
Keir Starmer has mentioned he can’t believe some other Scottish independence referendum happening all the way through his time as high minister.
The Labour chief insisted it was once extra essential to concentrate on the financial system than the charter.
Scotland’s first minister John Swinney just lately mentioned he sought after to reach “demonstrable support” for independence.
But Starmer – who visited Scotland forward of Thursday’s Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election – mentioned “nobody’s raising that with me as their first priority”.
In an interview to be broadcast on the BBC’s Good Morning Scotland programme later, the high minister mentioned an SNP victory at subsequent 12 months’s Holyrood elections would no longer trade his thoughts.
“I think it’s really important to focus on the priorities that matter most,” he mentioned.
“We got a big election win last year on the basis that we would stabilise the economy and ensure that on that foundation we built a stronger Scotland in a stronger United Kingdom and that’s what I intend to do.”
Starmer advised the programme his contemporary talks with John Swinney had no longer all in favour of independence.
He mentioned: “Nobody’s raising that with me as their first priority, certainly in the discussions I’m having with the first minister.
“We’re speaking about jobs, power, safety and coping with the price of dwelling disaster.”

Last month, the first minister talked about securing “demonstrable enhance” for breaking up the United Kingdom.
Swinney compared this to the 1997 referendum for a Scottish parliament, which was backed by around 74% of Scots.
But the first minister also told BBC Scotland News that it was “totally unacceptable” for the independence movement “to be thwarted through a Westminster govt that simply folds its hands and says ‘no’.”
What could change the approach to indyref2?
Former Conservative minister Michael Gove has said there could be a second Scottish independence referendum if the public show “overwhelming enhance” for one.
Gove, who sat in the cabinet for most of the period between 2010 and 2024, said he didn’t think another referendum was necessary.
However, he conceded that the UK government may have to change approach if SNP popularity and support for another vote grows.
Gove was part of a government that rejected requests from the Scottish government for a second referendum.
He denied that this was anti-democratic and insisted that Scotland had “extra essential” issues to deal with.
Gove now suggests that the likelihood of a second independence vote was linked to the SNP’s ability to improve public services.
“If, for the sake of argument, the SNP make all of the ones selections in govt in some way that provides folks self assurance in them then we may well be in a special place [on a second referendum],” he mentioned.