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UK Local Elections 2026
14MAY

Swinney bids for 2028 vote; Streeting refuses

3 min read
20:05UTC

John Swinney launched the SNP manifesto in Glasgow on Thursday 16 April with a 2028 independence referendum as the lead constitutional commitment, conditional on 65 seats. Wes Streeting said Westminster would refuse a Section 30 order even if the SNP won a majority.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

The SNP has staked its mandate on 65 seats; Westminster has staked its refusal on the answer regardless.

John Swinney launched the SNP's 2026 Holyrood manifesto, titled "Always on Scotland's Side", in Glasgow on Thursday 16 April. The lead constitutional commitment is a second independence referendum by 2028, conditional on the SNP winning 65 of 129 Holyrood seats. The same launch carried the maximum-price food-cap policy on six staples that the Institute for Fiscal Studies would dismiss five days later .

Wes Streeting, the UK Government's Health Secretary, responded the same day. The Labour Government would refuse a Section 30 order, the constitutional mechanism Westminster grants to authorise a Scottish referendum, even if the SNP won a majority. A UK Government source called the SNP food-cap policy "incoherent and undeliverable".

Swinney has framed his mandate around a single number: 65 SNP seats out of 129 forces the referendum question. With the Institute for Fiscal Studies having already dismissed the Scottish Conservatives, Reform UK and Scottish Labour on fiscal credibility , and on the verge of dismissing the SNP itself, independence sits outside the IFS's terms of reference entirely. Swinney's bet is that a numeric majority forces the constitutional question back into the arena even when Westminster has pre-emptively refused. Three Holyrood projection models disagree by 11 seats on whether 65 is reachable . Voters in 73 Scottish constituency seats and 56 regional list seats are deciding which model the actual vote will track.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The SNP (Scottish National Party) wants Scotland to become an independent country. To hold a legally binding referendum on independence, the Scottish Parliament needs permission from the UK Government, through a mechanism called a Section 30 order. John Swinney, the SNP leader and Scotland's First Minister, launched his party's manifesto for the 7 May Scottish Parliament election on 16 April. The lead commitment was a new independence referendum in 2028, but only if the SNP wins 65 seats , enough for a majority in the 129-seat parliament. Wes Streeting, a UK Government minister (the Health Secretary), immediately said the UK Government would refuse to grant a Section 30 order, even if the SNP wins a majority. That would make any referendum the SNP tried to hold without Westminster's agreement legally invalid and unrecognised. Polling models (YouGov's MRP, fieldwork March-April) project the SNP at 67 seats, two above the majority threshold. But even if those projections are right, the result would be a political standoff rather than a referendum.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Scotland Act 1998 reserves constitutional questions, including referendums on the union, to Westminster under Schedule 5. The 2014 Edinburgh Agreement was a voluntary political concession, not an exercise of a standing legal right. The SNP has not sought to legislate a referendum without Westminster consent since the Supreme Court's 2022 ruling confirmed that Holyrood cannot authorise a binding independence referendum unilaterally.

The result is a constitutional structure in which an SNP majority produces a mandate claim without a legal delivery mechanism. Streeting's pre-emptive 16 April refusal reflects Labour's calculation that conceding a Section 30 debate costs more votes in England than it gains in Scotland, and that the political penalty for Scotland-side denial is primarily paid by the Scottish Labour branch, whose projected 17 Holyrood seats make it the prospective official opposition rather than a kingmaker.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    An SNP majority on 7 May would produce a constitutional standoff rather than a referendum pathway, with no legal mechanism available to Holyrood without Westminster consent.

  • Risk

    The unconditional Section 30 refusal removes the independence question as a near-term electoral differentiator, shifting Scottish campaign focus to public service delivery , where the IFS has simultaneously ruled the SNP's plans unaffordable.

First Reported In

Update #5 · 11 Days to Go: Six-of-six, RPA dies, Welsh lead flips

Institute for Fiscal Studies· 26 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Russell Findlay (Scottish Conservatives)
Russell Findlay (Scottish Conservatives)
Findlay refused to resign as Scottish Conservative leader after the party fell to 12 Holyrood seats and lost all five constituency MSPs. He declined Swinney's post-election talks invitation, the only major-party leader to do so.
John Swinney (SNP)
John Swinney (SNP)
Swinney committed on 14 May to a Holyrood Section 30 vote within a week despite winning seven seats fewer than his own trigger threshold, relying on a SNP-Green majority of 73. He tabled a meeting with Starmer; Downing Street disputed that any referendum discussion was agreed.
Rhun ap Iorwerth (Plaid Cymru)
Rhun ap Iorwerth (Plaid Cymru)
Ap Iorwerth was sworn in as First Minister of Wales on 12 May, the first non-Labour head of the Welsh Government since 1999. He governs as a minority without a written Green confidence-and-supply agreement, his cabinet entirely Plaid.
Richard Tice (Reform UK)
Richard Tice (Reform UK)
Tice framed the Harborne £5 million gift as an unconditional personal security payment, citing milkshake incidents and the 2025 firebomb attack on Farage's home. Reform's position is that the Standards Commissioner investigation is politically motivated.
Wes Streeting
Wes Streeting
Streeting resigned as Health Secretary on 14 May, writing that Starmer would not lead Labour at the next election. He had not formally filed leadership nominations as of Thursday evening, making his departure a public verdict on the incumbent rather than a candidacy.
Green Party
Green Party
Zack Polanski's campaign delivered the Hackney and Lewisham mayoralties and both councils, plus 543 English council seats, establishing the first Green governing base in outer London. The 153-seat MRP undershoot was attributed to FPTP tactical dynamics in marginal wards rather than a polling error in vote share.