Three days after Scotland’s First Minister Humza Yousaf proclaimed he would fight and win a vote of no confidence in his leadership, he has resigned as SNP party leader. Unable to win back the support of the Greens after severing the coalition his minority government had signed up to, and unwilling to bargain with Alex Salmond’s Alba Party, he boxed himself into a corner, leaving the SNP and independence movement in crisis.
The missteps that led him to this point will go down in history as a masterclass in how not to do politics. It was the Greens who first cast doubt on the future of the Bute House Agreement (BHA) — calling an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) so their membership could vote on it after the SNP government reneged on ambitious climate change targets. But it was the abrupt manner in which Yousaf preempted that EGM, breaking off the deal without talks, that led to the Greens’ current fury and refusal to back him in a no-confidence motion. That motion had been lodged by Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross and was due to take place on Thursday.
With the numbers stacked evenly for and against him, Yousaf found himself relying on the support of Alba’s one MSP Ash Regan, formerly of the SNP, who stood against him in last year’s leadership contest before defecting.
The First Minister called her move to Alba “no great loss”, so she could perhaps be forgiven the obvious schadenfreude she felt at her position of power. Salmond, too, was barely able to suppress his glee as his party sought to extract concessions — including the protection “of the dignity and safety of women and children” and “progress on independence”. Alba also wanted the SNP to step aside in some Scottish seats.
To outside observers, these demands from a party pursuing the same endgame might seem reasonable. But to those following Scottish politics, the notion the SNP could cosy up to Alba was unthinkable. The feud between Salmond and his successor Nicola Sturgeon is at the heart of the independence movement’s ongoing civil war, and Alba has striven to undermine first her and then Yousaf’s leadership.
The reference to “the safety of women” also underscored another fault line: the ill-fated Gender Recognition Reform (GRR) bill. It would be difficult to overestimate the extent to which a polarisation over trans rights has riven the party, and fed into its current travails. Those on the movement’s gender-critical wing — including Regan — have long railed against the Greens’ supposed “wokeness”, and held them responsible for pushing the SNP towards more “progressive” policies. Meanwhile, the Greens have done little to ease the situation, criticising the recent Cass review and the decision to pause the prescribing of puberty blockers.
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SubscribeSo long, Bonnie Prince Useless!
From what I’ve gathered, I can count the number of people that still like this guy without running out of digits. On one hand.
A ridiculous headline.
Its true he never stood a chance; being an utter cretin has that effect.
“…Humza Yousaf never stood a chance…”
Humza: is it cause I is black?
(just a jokey AliG reference in case anyone wants to get their knickers in a twist)
It’s systemic racism stooopid !
The amusing thing is that it’s Hindu and Sikh immigrants who are heaving the biggest sign of relief.
For all the loud proclamations against racism, the difference in the way “kaffirs” are treated in Britain versus Pakistan is rather stark….and as the riots in Leicester showed, you can take the minority out of Pakistan, but…
I thought American politics were messed up and useless; no wonder the west can’t get anything done.
When you repeatedly proclaim that everyone is against you eventually it will become true.
Can unHerd journalists please try and avoid coy euphemisms such as ‘gender-critical views’ and ‘women’s reproductive rights’?
I have a new acronym to avoid the euphemisms for the blessed Humza – yardeig: yet another race and DEI grifter
YARDIEG – yet another race and DIE grifter. It’s DIE, not DEI, as there’s nothing godly about it.
Indeed. It has become fashionable to speak in euphemisms as that provides a patina of high-mindedness over straight talk. “Reproductive rights” gives the appearance of being far more than just abortion, even though it’s not.
Wouldn’t reproductive rights also include access to contraception?
Not being allowed to have children would be against one’s reproductive rights
When he complained and denigrated his own own country for being 95% white it is hardly surprising that Hunza Yousaf was hoist with his own petard when the government of which he was First Minister passed the recent so called ‘Prevention of Hate Crimes’ Act the consequences of which are so absurd it is hard to believe how it could have ever been passed in the first place.
Hear hear – that law made him a laughing stock before any of this happened
What I found interesting was the “script” the Police gave to defend Yousef on this matter was that he in no way intended to offend anyone. Yet we have been told that under this law, the self proclaimed intent of the accused is of no significance. It is only the perceived hurt felt by the person making the accusation.
Were I in the position of being accused under this law, my defence would be a repeat of the one given by the Police on Yousefs’ behalf.
But will they now revoke this legislation? My guess is not. The civil servants love this kind of legislation too much. It is just the replacement of one clown by an other clown in the ongoing circus act.
Even by the standards of today’s degraded leaders, this total and utter plank stands alone; what an achievement, what a legacy.
When one of your most lasting comments is lambasting a predominantly white nation for the “crime” of being predominantly white, that’s probably not going to engender lasting support. Compounded by the party’s headlong dive into the trans business and a flirtation with green policies many people realize are self-harming, the outcome starts to look predictable.
‘If Forbes is considered too divisive, an alternative would be to find a safer, more unifying figure, who could steer the Scottish government through the general election and on to the next scheduled Holyrood election in 2026.’
Herein lies the problem – they have no real power. The general election is what matters- either the Scots break away or stay stuck with a parliament that is at best a junior partner to Westminster – ditto the Welsh Cenedd. All else is vanity.
The Scottish Parliament is junior to Westminster. Fact. Whether the SNP admit to it or not.
They’re either junior to Westminster within the UK or they’d be junior to Brussels within the eu.
That’s if the EU would have them.
My wife had R4 on earlier this morning and someone (Nick Robinson perhaps) was talking about the drama in Scotland “ever since Nicola Sturgeon was forced to resign”.
Yes, you heard that right. The BBC version now appears to be that she was forced out. Victim status awarded !
Another one for the BBC disinformation unit ?
Puir Nicola shed a tear in her hankie
She was soooo upset
The wee luikalike Krankie.
I’ll play devil’s advocate for the BBC (just this once) but could the use of the word “forced” be meaning that Sturgeon had no choice rather than was being compelled?
Either way, it’s not a great choice of wording.
I get your point, but it’s strange that the BBC always seem to be on the “convenient” side of ambiguities like this.
The SNP and the Greens seem spectacularly incompetent.
Hard to think of someone worse than Swinney. I do remember him when he was “education” secretary during COVID.
Mind you, there is indeed a wealth of candidates, all equally unappealing, to choose from, but Swinney… I just can’t stomach him.
Anyway, it is true that Useless never stood a chance, but that was from the outset, not just the last few days.
Looks like this could lead to further division within the nationalist movement. Oh dear.
He had no chance because he’s a bit thick, but also because the party he inherited was an absolute basket-case of corruption. A corruption that saw Lawfare exercised against the likes of Craig Murray and Mark Hirst for commenting on the (also Lawfare) prosecution of Alex Salmond (in which at least one of the accusers quite obviously perjured herself). Such corruption of the Scottish legal system is enabled by the fact that the Lord Advocate also sits in the Scottish Cabinet (with the likes of Nicola Sturgeon and Yousaf).
Fun fact: Murray was jailed for months for the unprecedented ‘crime’ of ‘jigsaw identification’, bit it turned out that the majority of people who managed to piece together who Salmond’s accusers were in fact did so because they had read an article written by someone with very strong links to the author of this Unherd piece. That author remained uncharged. It’s a funny old world and no mistake.
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2020/05/a-very-political-prosecution/
After enduring 25 years of devolved government, I fail to see any benefit to Scotland. It’s just been a playgroup for the “eternal student” mentality of political obsessives and activists.
All the Holyrood discussion is basically squabbling over who gets to distribute wealth, and who to. Not a thought about how wealth is created. It’s inevitable that this leads to situations like Nicola and Humza found themselves in.
I don’t care. Just put them in a care home, give them all VR sets and they can live in their alternate universe and leave the rest of us alone. It would be cheaper than having them set policy.
Sad but true: people get the govt they deserve. The only person to blame for the terrible governance in Holyrood is the Scottish voter.