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Annabelle Ewing

Scottish politician (born 1960)


Scottish politician (born 1960)

FieldValue
nameAnnabelle Ewing
honorific-suffixMSP
imageAnnabelle_Ewing_MSP.jpg
captionOfficial portrait, 2016
officeDeputy Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament
term_start14 May 2021
predecessorLinda Fabiani
Christine Grahame
Lewis Macdonald
alongsideLiam McArthur
1blanknamePresiding Officer
1namedataAlison Johnstone
office1Minister for Community Safety and Legal Affairs
term_start118 May 2016
term_end126 June 2018
firstminister1Nicola Sturgeon
predecessor1Paul Wheelhouse
successor1Ash Regan
office2Minister for Youth and Women's Employment
term_start221 November 2014
term_end218 May 2016
firstminister2Nicola Sturgeon
predecessor2Angela Constance (as Minister for Youth Employment until 22 April 2014)
successor2Jamie Hepburn (as Minister for Employability and Training)
office4Member of the Scottish Parliament
for Cowdenbeath
parliament4Scottish
majority46,013 (17.6%)
term_start46 May 2016
predecessor4Alex Rowley
office5Member of the Scottish Parliament
for Mid Scotland and Fife
(1 of 7 Regional MSPs)
parliament5Scottish
term_start55 May 2011
term_end523 March 2016
office6Member of Parliament
for Perth
term_start67 June 2001
term_end611 April 2005
predecessor6Roseanna Cunningham
successor6Constituency abolished
birth_date
birth_placeGlasgow, Scotland
nationalityScottish
partyScottish National Party
parentsWinnie Ewing
Stewart Ewing
relativesFergus Ewing (brother)
alma_materUniversity of Glasgow
professionSolicitor
altColour photograph of Annabelle Ewing

| honorific-prefix = | honorific-suffix = MSP Christine Grahame Lewis Macdonald for Cowdenbeath for Mid Scotland and Fife (1 of 7 Regional MSPs) for Perth Stewart Ewing

Annabelle Janet Ewing (born 20 August 1960) is a Scottish politician and lawyer who has served as a Deputy Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament since May 2021. A member of the Scottish National Party (SNP), she has been the Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for the Cowdenbeath constituency since 2016, having previously been an MSP for the Mid Scotland and Fife region from 2011 to 2016. Ewing also served in the UK House of Commons as the Member of Parliament for Perth, from 2001 to 2005.

She held two junior ministerial roles and was Minister for Youth and Women's Employment from 2014 to 2016 and then Minister for Community Safety and Legal Affairs from 2016 to 2018. On the backbenches, she has sometimes been critical of the government, especially since the 2021 election, over issues like reforms to the gender recognition process. Her brother, Fergus Ewing, is also an MSP and their mother, Winnie Ewing, previously served as an MSP, MP and MEP.

Background

Ewing was born on 20 August 1960 to Winnifred Margaret Ewing (née Woodburn) and Stewart Martin Ewing. She attended Craigholme School for Girls in Glasgow and the University of Glasgow, where she graduated with a law degree. Before becoming an MP, Ewing was a European Community competition lawyer in Brussels and ran a small legal practice.

Ewing's family have been strongly connected to the nationalist movement in Scotland. Her mother was a former Scottish National Party (SNP) President, Winnie Ewing, who throughout her lifetime served as a member of three different parliaments for the party: Westminster, the Scottish Parliament and the European Parliament. Her brother is MSP Fergus Ewing, and her sister-in-law was the late Margaret Ewing, who had been an MSP and an MP. Her late father, Stewart Ewing was elected as an SNP district councillor for the Summerston Ward in Glasgow 1977, when he gained it from Dick Dynes, then-leader of the Labour Group on Glasgow District Council, a result described at the time by The Glasgow Herald as "an absolute sensation".

Early parliamentary and political career

Early candidature (1999-2001)

Ewing stood for the Stirling constituency in the 1999 Scottish Parliament election, and came second to the Labour candidate Sylvia Jackson. Later that year, she was selected by the SNP to contest a by-election for the Hamilton South constituency in the UK Parliament, the same area where her mother had won a famous by-election victory in 1967. Labour had a comfortable majority at the 1997 election, but there was a swing of 16% to the SNP in the by-election, and Labour's Bill Tynan won the seat with a majority of just over 550 votes.

MP for Perth (2001-2005)

In 2001, Ewing stood for the UK Parliament again, this time in Perth, where Roseanna Cunningham had been the MP. Ewing was elected, defeating the Conservative candidate, future MSP Liz Smith, by just 48 votes. This gave her the narrowest majority in Scotland.

Ewing was involved in a number of Parliamentary campaigns, including fighting for the rights of people with Hepatitis C, and working to gain a public enquiry into the events at Princess Royal Barracks, Deepcut, where James Collinson, a constituent, died on 23 March 2002.

On 16 December 2004, the Deputy Speaker Sir Alan Haselhurst removed her from the House as she refused to apologise for calling the then Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon a "back-stabbing coward" during exchanges over his plans to merge Scottish Regiments, including the Black Watch. As an MP, Ewing was also opposed to Britain's involvement in the Iraq war.

In the 2005 election, she contested the newly created constituency of Ochil and South Perthshire but lost to the Scottish Labour candidate, Gordon Banks, who won a slim majority of 688.

As a candidate (2005-2011)

Ewing sought to become SNP candidate for Moray in the 2006 Scottish Parliament by-election to succeed her late sister-in-law, Margaret Ewing. She was defeated by North East Scotland MSP Richard Lochhead who went on to win the seat in the by-election.

She was later selected to contest the Falkirk East seat in the 2007 Holyrood election on behalf of the SNP as a replacement for the previously selected candidate, the late Douglas Henderson. In the election she achieved a 9% swing from Labour to the SNP, however this was not enough to displace the incumbent Cathy Peattie.

She contested Ochil and South Perthshire for a second time at the 2010 election, again losing to Gordon Banks, who increased his majority to over 5,000 votes.

MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife (2011-2016)

At the 2011 election Ewing was elected to the Scottish Parliament as an MSP for the Mid Scotland and Fife region.

In 2014, Ewing voted in favour of the Marriage and Civil Partnership Bill which legalised same-sex marriage in Scotland.

Ministerial career

Minister for Youth and Women's Employment (2014-2016)

She was promoted to the Scottish Government on 21 November 2014 in Nicola Sturgeon's first Cabinet reshuffle. She became Minister for Youth and Women's Employment.

In 2016, Ewing defeated Scottish Labour deputy leader Alex Rowley to win election in the Cowdenbeath constituency. Following the election, she was moved to the Community Safety and Legal Affairs portfolio in 2016. She left the government in June 2018.

On the backbenches

Backbencher (2018-present)

Rebellions

In the 2021 election, Ewing was re-elected as MSP for Cowdenbeath, and as a backbencher engaged in a series of rebellions throughout the sixth session of the Parliament.

Ewing was one of nine SNP MSPs who voted against the Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill in 2022. The bill attempted to make it easier for individuals to change their legal gender, although was not implemented after the UK Government blocked it from receiving royal assent. In 2025, Ewing critiqued NHS Fife in relation to the employment tribunal Peggie v NHS Fife, where a nurse had complained about sharing changing facilities with a transgender woman.

In April 2024, along with five other SNP MSPs, Ewing abstained on stage one of the Victims, Witnesses, and Justice Reform (Scotland) Bill due to an objection to plans contained within the bill to pilot conducting rape trials without juries. In total, 62 MSPs abstained- more than the 60 who backed the legislation. The government later withdrew the plan for juryless trials from the bill.

Along with her brother, Fergus, and two other SNP MSPs, Ewing broke the SNP whip to back Conservative MSP Liz Smith's Schools (Residential Outdoor Education) (Scotland) Bill at stage one. The bill sought to introduce a right for every child in Scotland to receive one weeks outdoor education during their time at school. The government were eventually forced to back the bill and it passed stage three in December 2025.

In October 2025, Ewing was the sole SNP MSP to rebel on a motion criticising cuts to the fire service in Scotland. The proposed cuts would have impacted the first station at Lochgelly in her constituency. Ewing was praised by the Fire Brigades Union (FBU) for this stance.

Ewing was the only SNP MSP to vote against the two day suspension of independent MSP Ash Regan, formerly of the SNP, from the Parliament in January 2026. Regan had been sanctioned for breaching the MSP code of conduct by making public her intention to lodge a complaint against Green MSP Maggie Chapman over remarks she made in relation to the For Women Scotland Ltd v The Scottish Ministers case.

Other political positions

Ewing backed Kate Forbes in the 2023 SNP leadership contest, following the resignation of Nicola Sturgeon.

In May 2025, she voted against the Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill at stage one.

Having served as an MSP for 15 years, Ewing decided not to stand in the 2026 Scottish Parliament election.

Deputy Presiding Officer (2021-present)

Following the start of the new parliamentary session in 2021, Ewing was elected, alongside Liberal Democrat MSP Liam McArthur, as one of the two Deputy Presiding Officers of the Scottish Parliament. On 20 April 2023, after a particularly robust intervention from Fergus Ewing on the subject of gas extraction, she had to remind him officially about treating fellow members with respect. First Minister Humza Yousaf then quipped that he suspected it was not the first time she had had to tell her brother off.

References

References

  1. (2007-12-01). "Who's Who". Oxford University Press.
  2. McNeil, Robert. (13 February 2022). "Remembering Winnie Ewing: The Peerless political firebrand of independent mind". The Herald.
  3. (4 May 1977). "Dynes and Lally out in 24 Labour loses". The Glasgow Herald.
  4. "1999 Election Results".
  5. (30 August 1999). "Ewing to stand in by-election". [[BBC News]].
  6. (24 September 1999). "Labour scrapes home". [[BBC News]].
  7. Brown, Tom. (1999-10-11). "The union is shaken, but not stirred".
  8. "Vote 2001: Results & Constituencies. Perth". BBC News.
  9. (10 February 2005). "Annabelle Ewing". BBC News.
  10. (30 November 2004). "Deepcut Allegations".
  11. (29 July 2003). "Deepcut deaths 'not murder'". [[BBC News]].
  12. (16 December 2004). "Commons Debate: Future Infantry Structure".
  13. (16 December 2004). "MP thrown out of House of Commons". BBC News.
  14. (2002-09-25). "MPs who rebelled over Iraq".
  15. Jones, Sam. (2004-08-13). "Bomb death takes British toll to 64". The Guardian.
  16. (2005-05-06). "SNP fails in bid for Ochil seat".
  17. Association, Press. (2005-05-06). "Labour bloodied but still dominant in Scotland". The Guardian.
  18. (2005-05-06). "SNP gains two seats but slips to third place after LibDems Controversy mars Western Isles victory".
  19. (2006-01-04). "Salmond closer to Holyrood return". BBC News.
  20. "BBC NEWS {{!}} Election 2007 {{!}} Scottish Parliament {{!}} Election Result: Falkirk East".
  21. "BBC News {{!}} Election 2010 {{!}} Constituency {{!}} Ochil & South Perthshire".
  22. Bannerman, by Gordon. (2010-04-08). "General Election Ochil and South Perthshire".
  23. (2011-05-05). "Election results 2011: Scottish parliament results in full".
  24. (2014-02-04). "Scotland's same-sex marriage bill: How MSPs voted". BBC News.
  25. Robertson, Aileen. (2016-05-06). "SNP score seismic Fife victory".
  26. Cramb, Auslan. (27 June 2018). "Robison quits as Sturgeon shuffles pack - SNP leader to retain close ties to outgoing 'colleague and friend'". The Daily Telegraph.
  27. Clark, Alasdair. (2021-05-07). "SNP hold Cowdenbeath as Annabelle Ewing doubles majority".
  28. (2022-12-22). "Nine SNP MSPs break whip and vote against party's gender recognition reforms".
  29. (2023-10-09). "The use of Section 35 of the Scotland Act to block the Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill".
  30. (2025-07-17). "SNP MSP Annabelle Ewing brands Sandie Peggie tribunal a 'farce'".
  31. (2024-04-23). "SNP backbenchers rebel over controversial plans for juryless rape trials".
  32. (2024-04-23). "Victims bill passes first Holyrood vote". BBC News.
  33. (2024-10-31). "Juryless rape trials pilot to be axed by Scottish government".
  34. (2025-09-24). "SNP to U turn on outdoor education bill block after MSP's fury".
  35. Boothman, John. (2025-09-10). "SNP accused of blocking children's right to 'outdoor education'".
  36. (2025-12-16). "MSPs vote to pass Bill mandating outdoor residential education".
  37. (2025-10-02). "Cowdenbeath MSP defies party to support firefighters campaign".
  38. (2025-12-02). "'Consultation will be seen as a sham if you go ahead with Lochgelly fire cuts'".
  39. (2025-10-06). "Firefighters 'have lost faith in the SNP' after fire cuts debate".
  40. (6 January 2026). "*Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee's 9th Report, 2025 (Session 6)".
  41. (2026-01-06). "Ash Regan hit with Holyrood suspension ahead of crunch prostitution bill vote".
  42. Media, P. A.. (2026-01-06). "MSP Ash Regan suspended from Holyrood for two days".
  43. (2023-03-13). "SNP leadership: Who is backing who?".
  44. (2025-05-13). "How your MSP voted on the assisted dying bill".
  45. (2 March 2025). "Annabelle Ewing announces she will not run for re-election in 2026". The National.
  46. (2025-03-02). "Annabelle Ewing to quit Holyrood in 2026".
  47. (14 May 2021). "Scottish Parliament's deputy presiding officers elected after five-hour voting session". [[Holyrood (magazine).
  48. (2023-04-20). "SNP MSP Fergus Ewing calls Greens 'wine bar revolutionaries'". BBC News.
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