Douglas Ross has insisted it is “completely bonkers” that Holyrood’s first debate after the Christmas break will be about independence and not the “crisis” in the NHS.
The Scottish Conservative chief hit out at the SNP-Green Government for making the first debate of 2023 about Scotland’s constitutional future.
It comes as he said the NHS in Scotland was in “the grip of a winter crisis” with waiting times “spiralling” and staff left “overworked”.
Mr Ross said: “As people are lying on hospital floors and dying because of the delays in being treated, the SNP’s negligence is quite frankly criminal.”
READ MORE: Douglas Ross blames UK Tories' turmoil for 'profound difficulties'
With the Supreme Court having ruled last year that the Scottish Government cannot stage a second referendum on independence without Westminster’s consent, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has vowed to make the next UK general election a de facto referendum.
More details of this strategy are to be disclosed at a special SNP conference in March.
Mr Ross, meanwhile, revealed Scottish Tories are planning their own special conference for the following month – saying he would use this event to set out a “vision that will deliver an end to the nationalism that has divided Scotland since 2007” – the year the SNP came to power at Holyrood.
READ MORE: Starmer: People backed independence to take 'control over their lives'
The Conservative proposals will be “focused on making our nation more prosperous, better educated, with better public services,” he insisted.
The Scottish Conservative leader said this year presented a “golden opportunity to further develop our Scottish Conservative vision for Scotland’s future”.
His speech took place just days before MSPs return to Holyrood on Tuesday, with the Scottish Parliament scheduled to discuss the independence issue then in a Government debate on “People’s Right to Choose – Respecting Scotland’s Democratic Mandate”.
But Mr Ross said: “It think that is completely bonkers, it is absolutely ridiculous.
“It’s not a priority, it’s not a priority for me, it’s not a priority for my party. There is so much more we can focus on.”
READ MORE: Starmer: SNP's de facto plans 'standing in the way of common sense'
Mr Ross added: “We’re starting right now with a crisis in our NHS, we know there’s the potential for our education system to suffer as a result of strike action, we know there is this real, cost-of-living crisis that is going to continue.
“We don’t know what’s going to happen in Ukraine, we don’t know what’s going to happen for the remainder of the year, we know public services are struggling, they need more support.
“Yet the first debate we’re having in Holyrood is independence. That’s the first thing the SNP/Green Government think is important to speak about in the Parliament just down the road just next week.”
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