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Scottish identity is in. Scotland’s nationalist party is (likely) out. Why the disparity?

The Scottish National Party – whose raison d’être is Scottish independence – is losing its once-unchallenged grip on power.

Amid a cost-of-living crisis and a series of SNP leadership changes and scandals, the Labour Party is projected to knock the SNP out of the majority of Scotland’s seats in the July 4 parliamentary elections.

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Scottish national identity is soaring. But Scotland’s nationalist party appears set to lose many, if not most, of its seats in U.K. Parliament on July 4. Why has the independence movement lost its influence on the political scene?

Yet at the same time, more Scots today think of their identity as Scottish than as British – 72%, a jump of 15 points from 2012. With another independence referendum unlikely anytime soon, and the SNP significantly weakened, the movement will need to find a new way forward. That future may end up being one separate from political parties, as their utility for the movement has proved limited.

Losing the party as the movement’s North Star “doesn’t mean the cause for independence is weaker,” says political scientist Michael Heaney. “It just needs a new strategy.”

“It’s not about the SNP as the standard-bearer anymore,” says Murray Leith, a social scientist. “People feel a very strong sense of Scottish national identity, but that doesn’t automatically translate into a specific vote, either for the party or for the constitutional question.”

Growing up in this working-class city of 600,000, Sophie Johnson has long wanted her Scotland to be independent from the United Kingdom.

So impassioned was she that, at 16 years old, Ms. Johnson and her older sister were regular fixtures at Scottish pro-independence rallies. One gathering became a face-off against a sea of British unionists, who were amassing in a public square in Glasgow. Ms. Johnson and her older sister planted themselves in the middle along with a Scottish flag.

The mob shouted abuse and threw bottles at the young women, prompting the police to remove them for their own safety. But ultimately the police arrested the Johnson sisters for obstruction.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Scottish national identity is soaring. But Scotland’s nationalist party appears set to lose many, if not most, of its seats in U.K. Parliament on July 4. Why has the independence movement lost its influence on the political scene?

The incident went viral, and the sisters became a symbol of Scottish independence. “It was a very exciting time, and there was a lot of emotion,” says Ms. Johnson.

The independence movement that rallied people like Ms. Johnson a decade ago has plateaued since the defeat of the 2014 referendum by a 55% to 45% vote. The Scottish National Party – whose leaders had put forth that referendum – is losing its once-unchallenged grip on power after being battered by a cost-of-living crisis and a series of leadership changes and scandals. The Labour Party is projected to knock the SNP out of the majority of Scotland’s seats in the July 4 parliamentary elections, potentially reducing the SNP to just a quarter of its current total.

Yet at the same time, more Scots today think of their identity as Scottish than as British – 72%, a jump of 15 points from 2012. With another independence referendum unlikely anytime soon, and the SNP significantly weakened, the movement will need to find a new way forward. That future may end up being one separate from political parties, as their utility for the movement has proved limited.

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