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Scottish Liberal Democrats

Scottish state party of the Liberal Democrats


Scottish state party of the Liberal Democrats

FieldValue
nameScottish Liberal Democrats
native_namePàrtaidh Libearalach Deamocratach na h-Alba
colorcode#FF6400
logoScottish Liberal Democrats logo.svgclass=skin-invert
logo_size250
leaderAlex Cole-Hamilton
leader1_titleDeputy Leader
leader1_nameWendy Chamberlain
leader2_titlePresident
leader2_nameCaron Lindsay
leader3_titleChief Executive
leader3_namePaul Trollope
foundation
membership4,185
membership_yearDecember 2020
ideology{{ublclass=nowrap
Liberalism<ref name"Hepburn2010"
Social liberalism<ref name"Vries2007"
British federalism<ref>{{cite weburlhttps://www.libdems.org.uk/f41_towards_a_federal_uktitle=F41: Towards a Federal UK (Emergency Motion)date=4 October 2013website=libdems.org.ukaccess-date=28 July 2018archive-date=28 July 2018archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180728160850/https://www.libdems.org.uk/f41_towards_a_federal_ukurl-status=live}}
British unionism<ref>{{cite weburlhttp://www.scotlibdems.org.uk/faq_independencetitle=Where do the Scottish Lib Dems stand on independence?date=8 March 2016access-date=15 November 2016first=Greglast=Fosterpublisher=Scottish Liberal Democratsarchive-date=16 November 2016archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161116103537/http://www.scotlibdems.org.uk/faq_independenceurl-status=live}}
positionCentre to centre-left
nationalLiberal Democrats
internationalLiberal International
europeanAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
slogan"For a fair deal for Scotland"
coloursOrange
headquarters4 Clifton Terrace
Edinburgh
EH12 5DR
youth_wingScottish Young Liberals
seats1_titleHouse of Commons
(Scottish seats)
seats1
seats2_titleScottish Parliament
seats2
seats3_titleLocal government in Scotland
seats3
website
countryScotland
seats4
seats4_titleCouncils led in Scotland

|Liberalism |Social liberalism |British federalism |British unionism |Pro-Europeanism}} Edinburgh EH12 5DR (Scottish seats) The Scottish Liberal Democrats () is a liberal, federalist political party in Scotland, part of UK Liberal Democrats. The party holds 5 of the 129 seats in the Scottish Parliament, 6 of the 57 Scottish seats in the House of Commons and 88 of 1,226 local councillors.

The Scottish Liberal Democrats is one of the three state parties within the federal Liberal Democrats, the others being the Welsh Liberal Democrats and the English Liberal Democrats. The Liberal Democrats do not contest elections in Northern Ireland.

History

Formation and early years

The Scottish Liberal Democrat party was formed by the merger of the Scottish Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in Scotland, as part of the merger of the Liberal Party and SDP on 3 March 1988.

The party campaigned for the creation of a devolved Scottish Parliament as part of its wider policy of a federal United Kingdom. In the late 1980s and 1990s it and its representatives participated in the Scottish Constitutional Convention with Scottish Labour, the Scottish Greens, trades unions and churches. It also campaigned for a "Yes-Yes" vote in the 1997 devolution referendum.

1999–2007: Coalition government with Labour

In the first elections to the Scottish Parliament in 1999, the Scottish Lib Dems won 17 seats. Following this, it formed a coalition government with Scottish Labour in the Scottish Executive. The then party leader, Jim Wallace, became Deputy First Minister of Scotland and Minister for Justice. He also served as acting First Minister on three occasions, during the illness and then later, the death of the first First Minister Donald Dewar and the following resignation of his successor Henry McLeish. This partnership was renewed in 2003 and Wallace became Deputy First Minister and Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning. On 23 June 2005, Nicol Stephen MSP succeeded Wallace as party leader and took over his positions in the Executive until the 2007 elections.

Prior to the partnership government being formed in 1999, the UK had only limited experience of coalition government. The Lib Dems' participation attracted criticism for involving compromises to its preferred policies, although several of its manifesto pledges were adopted as government policy or legislation. These included changes to the arrangements for student contributions to higher education costs (although whether that amounted to the claimed achievement of having abolished tuition fees was hotly contested), free personal care for the elderly and (during the second coalition government) changing the system of elections for Scottish local authorities to the single transferable vote, a long-standing Liberal Democrat policy.

2007–2011: Opposition

In the 2007 Scottish Parliament election, the party won one fewer seat than in the two previous Scottish elections: this was the first parliamentary election for 28 years in which the party's parliamentary strength in Scotland was reduced. This experience led to some criticism of the party's election strategy and its leader. Although it was arithmetically possible to form a majority coalition with the Scottish National Party (SNP) and the Scottish Greens, the party refused to participate in coalition negotiations because of a disagreement over the SNP's policy of a referendum on Scottish independence, and sat as an opposition party in the Parliament.

On 2 July 2008, Nicol Stephen resigned as party leader, citing the "stresses and strains" of the job. Former deputy leader Michael Moore MP served as acting leader of the party until Tavish Scott MSP was elected party leader on 26 August 2008, winning 59% of the votes cast in a contest with parliamentary colleagues Ross Finnie and Mike Rumbles.

2011–2021: Electoral decline

At the 2011 Scottish Parliament election, the party lost all its mainland constituencies, retaining only the two constituencies of Orkney and of Shetland; it also secured three List MSPs. This was, at the time, by far the party's worst electoral performance since the re-establishment of a Scottish Parliament in 1999. The disastrous results were blamed on a backlash to the Lib Dems' coalition with the Conservative Party. Scott resigned as party leader on 7 May; Willie Rennie won the resulting election to replace Scott ten days later.

At the 2014 European Parliament election, the party lost its only MEP, leaving it with no representation in Europe for the first time since 1994. The party lost 10 of its 11 MPs at the 2015 general election with only Alistair Carmichael narrowly retaining his seat, holding Orkney and Shetland with a 3.6% majority.

At the 2016 Scottish Parliament election, the party again had five MSPs elected but was pushed into 5th place by the Scottish Greens. While it regained the two constituency seats of Edinburgh Western and North East Fife from the SNP, its vote share fell slightly overall.

At the 2017 general election, the party retained Orkney and Shetland with an increased majority, as well as regaining three seats lost to the SNP in 2015 – Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross, East Dunbartonshire and Edinburgh West. The Scottish Liberal Democrats lost out on the North East Fife constituency to Stephen Gethins of the SNP by just two votes in the most marginal result in the UK at the general election that year.

In the 2019 European Parliament election, the Liberal Democrats re-gained a Member of European Parliament: Sheila Ritchie represented the Scotland Region until the United Kingdom left the European Union in early 2020.

In the 2019 general election, UK Lib Dem leader Jo Swinson lost East Dunbartonshire to Amy Callaghan of the SNP by 150 votes, and was forced to stand down as leader; but the Liberal Democrats successfully regained North East Fife and retained four seats in Scotland. The Scottish Lib Dems replaced Scottish Labour as the third-largest party in Scotland in terms of seats at the 2019 general election, in a historic landslide defeat for Labour nationwide.

In the 2021 Scottish Parliament election electors returned only 4 Lib Dem MSPs: the party held on to their 4 constituency seats while losing their single regional seat in North East Scotland. The party's vote-share also declined further, reaching a new low in both constituency and list-vote share at a Scottish Parliamentary election, and 50 candidates lost deposits in the 73 constituencies contested. This resulted in the party dropping below the five-seat threshold required for recognition as a parliamentary party in the Scottish Parliament, and consequently losing certain parliamentary rights such as a guaranteed question at First Minister's Questions. Following the election, Rennie resigned as leader, and was replaced by Alex Cole-Hamilton in August 2021 after he stood to run unopposed.

2022–present: Rebuilding

After winning 87 council seats in the 2022 Scottish local elections, an increase from 67 in 2017, party leader Alex Cole-Hamilton announced a target of 150 councillors by 2027.

At the 2024 general election, the party won the most number of seats since 2010. They held the successors to their four seats which had their boundaries redrawn and gained an additional two by taking Mid Dunbartonshire and Ross, Skye and Lochaber from the SNP. Due to the reduction of House of Common seats in the 2023 Boundary Review, many news organisations would report the results as two holds and four gains.

Leadership

Leaders

No.ImageNameTerm startTerm end
1Malcolm Bruce3 March 198818 April 1992
2Jim Wallace18 April 199223 June 2005
3Nicol Stephen23 June 20052 July 2008
ActingMichael Moore2 July 200826 August 2008
4Tavish Scott26 August 20087 May 2011
5Willie Rennie17 May 201120 July 2021
ActingAlistair Carmichael20 July 202120 August 2021
6Alex Cole-Hamilton20 August 2021Incumbent

Deputy Leaders

No.ImageNameTerm startTerm end
1Michael Moore2 November 200220 September 2010
2Jo Swinson20 September 201023 September 2012
3Alistair Carmichael23 September 20123 December 2021
4Wendy Chamberlain3 December 2021Incumbent

Current party leadership, office bearers and committee members

Current party officials include:

  • Leader: Alex Cole-Hamilton MSP
  • Deputy Leader: Wendy Chamberlain MP
  • Convener: Jenni Lang
  • Treasurer: Mike Gray
  • President: Caron Lindsay
  • Vice-Convener, Policy: Neil Casey
  • Vice-Convener, Conference: Fraser Graham
  • Vice-Convener, Campaigns & Candidates: Charles Dundas

Structure

In keeping with its basis as a federation of organisations, the Scottish party also consists of a number of local parties (which mostly follow the boundaries of the Scottish Council Areas), which are each distinct accounting units under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000. Local parties are predominantly responsible for the party's political campaigning and for selecting candidates for parliamentary and local authority elections.

There are also eight regional parties (based on the boundaries of the eight Scottish Parliament electoral regions).

Administration

The party's headquarters are located in Edinburgh. The conference is the highest decision-making body of the party on both policy and strategic issues. The day-to-day organisation of the party is the responsibility of the party's Executive Committee, which is chaired by the Convener of the party and includes the Leader, the Deputy Leader and the President of the party, as well as the party Treasurer and the three Vice-Conveners. All party members vote every two years in internal elections to elect people to all the below positions, except Leader & Depute Leader.

Conferences

Like the Federal party, the Scottish party holds two conferences per year; a Spring Conference, and an Autumn Conference.

Associated organisations

Associated organisations generally seek to influence the direction of the party on a specific issue or represent a section of the party membership. The party has five associated organisations:

  • Association of Scottish Liberal Democrat Councillors and Campaigners (ASLDC)
  • LGBT+ Liberal Democrats
  • Scottish Green Liberal Democrats
  • Scottish Women Liberal Democrats
  • Scottish Young Liberals

Association of Scottish Liberal Democrat Councillors and Campaigners

The Association of Scottish Liberal Democrat Councillors (ASLDC) is a network of Liberal Democrat councillors and local campaigners across Scotland which works to support and develop Liberal Democrat involvement in Scottish Local Government. Following the Local Council Election of May 2017, under the Single Transferable Vote (STV) system, 67 Liberal Democrats were elected, a drop of 3 on Local Council Election of May 2012. A voluntary Executive Committee meets several times a year to run the organisation. ASLDC works alongside Liberal Democrats in the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (CoSLA) where Peter Barrett is leader of the Lib Dem Group.

Policy platform

The Scottish Party decides its policy on state matters independently from the federal party. State matters include not only currently devolved issues but also those reserved matters which the party considers should be devolved to the Scottish Parliament, including broadcasting, energy, drugs and abortion. The party also believes that the Scottish Parliament should exercise greater responsibility on fiscal matters. A party commission chaired by former Liberal Party leader and Scottish Parliament Presiding Officer Sir David Steel set out the party's proposals on the constitutional issue.

According to its constitution, the party believes in a "fair, free and open society ... in which no-one shall be enslaved by poverty, ignorance or conformity". It has traditionally argued for both positive and negative liberties, tolerance of social diversity, decentralisation of political authority, including proportional representation for public elections, internationalism and greater involvement in the European Union. In the 2007 elections it campaigned for reforms to public services and local taxation, and for more powers for the Scottish Parliament within a federal Britain.

In December 2007, the party (along with Scottish Labour and the Scottish Conservatives) supported the creation of a new Commission on Scottish Devolution, along similar lines to the earlier Scottish Constitutional Convention, to discuss further powers for the Scottish Parliament.

In 2012, the Scottish Liberal Democrats joined the Better Together campaign with other Unionist political parties to campaign for a No vote in the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, with Craig Harrow, then convener of the party, joining the Board of Directors.

They campaigned to for the UK and Scotland to remain a member of the European Union via the Stronger In preceding the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum

In 2021, the Scottish Liberal Democrats negotiated a budget agreement with the SNP Scottish government, helping pass the Scottish budget with the condition of additional funding for community mental health services, schools and renewables retraining for people in the oil and gas sector in North East Scotland.

In the Scottish Parliament election later that year, their manifesto pledges included training more mental health specialists, an NHS recovery plan after the COVID-19 pandemic, investing in low carbon heat networks, new national parks, a universal basic income, play-based education, opposing a second independence referendum and moving homes to zero-emission heating.

In the 2024 UK General Election, the party's manifesto was similar to the UK-wide party manifesto, and focussed on funding for the NHS and social care, stopping the dumping of sewage into Scottish rivers and tackling the cost-of-living crisis. The manifesto also included pledges on zero-emissions by 2045 at the latest, a one- year emergency home insulation programme, removing the benefit cap, electrifying the rail network, enhancing the Human Rights Act, and scrapping the Illegal Migration Act, among other policies.

Elected representatives

Scottish Parliament

Member of the Scottish ParliamentConstituency or RegionFirst electedSpokespersons
Alex Cole-HamiltonEdinburgh Western2016Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats; Health and Social Care, Drugs Emergency, Constitution and External Affairs
Liam McArthurOrkney2007Justice and the Climate Emergency
Willie RennieNorth East Fife2011Education and Communities
Beatrice WishartShetland2019Rural Affairs and Connectivity
Jamie GreeneWest Scotland2016Economy

House of Commons of the United Kingdom

Member of ParliamentConstituencyFirst electedNotes
Alistair CarmichaelOrkney and Shetland2001Chair of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee
Wendy ChamberlainNorth East Fife2019Deputy Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats and UK Liberal Democrat Chief Whip
Christine JardineEdinburgh West2017
Angus MacDonaldInverness, Skye and West Ross-shire2024
Susan MurrayMid Dunbartonshire2024UK Liberal Democrat Spokesperson for Scotland
Jamie StoneCaithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross2017Chair of the Petitions Committee

Local Government

Scottish Liberal Democrats currently have 88 elected councillors across Scotland with representation in each of the following councils:

  • Aberdeen City Council (4 councillors)
  • Aberdeenshire Council (14)
  • Argyll and Bute Council (4)
  • Comhairle nan Eilean Siar (1)
  • Dumfries and Galloway Council (1)
  • Dundee City Council (4)
  • East Dunbartonshire Council (4)
  • City of Edinburgh Council (14)
  • Fife Council (13)
  • The Highland Council (16)
  • Perth and Kinross Council (5)
  • Renfrewshire Council (1)
  • Scottish Borders Council (3)
  • South Lanarkshire Council (3)
  • West Lothian Council (1)

Election results

Scottish Parliament

ElectionLeaderConstituencyRegionalTotal seats+/–Pos.GovernmentVotes%SeatsVotes%Seats199920032007201120162021
Jim Wallace333,17914.2290,76012.44th
294,34715.4225,77411.84th
Nicol Stephen326,23216.2230,65111.314th
Tavish Scott157,7147.9104,4725.2114th
Willie Rennie178,2387.8119,2845.25th
187,8166.9137,1525.115th

House of Commons

This table shows the electoral results of the Scottish Liberal Democrats, from the first election the party contested in 1992. Total number of seats, number of votes and vote percentage, is for Scotland only. For results prior to 1992, see Scottish Liberal Party.

ElectionLeaderScotlandGovernmentSCOGBRVotes%Seats+/–Pos.199219972001200520102015201720192024
Malcolm BrucePaddy Ashdown383,85613.13rd
Jim Wallace365,36213.012nd
Charles Kennedy380,03416.32nd
528,07622.612nd
Tavish ScottNick Clegg465,47118.92nd
Willie Rennie219,6757.5104th
Tim Farron179,0616.834th
Jo Swinson263,4179.53rd
Alex Cole-HamiltonEd Davey234,2289.723rd

Local elections

The Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973 established a two-tier system of regions and districts. The Scottish Liberal Democrats contested the district elections in 1988 and 1992, followed by the regional elections in 1990 and 1994.

District councilsRegional and island councilsElectionVotesSeatsCouncilsElectionVotesSeatsCouncils%Pos.%Pos.1988199019921994
8.44th8.04th
9.54th12.24th

The two-tier system of local government lasted until 1 April 1996 when the Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994 came into effect, abolishing the regions and districts and replacing them with 32 unitary authorities. Elections for the new mainland unitary authorities were first contested in 1995. The Local Governance (Scotland) Act 2004 switched the electoral system for Scottish local elections from first past the post (FPTP) to single transferable vote (STV), beginning in 2007.

ElectionLeader1st Pref VotesCouncillorsCouncilsPos.Votes%Seats+/-Majorities+/-1995199920032007201220172022
Jim Wallace166,1419.8N/AN/A3rd
289,23612.7353rd
272,05714.51913rd
Nicol Stephen266,69312.7913rd
Willie Rennie103,0876.6954th
128,8216.844th
Alex Cole-Hamilton159,8158.6204th

European Parliament

During the United Kingdom's membership of the European Union (1973–2020), Scotland participated in European Parliament elections, held every five years from 1979 until 2019. The Scottish Liberal Democrats contested the 1989 and 1994 elections under the first past the post (FPTP) electoral system. The European Parliamentary Elections Act 1999 introduced a closed-list party list system method of proportional representation and a single Scotland-wide electoral region, which came into effect in 1999.

ElectionLeaderScotlandSCOGBRVotes%Seats+/–Pos.1989199419992004200920142019
Malcolm BrucePaddy Ashdown68,0564.35th
Jim Wallace107,8117.24th
96,9719.814th
Charles Kennedy154,17813.14th
Tavish ScottNick Clegg127,03811.54th
Willie Rennie95,3197.116th
Vince Cable218,28513.813rd

Appointments

House of Lords

PeerEnnobledNotes
Patrick Boyle, 10th Earl of Glasgow1984 (Hereditary)Current chief of Clan Boyle
Elizabeth Barker, Baroness Barker1999
Malcolm Bruce, Baron Bruce of Bennachie2015MP for Gordon (1983–2015). Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats (1988–1992). Deputy Leader of the Liberal Democrats (2014–2015)
Archy Kirkwood2005MP for Roxburgh and Berwickshire (1983–2005)
Jeremy Purvis2013MSP for Tweeddale, Ettrick and Lauderdale (2003–2011)
Nicol Stephen2011MP for Kincardine and Deeside (1991–1992). MSP for Aberdeen South (1999–2011). Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats (2005–2008). Deputy First Minister of Scotland (2005–2007)
Alison Suttie, Baroness Suttie2013Deputy chief of staff to Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg (2010–2011)
John Sinclair, 3rd Viscount Thurso2016 (Hereditary)MP for Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross (2001–2015)
Iain Vallance2004
Jim Wallace, Baron Wallace of Tankerness2007MP for Orkney and Shetland (1983–2001). MSP for Orkney (1999–2007). Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats (1992–2005). Deputy First Minister of Scotland (1999–2005). Acting First Minister of Scotland (2000, 2001)

Notes

References

References

  1. "Scottish Liberal Democrats Annual Report and Financial Statements". Electoral Commission.
  2. Eve Hepburn. (2010). "Using Europe: Territorial Party Strategies in a Multi-level System". Oxford University Press.
  3. Helma Gerritje Engelien de Vries. (2007). "Insiders and Outsiders: Global Social Movements, Party Politics, and Democracy in Europe and North America".
  4. (4 October 2013). "F41: Towards a Federal UK (Emergency Motion)".
  5. (6 March 2017). "Scot Lib Dems launch Federalism drive".
  6. Foster, Greg. (8 March 2016). "Where do the Scottish Lib Dems stand on independence?". Scottish Liberal Democrats.
  7. "Brand".
  8. "Scottish Liberal Democrat HQ".
  9. "Current party balance".
  10. "Scottish Councils 2025 (Total 32)".
  11. "Toraidhean Taghadh Pàrlamaid na h-Alba 2021". Scottish Parliament.
  12. [http://www.scotlibdems.org.uk/ "The party is led by Scotland's Deputy First Minister Nicol Stephen MSP and is a state party within the Liberal Democrats"], scotlibdems.org.uk, accessed 23 September 2006 ({{webarchive. link. (2 October 2006 ))
  13. [http://www.scotlibdems.org.uk/people/lp.shtml "Party Structure"] {{webarchive. link. (2 October 2006 , scotlibdems.org.uk)
  14. "Liberal Democrat History Group". Liberalhistory.org.uk.
  15. Duclos, Nathalie. (2006). "The 1997 devolution referendums in Scotland and Wales". Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique. French Journal of British Studies.
  16. Tempest, Matthew. (23 June 2005). "Nicol Stephen to lead Scottish Lib Dems". The Guardian.
  17. Carrell, Severin. (12 April 2007). "Lib Dem blow to SNP hopes of referendum on home rule". The Guardian.
  18. Curran, Joanne. (3 July 2008). "Scottish Lib Dem leader Nicol Stephen steps down 'to be with family'".
  19. Barnett, Anthony. (26 August 2008). "Scottish Lib Dems go for the continuity candidate". [[openDemocracy]].
  20. Carrell, Severin. (2 May 2011). "Scottish elections: Lib Dems face 'terrible backlash' as voters opt for SNP". The Guardian.
  21. Black, Andrew. (7 May 2011). "Scots Lib Dem leader Tavish Scott quits post". BBC News.
  22. Black, Andrew. (17 May 2011). "Willie Rennie named new Scottish Lib Dem leader". BBC News.
  23. (8 May 2015). "Election results: Mapping Scotland's dramatic change". BBC News.
  24. Withnall, Adam. (9 June 2017). "Fife North East election result: SNP wins Scottish marginal seat by just two votes".
  25. "Results of the 2019 General Election in Scotland". BBC News.
  26. (14 December 2019). "Scottish Lib Dem MPs meet after leader loses seat". BBC News.
  27. (7 May 2021). "Scottish election results 2021: The story so far". BBC News.
  28. (29 October 2022). "Lib Dems launch campaign to win 150 council seats in 2027". [[STV News]].
  29. Loudon, Callum. (July 7, 2024). "Liberal democrats claim last UK seat to declare result after delayed recount". [[STV News]].
  30. Sim, Phillip. (June 7, 2024). "How Scotland's new election map reshapes the race". [[BBC News]].
  31. "The Liberal Democrat team in Scotland".
  32. "The Federal Board".
  33. (29 January 2013). "Scotland and ASLDC – Association of Liberal Democrat Councillors". aldc.org.
  34. [http://www.scotlibdems.org.uk/conference/index.shtml "Scottish policy responsibilities include all devolved matters plus matters that we believe should be the responsibility of the Scottish Parliament."] {{webarchive. link. (2 October 2006 , scotlibdems.org.uk)
  35. "Microsoft Word - Steel Commission Report March 2006 formatted.doc".
  36. Brooks, Libby. (9 March 2021). "Scottish budget: SNP agree deal with Greens and Lib Dems". [[The Guardian]].
  37. (16 April 2021). "Scottish election 2021: Scottish Lib Dem manifesto at-a-glance". [[BBC News]].
  38. "For a fair deal - the 2024 Scottish Liberal Democrats manifesto".
  39. . ["Our Team"](https://www.scotlibdems.org.uk/about-us/our-team).
  40. (9 August 2023). "UK Election Statistics: 1918–2023, A Long Century of Elections".
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