Humza Yousaf considers quitting as Scotland’s prime minister

Humza Yousaf considers quitting as Scotland’s prime minister
Humza Yousaf considers quitting as Scotland’s prime minister

Humza Yousaf is considering quitting as Scotland’s prime minister rather than face two confidence votes, BBC News understands.

A source close to Mr Yousaf said that resignation was now an option but a final decision had not yet been taken.

“The clock has been ticking ever downwards,” the source told the BBC on Sunday night.

Mr Yousaf has faced a fight for survival as prime minister after abruptly ending the SNP’s power-sharing deal with the Scottish Greens last Thursday.

Article information
  • Author, James Cook
  • Role, BBC Scotland editor
  • 2 hours ago

He is understood to have ruled out a deal with Alex Salmond’s Alba party, and his prospect of surviving a vote of no confidence in his leadership is now dependent on the Scottish Greens.

He needs the support of at least one member of the opposition at Holyrood to survive the vote, which could take place as early as Wednesday.

The parliamentary bureau, made up of the presiding officers and MSPs from the main parties, will decide this week when the vote takes place and normally gives two days notice.

Image caption, The ending of the Bute House Agreement provoked a furious reaction from the Scottish Green co-leaders Lorna Slater and Patrick Harvie

Jettisoning the deal with the Greens, known as the Bute House Agreement, provoked a furious reaction from his former partners in government.

He now faces two motions of no-confidence this week, one brought by the Scottish Conservatives in his own leadership as first minister and another from Scottish Labor which would force his entire government to resign.

The Greens are due to meet later on Monday but have repeatedly ruled out supporting him in the personal vote.

The Scottish Conservatives, Labor and the Liberal Democrats have already said they will vote against him.

If nothing changes, that leaves the prime minister facing a choice of defeat in a confidence vote or resignation in advance.

The SNP has 63 MSPs in the 129 seat parliament, so if the seven Green MSPs vote against him, he is reliant on support from the sole Alba party MSP Ash Regan to continue in his role.

That would lead to a 64:64 tied vote in which case the presiding officer would be expected to vote to maintain the status quo.

The motion of no confidence in him personally is not binding but if he lost he would come under intense pressure to step down.

If he lost the government vote, MSPs would have 28 days to vote for a new prime minister or automatically trigger a Scottish parliamentary election.

Image caption, Alex Salmond’s Alba party has drawn up a list of demands in return for its support

Alba, a rival pro-independence party led by former prime minister Alex Salmond, has been outlining a list of demands that might persuade Ms Regan to support the prime minister.

At an emergency meeting on Sunday, Alba’s governing body formally approved Ms Regan’s plan to pursue the issues of independence, “women’s rights” and the “restoration of competent government” in any negotiations.

Mr Salmond told BBC News he was also looking for a move away from “the culture wars” and a shift towards the “people’s priorities,” which he said were health, housing, transport, education and the economy.

He said he expected Ms Regan to hold talks with Mr Yousaf in the coming days.

But a deal with Mr Salmond’s party is opposed by many within the SNP, and could open up further internal divisions.

A source close to Mr Yousaf told the BBC on Sunday evening “there is going to be no deal,” with Alba.

The Scottish government has not confirmed a time for any meetings with opposition figures or even that they will definitely go ahead.

Weakened authority

Two SNP MPs, Stewart McDonald and Pete Wishart, have come out publicly against the idea of ​​a deal with Alba.

One senior SNP figure told BBC News it would be intolerable for any SNP leader to beholden to Mr Salmond, whose estrangement from the party he twice led is a source of bitterness all round.

Even if he were to survive the vote of no confidence, Mr Yousaf’s authority would be badly weakened.

In other words, even if Mr Yousaf were able to continue in office with the support of his own MSPs plus Ms Regan, without votes from elsewhere in the chamber, he would struggle to govern.

Image caption, Alba’s sole MSP Ash Regan has been placed in a powerful position by Humza Yousaf’s predicament

The BBC has been told that there were talks between the SNP leadership and the Green leadership over the weekend but that they did not alter the Greens’ position.

Nor did the SNP’s former Westminster leader, Ian Blackford, apologize to them on the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg.

Co-leader Lorna Slater who, along with Patrick Harvie, was dismissed as a minister in Mr Yousaf’s government at a short and “pretty robust” meeting in the prime minister’s official residence, Bute House, early on Thursday morning, told The Sunday Show on BBC Scotland that the prime minister “has lost our confidence and lost our trust.”

She added: “I cannot imagine anything at this point that could change that position.”

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Video caption, Green co-leader Lorna Slater said Mr Yousaf must face the consequences of a spectacular breach of trust

The Greens are due to agree on Monday to decide whether or not to even accept Mr Yousaf’s invitation to a meeting.

They had been scheduled to meet next month to decide whether or not to continue in the power-sharing deal with the SNP after discontent among members about changes to gender healthcare and the abandonment of a key climate change target.

A critic of the Greens’ approach to that issue, and others, is Kate Forbes, the former finance secretary, a social conservative who came close to defeating Mr Yousaf in last year’s leadership contest and could run again if he stands down.

Image caption, Former leadership contender Kate Forbes is a possible replacement for Mr Yousaf

Ms Forbes insisted this week that she was backing Mr Yousaf but she has used similar language to Mr Salmond’s about “getting back to the people’s priorities,” such as creating wealth, improving education and fixing healthcare.

However, those positions are deeply unpopular within the progressive wing of the SNP and they might find it difficult to unite the party and to run a minority government, especially if they were dependent on the Greens for support.

Other names being floated as potential replacements for Mr Yousaf are Education Secretary Jenny Gilruth, Culture Secretary Angus Robertson, Health Secretary Neil Gray and Economy Secretary Màiri McAllan.

With the Greens apparently standing firm, and the SNP’s leadership’s reluctance to engage with Alba, Mr Yousaf may yet resign rather than endure the humiliation of losing a confidence vote.

One source close to the prime minister said the end of his time in office appeared to be approaching and that, by sacking the Greens, he had gambled and lost.

 
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