Scottish National Party's manifesto pledges analysed
We have analysed some of the policies in the Scottish National Party's manifesto for the 2026 Holyrood election.
www.bbc.comHere’s a concise update on the SNP manifesto 2026 based on the latest public coverage.
Summary of priorities: The SNP’s 2026 Holyrood manifesto centers on cost-of-living relief, public services (notably the NHS), and growth. It includes a plan to cap bus fares at £2 and to set price caps on a basket of essential foods, alongside investment in public services and jobs. This framing aims to present a proactive, interventionist agenda tied to everyday affordability.[1][4]
Key policy highlights: In addition to the cost-of-living measures, the manifesto promises commitments such as 150,000 apprenticeships, a teacher job guarantee, a vaccine display ban, a wealth fund for Scotland, and significant investment in roads and pothole repairs. It also signals actions on climate, child poverty, housing, childcare expansion, and international development funding.[3][4][6][1]
Campaign reception and analysis: Coverage indicates the manifesto is being pitched as a "manifesto of action" with a focus on tangible, day-to-day benefits (buses, food prices, NHS funding). Analysts and media scrutinize how well these pledges translate into deliverable policy and how they balance short-term relief with longer-term renewal.[4]
Related media and events: The SNP launched the manifesto in Glasgow in mid-April 2026, with subsequent official releases and discussions through party channels and media briefings. Public engagement includes video broadcasts of the manifesto launch and party communications outlining the core package and long-term aims.[2][5][6]
Additional context: The manifesto comprises 72 pages and has been reviewed by BBC Scotland for policy details, offering a baseline for what the SNP pledges to deliver if re-elected. External responses (e.g., from business and other stakeholders) are available from outlets like WiredGov and industry groups, reflecting interest in how these pledges affect costs, infrastructure, and public services.[8][4]
Illustration: If you’d like, I can pull out a side-by-side of major pledges (bus fare cap, food price caps, NHS funding commitments, and apprenticeships) with their estimated financial or logistical implications, and provide a short, cited briefing.
Would you like a concise table of the top 6 pledges with quick feasibility notes and 1-sentence potential impacts?
Citations:
We have analysed some of the policies in the Scottish National Party's manifesto for the 2026 Holyrood election.
www.bbc.comMichelle Ferguson, CBI Scotland Director, responds to 2026 SNP manifesto
www.wired-gov.netThe SNP is always on your side. On May 7th choose a Scottish Government that works for Scotland. Make it both votes SNP.
www.snp.orgThe snp manifesto 2026 is built around a striking political bet: that voters will respond more to bills, buses and hospital waits than to constitutional argument. In Glasgow, John Swinney framed the launch around the cost of living, promising a £2 bus fare cap, a legal price ceiling on essential food items and more NHS …
www.el-balad.comWhat built environment commitments are the main parties making in the run-up to next month’s Scottish Parliament elections?
www.befs.org.uk