Edinburgh Evening News

Yousaf has left his successor a tricky legacy

- Ian Swanson

‘‘ Leading figures have begun to rally round the idea of bringing back John Swinney

Humza Yousaf may have quit as First Minister but it looks as if the SNP government will live to fight another day. The Greens, who were set to back the Tory vote of no confidence in Mr Yousaf, will not vote for Labour's motion to bring down the whole Scottish Government.

But whoever takes over the SNP helm now will be leading a minority government, which means constant deals with other parties on an issue-by-issue basis to get legislatio­n through and win votes in parliament.

In his resignatio­n speech Mr Yousaf insisted he had done the right thing in ending the powershari­ng deal with the Greens though he acknowledg­ed he had "underestim­ated" the hurt and upset the decision caused. But he has bequeathed his successor a tricky situation for the next two years up until the 2026 Holyrood elections.

Hunting for MSPs who will side with you in a vote is not just for motions of confidence, it's for the rest of the life of this parliament­ary session.

Minority government is not new to Holyrood. When the SNP first won power back in 2007, it had only 47 seats out of the 129, but survived a full term with relatively few defeats. And the SNP did the same again between 2016 and 2021.

But one of reasons Nicola Sturgeon signed the Bute House Agreement with Greens after the 2021 elections was to avoid votes of confidence like the ones which she and her deputy John Swinney survived towards the end of that parliament.

By then the political situation had become much more febrile, not least due to the spectacula­r fallout between Ms Sturgeon and her erstwhile mentor Alex Salmond. And in an echo of that bitter episode, SNP insiders made clear that in the effort to secure the necessary votes for Mr Yousaf to survive there could be no concession­s to Mr Salmond's Alba party. Any such move would be "a deal with the devil" and "intolerabl­e".

Although Green co-leader Patrick Harvie says his party "stands ready" to work with a new SNP leader, no-one is expecting a formal arrangemen­t. It's going to mean repeated negotiatio­ns.

And the need to keep the door open to co-operation with the Greens could also influence the choice of SNP leader. Mr Harvie was clear that Kate Forbes was not an appealing prospect.

 ?? ?? Humza Yousaf leaves after announcing his resignatio­n
Humza Yousaf leaves after announcing his resignatio­n
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