THE majority of Scots have more confidence in the Scottish Government to stop a further outbreak of coronavirus than UK ministers, a survey suggests.
Nearly two-thirds of Scottish respondents (62 per cent) believe Holyrood ministers are capable of preventing a second wave of Covid-19, while 38 per cent said they are confident in the UK Government doing so.
The findings are among the preliminary results from the UK-wide CovidLife survey, launched last month by the University of Edinburgh’s Generation Scotland project.
When asked about the ability of the Scottish Government to prevent a further outbreak, 9 per cent said they are very confident and 53 per cent are somewhat confident.
This compares to 27 per cent who are not very confident and 10 per cent who are not confident at all.
The poll surveyed 11,686 people in Scotland with wider figures including a further 640 respondents in England.
Just 3 per cent of the Scottish and English respondents said they are very confident the UK Government can prevent a second wave, 34 per cent are somewhat confident, 40 per cent are not very confident, and 23 per cent said they are not confident at all.
Among those in Scotland, 3 per cent said they are very confident in the UK Government, 35 per cent are somewhat confident, 40 per cent are not very confident, and 22 per cent said they are not confident at all.
The period covering the survey – April 17 to May 7 – marked a time when both governments were conveying the “stay at home” message.
A majority of respondents across the UK (85 per cent) said “stay at home, protect the NHS, save lives” was clear advice, with 65 per cent also saying it was an appropriate measure.
Professor David Porteous, lead investigator for CovidLife, said: “Our volunteers were markedly less confident in Westminster’s ability to prevent a second outbreak of Covid-19 than Holyrood’s.
“This was for the period when the UK-wide message was: ‘Stay at home, protect the NHS, save lives’.
“It will be very interesting to see how that level of confidence is affected now that Westminster has changed its message to ‘Stay alert, control the virus, save lives’.”
A Scottish Government spokesman said: “We are very grateful to the public for their continuing support of the ‘Stay at home, save lives’ essential message.
“The very difficult sacrifices which we are all making are working, but progress remains fragile and the margins for ensuring the virus does not take off again remain tight – we are at a pivotal point.
“We will not keep lockdown in place for a moment longer than is necessary and will set out a phased approach to relieving some of the pressure of lockdown as soon as we can.”
A UK Government spokesman said: “We have taken the right steps at the right time based on the best available science to tackle coronavirus and keep the whole of the UK safe.
READ MORE: Attacks on Glasgow's emergency workers surge in lockdown
“Thanks to the hard work and sacrifice of the British people, we have slowed the spread of coronavirus and prevented our NHS from being overwhelmed.
“No one part of the UK could face this pandemic alone, and the UK Government is supporting the devolved administration in Holyrood through this crisis.
“This includes £3.5 billion of funding, vital military support from the British armed forces and the UK-wide testing and PPE strategy that means Scotland is receiving additional PPE from central UK stocks.
“This is on top of an unprecedented package of UK-wide support for businesses and individuals, totalling £330 billion.”
Comments & Moderation
Readers’ comments: You are personally liable for the content of any comments you upload to this website, so please act responsibly. We do not pre-moderate or monitor readers’ comments appearing on our websites, but we do post-moderate in response to complaints we receive or otherwise when a potential problem comes to our attention. You can make a complaint by using the ‘report this post’ link . We may then apply our discretion under the user terms to amend or delete comments.
Post moderation is undertaken full-time 9am-6pm on weekdays, and on a part-time basis outwith those hours.
Read the rules hereLast Updated:
Report this comment Cancel