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John Swinney wins vote to be re-appointed first minister

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CitrixNews Staff
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John Swinney wins vote to be re-appointed first minister
John Swinney wins vote to be re-appointed first minister43 minutes agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleAngus CochraneSenior political journalist, BBC ScotlandPA Media John Swinney, who has a bald head and glasses, sits at a desk in the Scottish Parliament with his chin resting on his handPA MediaJohn Swinney's SNP won 58 seats at the Holyrood election

John Swinney is to be re-appointed as first minister of Scotland.

The SNP leader won the nomination in a vote of the Scottish Parliament.

The leaders of Holyrood's five other parties also stood for the role, but the SNP's comfortable election victory made Swinney's nomination a virtual certainty.

His appointment will be rubber-stamped by the King before a signing-in ceremony at the Court of Session on Wednesday.

Swinney, who has served as first minister since taking over from Humza Yousaf two years ago, will appoint a cabinet on Wednesday.

SNP leader John Swinney re-elected as Scotland’s first minister

Swinney defends food prices policy ahead of first minister vote

He told MSPs he would provide "reliable, trusted leadership in turbulent times".

Swinney said he would work with the whole chamber to ease cost of living, improve the NHS, grow the economy and protect the environment.

The first minister said that with a record pro-independence majority in parliament between SNP and Green MSPs, the public had made it known "loud and clear" that it wanted independence, and that he would "seek to abide by those wishes".

He insisted that his government was ready to deliver "ambitious, practical" plans to move towards independence.

The SNP won a clear victory at the Holyrood election, but did not secure an outright majority.

This means Swinney's government will need help from other parties to pass laws.

Following the election of SNP veteran Kenneth Gibson as presiding officer, the SNP cohort has been cut to 57 MSPs - eight short of a majority.

To win the nomination for first minister, candidates needed to gain more votes than all of their rivals combined. The vote was repeated until this happened, with the lowest-scoring candidate eliminated in each round.

Reform UK Scotland and Labour finished a distant second place in the election, returning 17 MSPs each.

The Greens won a record 15 seats, followed by the Conservatives on 12 and the Lib Dems on 10.

Swinney won the nomination after three rounds of voting, with Alex Cole-Hamilton of the LibDems and Tory Russell Findlay eliminated in the first two rounds of voting.

Getty Images Malcolm Offord, who has grey hair swept back and black rimmed glasses. He is wearing a business suit with wood panelling behind him Getty ImagesReform's Malcolm Offord was one of six party leaders to make a pitch to MSPs

Making their pitches to MSPs, opposition leaders all called for action to bring down the cost of living and improve the NHS. There were also repeated warnings about the public becoming disillusioned with politics.

Reform's Malcolm Offord claimed the SNP had created a "broken system of high taxation and welfare dependency", arguing that only his party could deliver "prosperity for every Scot".

Labour leader Anas Sarwar, acknowledging it had been a disappointing election for his party, said the parliament had a responsibility to take on "the politics of fear and blame" and win over a "scunnered" public.

Green co-leader Gillian Mackay noted that Scots had elected the largest-ever pro-independence majority, insisting the country should have the chance to vote to choose its constitutional future.

But Conservative chief Findlay, recognising that the vote was a foregone conclusion", used his speech to urge Swinney not to put "constitutional paralysis above good governance".

Lib Dem Cole-Hamilton urged the SNP to put the "divisive" issue of a second independence referendum "in the deep freezer".

A second independence referendum would have to be signed off by the UK government, which has repeatedly ruled out another vote.

Swinney has not set out in detail how he intends to overcome this constitutional impasse.

Swinney's comeback

Swinney's re-appointment caps a remarkable turnaround for the SNP stalwart.

The Holyrood veteran appeared to have retired from frontbench politics in 2023, when he stepped down from cabinet following Nicola Sturgeon's resignation as first minister.

That all changed when Humza Yousaf's premiership imploded in April 2024.

Swinney, citing a "profound sense of duty", decided he still had something to offer his party and country.

He was unable to prevent an SNP collapse at the 2024 general election. But having seen his party returned to government at Holyrood, Swinney has secured a fifth successive term of SNP government.

By-election to replace Stephen Flynn set for next month

Scottish LabourSNP (Scottish National Party)Scottish Liberal DemocratsScotlandJohn SwinneyScottish ParliamentScottish ConservativesScottish Greens

Originally reported by BBC News