The SNP's 2024 manifesto demanded full devolution of income tax, National Insurance, VAT and the power to levy windfall taxes to the Scottish Parliament, and assumed a £30 billion annual revenue uplift would follow an independent Scotland rejoining the European Union. The framing was Scotland constrained by Westminster fiscal architecture and able to deliver progressive growth only through full powers and EU membership.
The Programme for Government published by John Swinney in May 2025 reframed the SNP's economic role as Holyrood delivery rather than Westminster ask, with four priorities including eradicating child poverty and growing the Scottish economy. The wider tax devolution and EU rejoin growth arguments have not been Westminster campaigns since the 2024 election.
The SNP manifesto committed at least £10 billion of capital investment in the Scottish NHS over ten years and pledged that all UK Government funding consequentials from NHS England spending increases would be passed through to Scottish health and social care. NHS Scotland is devolved to the Scottish Government.
NHS Scotland delivery has become the area on which the SNP is most directly judged at Holyrood. Waiting times, A&E performance and recruitment difficulties have been the dominant Scottish political questions through 2025 and 2026. The party that has run health policy in Scotland since 2007 is now defending its own delivery record on the brief it cannot externalise.
The SNP manifesto pledged to push for a bespoke Scottish visa system, opposed the Rwanda removals scheme, supported the right to work for asylum seekers, and argued that Scotland's demographic and labour market needs required a different immigration approach than the UK wide net migration framing.
Education is devolved. The manifesto reaffirmed the maintenance of free university tuition for Scottish students, opposition to charging fees, and ongoing investment in early years and school education. The Westminster ask was funding consequentials and a UK wide rejection of fee increases.
The manifesto demanded £28 billion per year of UK Government investment to meet net zero targets, including at least £500 million to support Scotland's transition from oil and gas. The SNP's position on new North Sea oil and gas licences was that they should be allocated on a "rigorously evidence led, case by case basis", a position materially softer than Labour's no new licences pledge.
The refreshed Scottish energy strategy promised since 2022 remained delayed through 2025. The "case by case" North Sea position has not been amended despite Labour's licensing freeze and the November 2025 North Sea Future Plan. The party that has held the energy and just transition brief for nineteen years has not yet published the strategy that brief implies.
Housing in Scotland is largely devolved. The manifesto's Westminster ask was reintroduction of a simplified Help to Buy ISA scheme, annual uplifts to Local Housing Allowance, and devolution of Housing Benefit and Local Housing Allowance powers to the Scottish Parliament. The manifesto contained limited UK wide housing supply commitments.
The manifesto's central UK welfare demands were that Westminster scrap the two child benefit cap, scrap the bedroom tax, and expand carer's allowance. Social Security Scotland delivers devolved benefits including the Scottish Child Payment.
Labour scrapped the two child benefit cap at the November 2025 Budget, removing the SNP's headline UK welfare demand from contested space. The two child cap was the defining welfare distinction the SNP took into the 2024 election and the case for it has been won by another party.
Criminal justice is devolved. The manifesto's Westminster engagement was limited to opposing the wider Conservative sentencing reform agenda and to defending Scottish policy distinctions including the not proven verdict reform process.
The manifesto pledged removal of Trident nuclear weapons from Scotland as a precondition for an independent Scotland's foreign policy, opposition to UK arms sales to Israel, continued support for Ukraine including military assistance, and restoration of overseas aid spending to 0.7 per cent of gross national income. The SNP supported NATO membership while opposing NATO expansion.
The SNP manifesto positioned EU rejoin as a post independence promise: an independent Scotland would seek European Union membership, with the rejoin route opening only after a successful independence vote. The party did not commit to a UK level rejoin campaign within the 2024 2029 parliament.
The SNP's 2024 manifesto put independence on page one line one and committed that an SNP majority of Scottish Westminster seats would trigger an immediate ask for a section 30 order from the UK Government to enable a re run of the 2014 independence referendum. The Westminster mandate strategy was the single most important constitutional ambition of the manifesto.
The SNP returned nine of Scotland's fifty seven seats in 2024 with a vote share of 30 per cent, down from 45 per cent in 2019. Swinney's Programme for Government, published May 2025, redefined the independence ask as contingent on an SNP outright majority at the May 2026 Holyrood election, with a constitutional convention to follow and a draft constitution to be prepared. The Westminster route to independence has been replaced by a Holyrood majority gamble.