Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has branded the PM Boris Johnson 'dangerous'

Nicola Sturgeon has launched the SNP election manifesto with a pledge to "escape Brexit and put Scotland's future in Scotland's hands".

The manifesto says that the SNP winning the most seats in Scotland would send a "clear" message that an independence referendum must be held next year.

Ms Sturgeon said the country faced a "fundamental question" over who should decide its future.

And she called for a big increase in NHS funding across the UK.

The SNP won 35 seats at the last general election in 2017, making it the third biggest party in the UK Parliament, and it hopes to hold the balance of power if there is a hung parliament after the forthcoming election.

Ms Sturgeon says she is open to forming a "progressive alliance" with other parties after the election, but has ruled out doing a deal with the Conservatives or entering into a formal coalition with Labour.

Among the key pledges in the party's election manifesto are:

A second referendum on Scottish independence next year

Another referendum on EU membership, or the revocation of Article 50 if it is the only alternative to a no-deal Brexit

To call on the UK government to match Scottish per capita NHS spending, which will also deliver increased funding for Scotland

Demand an end to austerity and press the UK government to invest in public services and the economy

To call for the UK government to devolve powers over drug policy to the Scottish Parliament

To press for the devolution of employment law

To also seek the devolution of immigration powers so that Scotland can have a "migration system that works for our economy and society"

Scrap the UK's Trident nuclear missile system

An additional 12 weeks of parental leave which would be ring fenced for fathers to take

A proposal for a NHS Protection Act to guarantee that the health service will not be used as a "bargaining trip" in future trade deals

A plan to ring-fence oil and gas revenues to pay for climate change measures.

At-a-glance: The SNP manifesto

Ms Sturgeon accused the main Westminster parties of delivering "constant chaos" since the 2014 independence referendum, which saw Scottish voters choose to remain in the UK by 55% to 45%.

And she claimed that Prime Minister Boris Johnson was "dangerous and unfit for office" and that his proposed Brexit deal would be a "nightmare" for Scotland.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption General election 2019: What's in the SNP's manifesto?

She told the manifesto launch event in Glasgow: "A vote for the SNP is a vote to escape Brexit, It is a vote to put Scotland's future in Scotland's hands, and it is a vote to deprive Boris Johnson's Conservative Party of a majority.

"The reality of Westminster control over Scotland is this: a right-wing Tory government Scotland didn't vote for and a prime minister in Boris Johnson who is dangerous and unfit for office."

Mr Johnson has already ruled out granting the formal consent that Ms Sturgeon, the Scottish first minister, says would be needed to ensure any independence referendum was legal.

Jeremy Corbyn has said he would oppose a referendum in the first two years of a Labour government - but the party says it would not oppose one if there is a pro-independence majority after the next Scottish Parliament election in 2021.

But Ms Sturgeon said the decision on if and when a referendum is held should be one for the "people of Scotland and the Scottish Parliament".

She added: "The democratically-elected Scottish Parliament has agreed the people should be given a choice over their future. An unelected Tory Westminster government has no right to overturn that decision.

"So an SNP victory in this election would be a clear instruction from the people of Scotland to respect Scottish democracy.

"There must be no Westminster veto over the right of the people of Scotland to decide their own future."

Image copyright Reuters Image caption Boris Johnson has given a "cast iron guarantee" that he would reject any request for consent to hold indyref2 if he wins the election

And despite Mr Johnson's campaign pledge to "get Brexit done", Ms Sturgeon warned it was "nowhere near done" and predicted that Brexit would dominate Westminster politics for years to come.

She said: "The Tories have barely got going - they haven't even started trade talks. Because of Johnson's hard line position, there is every chance the UK will leave without a trade deal next year. That would be a catastrophe for jobs.

"And even if he somehow avoids that, his dream deal will be a nightmare for Scotland.

"It will take Scotland out of the single market - which is eight times the size of the UK alone - and out of the Customs Union, the world's biggest trading block."

The SNP are not pretending that there is any chance they could form a government in Westminster, no matter how many seats they win.

So Nicola Sturgeon admits these manifesto pledges can only be met if this election produces a hung parliament, if Labour are the largest party, if the SNP hold the balance of power, and if they can agree a deal with Jeremy Corbyn.

Ms Sturgeon has already ruled out a formal coalition with Labour, saying she favours a "progressive alliance" with like-minded parties.

In those circumstances the most important ask for Nicola Sturgeon is getting Mr Corbyn to agree to a second independence referendum. Without that, any kind of deal would be unthinkable.

Read more from Sarah here

Ms Sturgeon also unveiled further details of the demands the SNP would make in return for supporting Labour if there is a hung parliament.

The party says that central to this will be proposals to significantly increase funding for the NHS across the UK - with the SNP saying it is proposing more substantial funding increases than any other major party in the election.

The SNP will demand that the next UK government raises per-head health spending south of the border to levels seen in Scotland.

The party says spending is currently £136 per head higher north of the border, and that such a move would see NHS resource funding in England increase by more than £35bn between 2019/20 and 2023/24.

This would also mean an additional £4bn in Barnett consequential for the Scottish NHS.

What are the other parties pledging on Scottish independence, Brexit and Trident?

Image copyright EPA

Brexit: The Conservatives say they will deliver Brexit by the end of January 2020 under the terms of the PM's deal negotiated with the EU.

The Liberal Democrats have vowed to cancel Brexit if elected as a majority government, or otherwise campaign for a referendum including the option of staying in the EU.

Labour wants to renegotiate the PM's Brexit deal then put it to a referendum within six months, with the option of staying in the EU. The party has not said which side it would take in such a vote.

Trident: The Conservatives say they will maintain the Trident nuclear deterrent.

The Liberal Democrats support maintaining a minimum nuclear deterrent with leader Jo Swinson making clear she would be prepared to deploy Trident if she was prime minister.

Labour supports the renewal of the Trident nuclear deterrent but also said it would lead multilateral efforts to achieve a nuclear-free world under the non-proliferation treaty.

Scottish independence: Labour opposes Scottish independence but has said a Labour-run UK government would agree to another referendum if pro-yes parties win a majority at the next Holyrood election in 2021.

The Conservatives are opposed to a second independence referendum with Boris Johnson claiming he could "guarantee" there will not be a second vote if the Conservatives win the general election.

The Liberal Democrats say they oppose a second independence referendum and oppose independence.

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