First Ministers join forces to call for EU Referendum Remain vote

Five Scottish first ministers from three political parties have come together in an unprecedented show of unity to urge voters to Remain in the European Union.

Published 22nd Jun 2016

Five Scottish first ministers from three political parties have come together in an unprecedented show of unity to urge voters to Remain in the European Union.

SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon and her predecessor Alex Salmond, former Scottish Labour leaders Jack McConnell and Henry McLeish and former Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Jim Wallace have signed a joint statement to maximise the Remain vote in Scotland.

Scottish Vote Leave said the Holyrood leaders are part of a ā€œproject fear establishmentā€ who are ā€œout of touch with ordinary votersā€.

In a joint statement, the first ministers said: ā€œWe are proud to come together to urge our fellow Scots to vote Remain in this unprecedented display of unity in the history of the Scottish Parliament.

ā€œThe stakes could hardly be higher. Staying in the European Union and its single market is vital for jobs and investment in Scotland, and also enshrines key protections for workers and consumers.

ā€œWe must vote to keep our EU rights and by maximising the Remain vote in Scotland we could make the difference in keeping the UK in the European Union.

ā€œOur message to the people of Scotland is to unite as a nation, turn out on Thursday and vote Remain.ā€

Current Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale has urged UK voters to learn from the Scottish independence referendum and listen to experts who are warning of the economic risks of leaving the EU.

Speaking ahead of a Remain rally in London, Ms Dugdale said: ā€œIn the independence referendum they told us we were scaremongering ... yet we've been proved right.

ā€œThe warnings from the experts were accurate. In fact, they downplayed the risks at the time, on oil, on currency, on our public finances.

ā€œNigel Farage can dismiss some of the experts some of the time. But he can't dismiss all of the experts all of the time.ā€

Current Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie said: ā€œTomorrow we can choose to work together or walk away from international co-operation that has helped keep the peace in Europe for more than five decades.

ā€œWe will choose to work together or walk away from something that has given us billions of pounds in trade, millions of jobs across the UK and has helped bring thousands of criminals to justice.ā€

A Scottish Vote Leave spokesman said: ā€œThe former first ministers are out of touch with ordinary voters by saying we shouldn't worry about uncontrolled EU migration.

ā€œYet for millions of Scots that is the real concern. Uncontrolled EU migration depresses wages, pushes up rents and puts pressure on our NHS.

ā€œIn this referendum we are being asked to give away our ability to influence decisions and govern our country.

ā€œOutside the EU we will have control over our borders, we will have more powers for our Parliament and more money to spend on our public services.ā€