A new leader of the Scottish National Party will be announced on Monday (March 27), with three candidates in contention to succeed Nicola Sturgeon.
Kate Forbes, Ash Regan and Humza Yousaf have spent weeks battling to become the next first minister, with SNP members having begun to cast their ballots on March 13. Polls will close at midday on Monday. The party will reveal the results of the two-week online ballot in Edinburgh at 2pm.
The race was triggered following Ms Sturgeon’s resignation after more than eight years in Scotland’s highest office.
Ms Sturgeon, the leader since 2014, has admitted the process has been “difficult” but, according to the Financial Times, said Scotland would emerge in a better place with the debate a “healthy” one.
The leadership contest has been a turbulent one for the SNP, with bitter clashes between candidates, in-fighting and the sudden resignation of the party’s chief executive and Ms Sturgeon’s husband, Peter Murrell, following controversy over the transparency of SNP membership numbers.
Hustings events were held around Scotland in the lead-up to March 13 for members to get to know their candidates better.
Here is what we know about them.
Kate Forbes
The current Secretary for Finance and Economy and a Gaelic-speaker, Kate Forbes was elected to the Scottish Parliament in 2016 and is on maternity leave after giving birth to her first child.
In 2020, the 32-year-old became the first woman to deliver the Scottish government’s budget, only hours after her predecessor, Derek Mackay, quit.
Ms Forbes has recently apologised about her comments that she would have voted against the introduction of same-sex marriage and that having children outside of marriage “would be wrong according to my faith”.
The comments left many LGBT+ members aghast, causing prominent backers to distance themselves from her campaign. These included Scottish Deputy First Minister John Swinney, who said he “profoundly disagrees with views of Kate Forbes”.
Now Ms Forbes has promised to protect the rights of everybody in Scotland, “particularly minorities”.
Ms Forbes is a member of the socially conservative, evangelical Free Church of Scotland, and in February wrote about her stance on Twitter.
She said that she was “greatly burdened and heartsore that some of my responses to direct questions in the media have caused hurt to friends, colleagues and fellow citizens”.
She also said that she would “defend to the hilt the rights of everybody in Scotland, particularly minorities, to live and to love without fear or harassment in a pluralistic and tolerant society”.
Ms Forbes said “more of the same” would be “an acceptance of mediocrity” for the party.
Ms Forbes is the favourite with many bookmakers to be named as the next SNP leader. However, her odds have drifted from 11/10 to 5/2.
She would be the youngest SNP leader if she were to win the race.
Humza Yousaf
The 37-year-old health secretary has cast himself as the continuity candidate to become the front-runner in the contest.
He took over the country’s response to the Covid crisis when appointed in May 2021 and was the youngest MSP elected to the Scottish Parliament aged 26.
He has served in numerous roles and, in 2018, he was appointed as Cabinet Secretary for Justice. He introduced the Hate Crime Bill, which caused controversy among opposition parties.
Mr Yousaf’s capacity to lead has come under question after a recent report revealed a less-than-impressive NHS Covid recovery plan. The damning report revealed figures showing the full extent of waiting times at A&E departments of up to 60 hours.
Douglas Ross, the Scottish Conservative leader, said that Mr Yousaf should be “sacked, not promoted”. He asked whether “the useless health secretary is really the best the SNP have to offer the country”.
Mr Yousaf retaliated by telling BBC Scotland: “We have never hidden the scale of the task and recovery will not take weeks or months but years.”
Ash Regan
A former minister and occasional party rebel, Ms Regan confirmed in February she was putting herself forward to be the new SNP leader.
Ms Regan had earlier resigned from the Scottish government in protest at the gender recognition reform bill. Ms Regan has stated her “firm support” for equal marriage and brought in former Alba candidate, Kirk Torrance, to join her leadership election team.
“Ash Regan’s leadership campaign team includes a number of ‘best-in-class’ advisers, including campaign strategist Kirk Torrance, who led the SNP in the digital transformation of their renowned campaigning machine,” a representative for Regan said.
“Torrance advised former first ministers [Alex] Salmond and Sturgeon through the 2014 Scottish independence referendum and during their respective election victories between 2010 and 2016.”
She is considered the rank outsider and has said during the campaign that the SNP has “lost its way”.