The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

From ‘real leader’ to crushing defeat

- ADELE MERSON

Angus Robertson spent 16 years representi­ng Moray until being toppled by Douglas Ross in 2017 in a headline-grabbing victory.

It was one of the biggest scalps in UK politics to see the SNP’s Westminste­r leader lose out as the Tories swept to victory across the north-east.

Now, the former Moray MP has emerged as the bookies’ favourite to become the next first minister, after entering politics in 2001.

He is currently Constituti­on Secretary with a brief which includes planning for a long-promised second independen­ce referendum.

The 53-year-old entered Holyrood in 2021, to represent Edinburgh Central, and was quickly elevated to Nicola Sturgeon’s cabinet.

He is one of the few surviving veterans of the Alex Salmond era and was the party’s Westminste­r leader from 2007 until 2017.

Over 20 years in elected politics and his leadership experience is likely to have contribute­d to bookies tipping him for the position.

Born in London, to a Scottish father, Struan, who was an engineer, and a German mother, Anne, who was a nurse, he was later brought up in Edinburgh.

He graduated from Aberdeen University in 1991 with an MA Honours in politics and internatio­nal relations.

After his studies, he became a journalist, working as a foreign and diplomatic correspond­ent in Central Europe for the BBC World Service.

A fluent German speaker, he served as a European and internatio­nal affairs adviser to SNP MSPs at Holyrood before he was elected to Westminste­r in 2001 to represent Moray.

He was Scotland’s youngest MP at the time and served as the SNP’s spokesman on defence and internatio­nal relations.

In 2007, he became the SNP Westminste­r leader, following Mr Salmond’s election as first minister.

The MP co-ordinated the party’s election victories at Holyrood in 2007 and 2011, as well as the party’s landslide at Westminste­r in 2015.

He won plaudits for his performanc­es in Prime Minister’s Questions, with many describing him as the “real opposition leader”.

Locally, he campaigned to save the Kinloss Army Barracks from closure in 2016. He was one of the party’s most high-profile losses in the 2017 general election.

Mr Ross stunned pundits when he overtook Mr Robertson with a swing of 13,000 votes – more than a quarter of the turn-out.

The Scottish Tory leader previously said he believed his opponent had been punished for focusing on Westminste­r grandstand­ing instead of local concerns.

Mr Robertson married Jennifer Dempsie, a former SNP aide and founding partner at Forres-based communicat­ions consultanc­y Spey, in 2016.

He resigned as the SNP’s depute leader in February 2018, after losing his seat in the Commons.

The following year, he went on to launch the proindepen­dence think tank Progress Scotland.

The veteran put himself forward for the seat of Edinburgh Central in the 2021 Holyrood election.

Ahead of the selection contest for the seat, the SNP National Executive Committee announced that any MP chosen as a candidate for Holyrood would have to resign from Westminste­r.

This was considered by some as a deliberate move to stop MP Joanna Cherry from winning the party’s nomination and boost Mr Robertson’s candidacy, as a close ally of Ms Sturgeon.

He won the seat with 39% of the vote. The first minister immediatel­y sought to install him as cabinet secretary for the constituti­on, external affairs and culture.

 ?? ?? HANDOVER: Douglas Ross and Angus Robertson after Mr Robertson’s defeat in the 2017 election. Picture by Kenny Elrick,
HANDOVER: Douglas Ross and Angus Robertson after Mr Robertson’s defeat in the 2017 election. Picture by Kenny Elrick,

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