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SNP leader Swinney denies Scottish independence would lead to austerity
Scottish First Minister and SNP leader John Swinney during a visit to Asda Chesser Supermarket, in Edinburgh, while on the General Election campaign trail, June 12, 2024

FIRST MINISTER John Swinney has denied that Scotland would face austerity if it went it alone.

The SNP leader defended his party’s pursuit of independence on BBC television’s Panorama programme, which will interview each political party leader in turn over the coming weeks.

Having spent the last week citing claims by the Institute for Fiscal Studies that Labour and Tories were part of a “conspiracy of silence” over a £18 billion gap in UK finances over the next parliament, Mr Swinney was challenged on the think tank’s view — expressed by director David Phillips at the last Holyrood election — that a Scottish state would be forced to administer austerity and “cut its cloth to fit the size of its own purse.”

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