The National (Scotland)

Praise as former SNP leader ignores ‘pantomime’

- BY STEPH BRAWN

CAMPAIGNER­S have called for the “ludicrous” requiremen­t for MSPs to declare service to the monarchy to be ditched after Humza Yousaf broke with tradition in his resignatio­n letter to the King.

As he quit as first minister, Yousaf said in a letter to King Charles that “with my humble duty” he was writing to resign from office.

He added it “has been my pleasure to serve Your Majesty” but notably republican Yousaf did not repeat his predecesso­r Nicola Sturgeon’s words, as she wrote: “I have the honour to be, Sir, Your Majesty’s humble and obedient servant.”

According to Debrett’s, a Londonbase­d etiquette coaching company, the first line of a letter to the King should begin with the phrase “with my humble duty” but it should also end with: “I have the honour to remain, Sir, Your Majesty’s most humble and obedient servant”.

CEO of anti-monarchy Republic, Graham Smith, said he hoped that incoming first minister John Swinney would take note of Yousaf’s “small step” towards ditching the “arcane” language MSPs are required to use towards the monarchy when they are elected.

After an election, MSPs are sworn in by taking an oath or affirmatio­n with the oath being “I swear by Almighty God that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to His

Majesty King Charles, his heirs and successors, according to law. So help me God”.

Swinney has previously said he would prefer to keep the monarchy in the event of Scottish independen­ce.

Asked what he thought of Yousaf toning down the language of Sturgeon’s letter, Smith told The National: “First ministers, like all politician­s, should see themselves as servants of the people, not of an unelected monarch who represents no one but himself.

“Let’s hope [John] Swinney and others take note of this small step toward ditching this arcane language that is offensive to all our democratic values.”

Campaigner­s branded Sturgeon’s letter “deeply disturbing” last year with Scottish anti-monarchy group Our Republic calling out the “bizarre an anachronis­tic ritual that paints the head of Scotland’s Government as no more than a servant of the King”.

Tristan Gray, convener of Our Republic, said MSPs should be able to choose who to declare their loyalty to, adding that Yousaf’s letter still showed he had to tread a “bizarre middle-ground” as a republican.

He said: “After the 2021 election, many MSPs took the opportunit­y to protest the ludicrous, archaic, and anti-democratic requiremen­t to declare their service to the monarchy before taking their seats as representa­tives in the Scottish Parliament.

“Nicola Sturgeon was one who did so, on behalf of her party, declaring her loyalty first to the Scottish people.

“For her [Sturgeon’s] resignatio­n to have included a dedication as an ‘obedient servant; to the King was a shock, and cast doubt on the value of that earlier protest.

“Humza Yousaf, by contrast, has stayed true to this bizarre middlegrou­nd our political representa­tives have been forced to tread. Both in doing their actual elected jobs as representi­ng the people who elected them – and playing this pantomime act of subservien­ce to a monarchy we now know, from polling this week, that Scots don’t even want.

“It’s long past time we put this charade behind us, and I hope we see the Scottish Parliament make a request to Westminste­r to amend the Scotland Act so that Scottish politician­s can choose who they declare their loyalty to – and let the Scottish public judge them on that.”

It’s long past time we put this charade behind us

 ?? ?? Humza Yousaf did not use the words ‘humble and obedient servant’ in his letter to King
Humza Yousaf did not use the words ‘humble and obedient servant’ in his letter to King

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom