HUMZA Yousaf said he is confident the SNP can “come out on top” in the forthcoming Westminster General Election.
It comes after polling expert John Curtice warned that the First Minister is “nothing like as popular” with voters as his predecessor Nicola Sturgeon, adding that it meant Labour could make “significant progress” in Scotland when the election, which is almost certain to take place in 2024, is held.
The polling expert said: “The SNP are no longer dominating the support of those who are in favour of independence, some of them are now saying they’re going to vote Labour.”
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However, Yousaf, who took over as First Minister and SNP leader in March 2023, insisted he was “confident” going into the General Election, despite conceding his party has had a “tricky year with lots of difficult issues”.
He told the PA news agency the SNP was “leading every other political party despite the fact it has been a tricky number of months”.
With the SNP “very much on election footing”, Yousaf added he was looking to not just hold seats at Westminster but for his party to “win as many seats as we possibly can”.
While he accepted the election is “going to be a challenge”, he stated: “We believe, the SNP, that we can come out on top.
“Why do we believe that? Because we think our values chime most closely with those of the Scottish people and we will stand up for Scotland.
“We will continue to make that case to the people of Scotland and I am confident going into the General Election.”
He added that despite the “issues” the party has faced “people tend to see us as trusted with running the Government, trusted with public services”.
Curtice, a professor of politics at the University of Strathclyde and a senior research fellow at the National Centre for Social Research, told BBC Radio Scotland that Sturgeon’s “fateful decision” in February 2023 to step down as SNP leader and first minister had had “quite substantial political consequences” for her party.
While Yousaf replaced her in both those roles, Curtice said the leadership contest which saw him elected exposed divisions within the party, with the public “now much more likely to think the SNP are divided”.
He added that while the General Election could result in “radical change south of the Border”, with victory for Keir Starmer’s Labour Party, he added that “north of the Border, also we could see Labour making significant progress and thereby increasing Labour’s chances of being able to get an overall majority at Westminster”.
Meanwhile, Scottish Labour deputy leader Dame Jackie Baillie has said 2024 will be the year her party “has long waited for”.
Writing in The Scotsman newspaper, she said: “Labour will be ready to replace a scandal-ridden Conservative Government whenever an election is called.
“We are working hard, preparing to do the same in Scotland when the time comes.”
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