will be back soon, Europe. Keep the light on."
Scottish Greens co-leader Lorna Slater said: "Only the people of Scotland have the right to determine Scotland's future.
"17 consecutive opinion polls have demonstrated majorities in favour of independence, with the most recent indicating a record 58% support.
"Whether it's the botched handling of the coronavirus crisis, the Brexit catastrophe or just the heartlessness of Tory governments we haven't voted for, it's clear that the UK isn't working for Scotland.
"Scottish Greens will go into May's election with a clear commitment to put Scotland's future in Scotland's hands, and the people of Scotland will have their say."
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