Nicola Sturgeon has said she believes “emphatically” that she remains the best person to lead the SNP, as two party heavyweights both tipped as future first ministers commence their battle to return to the Scottish parliament in the 2021 elections.
Sturgeon was quizzed on BBC1’s The Andrew Marr Show about increasingly public criticisms from SNP politicians about her independence strategy, after Boris Johnson ruled out granting the legal powers necessary to hold a second referendum in perpetuity.
She replied: “I do think the issues of frustration can be slightly overblown in this very heated world we live in,” while confirming she intended to lead her party to victory at next year’s Holyrood elections and return as first minster.
She told Marr that two conditions were required for her to remain as leader: “First you have to have support not just of party but of country and I would say humbly that I’ve just led my party to another landslide election victory, the sixth election victory I’ve led my party to in my five years as party leader and first minister. But secondly I have to be sure that I want to do this job, think I’m the best person to do this job and have the drive and energy and that is emphatically the case.”
Sturgeon’s comments come as two of the SNP’s most influential figures, Joanna Cherry and Angus Robertson, announced their bids for nomination to contest the coveted Holyrood parliament seat of Edinburgh Central, currently held by the former Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson, who plans to step down next year.
Cherry, a prominent MP who last year garnered plaudits for leading the successful legal challenge to the prorogation of parliament, confirmed she would be seeking the candidacy – just days after Robertson, the party’s former leader at Westminster, did so.
While the outcome of the selection will reflect local loyalties, it must also be viewed in the context of ongoing arguments about party strategy as well as anxieties about the impact of Alex Salmond’s trial for alleged sexual offences, which begins in March.
Robertson, the respected party veteran and a close supporter of Sturgeon, is known to favour a more gradualist approach, telling the Guardian last October that support for independence was at “a pivot point”, but warning: “People also say they want to see the impact of Brexit before they decide to do something else.”

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