A Quote by Nicola Sturgeon

I'm the leader of the SNP. I think you would expect me to say I would vote SNP in whatever constituency I lived in. — © Nicola Sturgeon
I'm the leader of the SNP. I think you would expect me to say I would vote SNP in whatever constituency I lived in.
I take responsibility for everything that happens in the SNP as leader.
Vote SNP for a party that always stands up for Scotland, that is stronger for Scotland, and a government that will keep the country moving in the right direction.
I was fascinated, long before I joined the SNP, in the world around me; current affairs really interested me.
I have huge respect for Nicola Sturgeon and for the SNP.
The SNP talks a lot - but they have proved that they cannot deliver.
I hope nobody in England is afraid of the SNP - there is absolutely no need to be.
No one anticipated the SNP wiping out Labour in Scotland in 2015.
The SNP became a minority government in 2007, then a majority one in 2011. But Labour viewed what was happening as some kind of aberration. They felt the problem wasn't theirs: they didn't have to change; the Scottish people had just gone down this wrong road, and if they waited long enough, they would find their way back.
If you were to describe me as teetotal, on behalf of my constituency I'd have to sue; that would lose me every vote in the Highlands.
My pledge to you is that the SNP will put women and gender equality right at the heart of the Westminster agenda.
I wish I could do whatever I liked behind the curtain of “madness”. Then: I’d arrange flowers, all day long, I’d paint; pain, love and tenderness, I would laugh as much as I feel like at the stupidity of others, and they would all say: “Poor thing, she’s crazy!” (Above all I would laugh at my own stupidity.) I would build my world which while I lived, would be in agreement with all the worlds. The day, or the hour, or the minute that I lived would be mine and everyone else’s - my madness would not be an escape from “reality”.
The SNP are far from radical, but they do have a knack for producing the odd simple, progressive policy that's hard to argue against.
Anyone who seriously wants to keep Scotland in the U.K. must seek to stop the rise of the SNP, not to fuel and encourage it.
Go first to your Highest Thought about yourself. Imagine the you that you would be if you lived that thought every day. Imagine what you would think, do, and say, and how you would respond to what others would do and say. Do you see any difference between that projection and what you think, do, and say now?
I love Britain. It really worries me, the prospect of Ed Miliband propped up by Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP and what that could do to our country. It's absolutely right that we highlight to voters that potential risk.
Maybe unlike a lot of people who join the SNP today, I never had any expectation of a political career.
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