Nicola Sturgeon sensationally quit after admitting she’s too divisive and holding back SNP’s pursuit of independence

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Nicola Sturgeon speaking during a press conference at Bute House in Edinburgh where she announced she will stand down as First Minister of Scotland. Picture date: Wednesday February 15, 2023. PA Photo. See PA story POLITICS Sturgeon. Photo credit should read: Jane Barlow/PA Wire

NICOLA Sturgeon quit as Scotland’s First Minister today after admitting she had become a divisive figure holding back the SNP’s pursuit of independence.

Close to tears, she said she had become a barrier to breaking up the UK after eight years in power.

An emotional Sturgeon announced her decision to resign

She made her resignation speech at a hastily arranged press conference

The decision comes amid controversial gender laws in Scotland

Her sudden departure shocked politicians across the divide in Westminster and Holyrood after she said weeks ago there was “plenty left in the tank”.

But one SNP official said: “Better to leave before the ship sinks and you’re pushed.”

Critics called her departure a “hammer blow” to the independence cause — and urged her successor to scrap the controversial gender laws which played a key role in her downfall.

Ms Sturgeon, 52, made her resignation speech at a hastily arranged press conference, telling the audience: “Now to be clear, I’m not expecting violins here.

“But I am a human being as well as a politician.”

She said of her decision to go: “In my head and in my heart, I know that time is now that it is right for me, for my party and for the country.”

Speaking at Bute House, Edinburgh, her official residence, she said fixed opinions about her were “barriers to debate” with independence viewed “through the prism of Nicola Sturgeon”.

She said support for the nationalist cause “needs to be solidified”.

Ms Sturgeon went on: “To achieve that, we must reach across the divide in Scottish politics and my judgment now is that a new leader would be better able to do this.

“Someone about whom the mind of almost everyone in the country is not already made up, for better or worse.

“Someone who is not subject to quite the same polarised opinions, fair or unfair, as I now am.”

Ms Sturgeon said the public outcry over putting transgender double rapist Isla Bryson in a women’s jail was not the final straw in her decision to quit.

She also said leaving was not a reaction to “short-term pressures” after Westminster blocked her hoped-for gender reforms.

Her decision came as polling revealed 44 per cent support for separatism — less than that recorded at the 2014 vote in Scotland.

It also marked the biggest lead for the No campaign since June 2017.

Only one in five Scottish voters backed her plan to treat the general election as a de facto referendum on independence.

Her bid for nationalism also suffered a major blow when the Supreme Court ruled she could not hold a legally binding vote without Parliament’s permission.

PM Rishi Sunak refused to say if he thought Ms Sturgeon’s decision to quit was a blow for the independence cause, but commented that the pair “didn’t agree on everything”.

Cabinet Minister Alister Jack said her resignation presented a “welcome opportunity for the Scottish government to change course, and to drop its divisive obsession with independence”.

Tory MP Kevin Foster said: “Her departure is clearly a hammer blow to the cause of separatism and the movement is clearly losing ground.”

Labour shadow ministers were said to be cock-a-hoop as they believe her departure will clear the way for them to win a dozen seats at the election.

One Labour MP said: “It’s game on.”

Many commentators said the backlash over Ms Sturgeon’s gender self-ID law and its knock-on effect for independence support had seen her off.

Of her Gender Recognition Reform bill, Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove said: “I hope her successor will address the concerns now so vividly apparent with the GRR bill.”

Ms Sturgeon refused to comment on whether she had been questioned by police, or expected to be, over an alleged fraud within her party focused on £600,000 of missing cash from an online crowd-funder for a second independence vote.

The police declined to comment.

She also faced questions over her husband Peter Murrell’s £107,000 loan to the SNP.

Sturgeon became Deputy First Minister when the SNP formed a minority government in 2007

Sturgeon took the top job when Alex Salmond stood down following the failed 2014 independence vote

Ms Sturgeon joined the SNP at 16, saying former PM Margaret Thatcher inspired in her a “strong feeling Scotland should not be governed by a Tory government that we hadn’t elected”.

She was elected to the Scottish Parliament in 1999 and, when the SNP formed a minority government in 2007, became Deputy First Minister, later taking the top job when Alex Salmond stood down following the 2014 independence vote defeat.

She fell out with Mr Salmond after he faced sexual harassment allegations.

He was acquitted, and the Scottish government paid £500,000 towards his legal fees over its handling of the complaints.

Mr Salmond claimed senior SNP figures had tried to sabotage his career, which Ms Sturgeon denied.

Earlier today, he said she was a “first-rate communicator” but her campaign for independence had “no clear strategy”.

Ms Sturgeon’s domestic record has been dogged by the NHS’s struggles in the aftermath of the pandemic, with rocketing waiting times in emergency departments.

She faced major criticism over failing to close the widening gap between the richest and poorest pupils on areas including reading, writing and numeracy.

Ms Sturgeon will be First Minister until a successor is announced and will be a Scottish Parliament backbencher until at least 2026.

Bookies have Angus Robertson and Kate Forbes as favourites to take over.

Sturgeon faced questions over husband Peter Murrell’s SNP loan

Sturgeon masked for Covid in the Scottish Parliament in 2021
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