Kuenssberg: SNP in meltdown, and what happens next matters across the UK

by | Apr 27, 2024 | Politics

By Laura KuenssbergPresenter, Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg”OMG.” That’s what one SNP politician said to me when they realised First Minister Humza Yousaf had binned a planned public event on Friday morning, fuelling the guessing game about whether or not he’ll quit.In fact, when he popped up in his home city of Dundee in the “busy politician” outfit of hard hat and high-vis vest, he said he wouldn’t quit – while also seeming to admit, rather astonishingly, that he had made a horlicks of his breakup with coalition partners the Greens. “I’ve heard they’re upset, I’ve heard their anger,” he said. “And I can honestly say that was not the intention.” As our Scotland editor James Cook writes, Yousaf, who was cruelly tagged Humza “Useless” by the tabloids even before he became first minister, is in serious danger of being kicked out of office in a few days’ time. His old SNP leadership rival, Ash Regan, member of Alex Salmond’s Alba Party, is likely to hold the casting vote when MSPs decide his future. It’s not impossible that she backs him – for a political price. Yousaf might keep his job if he gets her vote, but a deal with Alba might mean he loses control of certain policies. There are no guarantees – and the chances of him being able to get the Greens back on side seem, right now, slim to none.”It’s hard to see him making it to next Thursday,” one SNP insider said. “And if he did, it would all fall apart in a few weeks when on every vote, he is stuck between paying a high price to the Greens or selling his soul to Alex Salmond.”PA MediaThe SNP’s own MPs are speculating publicly about what might happen next – one saying it’s 50/50 that he’ll be in a job by the end of the week. Another wrote online that the party “cannot be beholden to the unelectable Alba party”, even though making some kind of agreement with that group might be Yousaf’s only way to hang on. Another party source said Yousaf had chosen the wrong approach from the start. “The decision to style his leadership as a continuity candidate misjudged the mood of the Scottish people,” the source said. “There were enough rumblings of discontent with gender recognition reform that signified a change of approach was needed.”Who is Ash Regan, the woman who could be key to Yousaf’s fate?In other words, Nicola Sturgeon left behind an unhappy party and the electorate had been scratching its head. Perhaps Yousaf failed to spot things needed shaking up. Whatever happens to the current first minister in the next few days, the bigger problem for the SNP is that this “OMG” moment is just the latest in a long line of nasty surprises for a party that has been in decline, after dominating almost everything in Scottish politics for many years.Sign up for the Off Air with Laura K newsletter to get Laura Kuenssberg’s expert insight and insider stories every week, emailed directly to you.Its leaders, Alex Salmond and then Nicola Sturgeon, were able to make Westminster sit up and pay attention. In election after election, the SNP swept the board with astonishing force. Labour could hardly get a look in, and rarely in Scotland can the Conservatives capture much ground. Sturgeon used to pop up at rallies with thousands of whooping and cheering supporters, and fly around in a helicopter campaigning. Maybe what goes up, really must come down. First there was the extraordinary bust up between Sturgeon and Salmond – first minister and mentor turned political enemies – that started with investigations into sexual harassment in 2018. Inquiries, reports and a huge court case later, the two best known figures in the SNP and the independence movement are politically – and bitterly – estranged. Salmond has a rival party that suddenly finds itself in a powerful position.Then there was the police investigation and subsequent charge of Sturgeon’s husband Peter Murrell; Scotland’s governing party embroiled in long running saga into that toxic mix of money and politics. Intense controversy followed, over changing the law around allowing trans people to change their gender – then Sturgeon’s resignation, prompting a bruising leadership contest that put Humza Yousaf in charge.Will winning a confidence vote be enough to save Yousaf?’No doubt’ FM will quit if he loses vote – McKeeWhy did Nicola Sturgeon resign as first minister?Unhappiness in Scotland has been building over the standard of public services and the quality of the government at Holyrood – now this nasty and public split with the Greens. All the while, the SNP has dangled never ending promises that another vote on independence is just around the corner. But the political reality is that the chances of a new referendum have been fading. The party insider says: “Even without this week’s drama, the SNP’s big problem is for the last year it’s been …

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[mwai_chat context=”Let’s have a discussion about this article:nnBy Laura KuenssbergPresenter, Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg”OMG.” That’s what one SNP politician said to me when they realised First Minister Humza Yousaf had binned a planned public event on Friday morning, fuelling the guessing game about whether or not he’ll quit.In fact, when he popped up in his home city of Dundee in the “busy politician” outfit of hard hat and high-vis vest, he said he wouldn’t quit – while also seeming to admit, rather astonishingly, that he had made a horlicks of his breakup with coalition partners the Greens. “I’ve heard they’re upset, I’ve heard their anger,” he said. “And I can honestly say that was not the intention.” As our Scotland editor James Cook writes, Yousaf, who was cruelly tagged Humza “Useless” by the tabloids even before he became first minister, is in serious danger of being kicked out of office in a few days’ time. His old SNP leadership rival, Ash Regan, member of Alex Salmond’s Alba Party, is likely to hold the casting vote when MSPs decide his future. It’s not impossible that she backs him – for a political price. Yousaf might keep his job if he gets her vote, but a deal with Alba might mean he loses control of certain policies. There are no guarantees – and the chances of him being able to get the Greens back on side seem, right now, slim to none.”It’s hard to see him making it to next Thursday,” one SNP insider said. “And if he did, it would all fall apart in a few weeks when on every vote, he is stuck between paying a high price to the Greens or selling his soul to Alex Salmond.”PA MediaThe SNP’s own MPs are speculating publicly about what might happen next – one saying it’s 50/50 that he’ll be in a job by the end of the week. Another wrote online that the party “cannot be beholden to the unelectable Alba party”, even though making some kind of agreement with that group might be Yousaf’s only way to hang on. Another party source said Yousaf had chosen the wrong approach from the start. “The decision to style his leadership as a continuity candidate misjudged the mood of the Scottish people,” the source said. “There were enough rumblings of discontent with gender recognition reform that signified a change of approach was needed.”Who is Ash Regan, the woman who could be key to Yousaf’s fate?In other words, Nicola Sturgeon left behind an unhappy party and the electorate had been scratching its head. Perhaps Yousaf failed to spot things needed shaking up. Whatever happens to the current first minister in the next few days, the bigger problem for the SNP is that this “OMG” moment is just the latest in a long line of nasty surprises for a party that has been in decline, after dominating almost everything in Scottish politics for many years.Sign up for the Off Air with Laura K newsletter to get Laura Kuenssberg’s expert insight and insider stories every week, emailed directly to you.Its leaders, Alex Salmond and then Nicola Sturgeon, were able to make Westminster sit up and pay attention. In election after election, the SNP swept the board with astonishing force. Labour could hardly get a look in, and rarely in Scotland can the Conservatives capture much ground. Sturgeon used to pop up at rallies with thousands of whooping and cheering supporters, and fly around in a helicopter campaigning. Maybe what goes up, really must come down. First there was the extraordinary bust up between Sturgeon and Salmond – first minister and mentor turned political enemies – that started with investigations into sexual harassment in 2018. Inquiries, reports and a huge court case later, the two best known figures in the SNP and the independence movement are politically – and bitterly – estranged. Salmond has a rival party that suddenly finds itself in a powerful position.Then there was the police investigation and subsequent charge of Sturgeon’s husband Peter Murrell; Scotland’s governing party embroiled in long running saga into that toxic mix of money and politics. Intense controversy followed, over changing the law around allowing trans people to change their gender – then Sturgeon’s resignation, prompting a bruising leadership contest that put Humza Yousaf in charge.Will winning a confidence vote be enough to save Yousaf?’No doubt’ FM will quit if he loses vote – McKeeWhy did Nicola Sturgeon resign as first minister?Unhappiness in Scotland has been building over the standard of public services and the quality of the government at Holyrood – now this nasty and public split with the Greens. All the while, the SNP has dangled never ending promises that another vote on independence is just around the corner. But the political reality is that the chances of a new referendum have been fading. The party insider says: “Even without this week’s drama, the SNP’s big problem is for the last year it’s been …nnDiscussion:nn” ai_name=”RocketNews AI: ” start_sentence=”Can I tell you more about this article?” text_input_placeholder=”Type ‘Yes'”]
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