Farage
throws a wildcard into Scotland’s elections
Miles
from victory, Reform UK are still playing an outsize role in the race to run
Scotland.
April 17,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Andrew
McDonald
https://www.politico.eu/article/nigel-farage-scotland-elections-wildcard-reform-uk-scottish-labour/
SCOTLAND
— Deep in the polling doldrums, Scottish Labour has a plot to sneak into power
regardless.
Once the
favorite to topple a tired Scottish National Party that’s run Scotland’s
devolved government for almost two decades, Scottish Labour now polls in either
a distant second or third place in most projections. A fifth-consecutive SNP
victory seems inevitable at nationwide elections on May 7.
Yet
officials across the parties now whisper in private that polls could be
overstating the SNP’s heft. They say low turnout may produce unpredictable
results.
And they
caution that it is not yet clear who exactly the once-unthinkable rise of Nigel
Farage’s Reform UK in Scotland will benefit.
“All it
takes is a couple of points swing towards us and [a Scottish Labour government]
is within reach,” a senior Scottish Labour official, granted anonymity to
discuss strategy, said. “But on the other hand a few points toward the SNP, and
they win a majority.”
Urban
warfare
At the
center of Labour’s hopes is a clutch of constituencies across Scotland’s
central belt — the mostly urban bit of Scotland where the majority of its
population lives.
In these
seats — which are typically either in the two biggest cities, Glasgow or
Edinburgh, or in the commuter towns outside them — Scottish Labour believes an
extremely narrow path to victory exists by convincing Scots to hold their noses
and vote for the party most likely to oust the SNP.
“Frankly,
we’re spending a lot of money on it,” the official quoted above said of the
central belt push. “It’s about convincing anyone who doesn’t like the SNP —
most of the country — that we are still the best way of getting them out.”
If Labour
can rally anti-SNP voters behind them in a set of key constituencies, the
theory goes, then the SNP is in danger of being well off the critical 65-seat
mark it needs for a majority in the Scottish parliament.
At this
point a second vote — of members of the Scottish parliament to elect a first
minister — becomes crucial. The SNP has tended to rely on the votes of the
pro-independence Scottish Greens to elect its first ministers. But in a
situation where the number of Green and SNP lawmakers does not equal 65, there
is then a route to Scottish Labour Leader Anas Sarwar becoming first minister.
That
would rely on the votes of other parties opposed to the SNP’s long-promised
push to break up the United Kingdom and make Scotland an independent nation.
And this
has put Scottish Labour, a center-left outfit, in the extraordinary position of
having to deny they would court votes from newly-elected members of the
Scottish Parliament representing Farage’s right-wing Reform UK to get Sarwar
into office. There are vanishingly few realistic scenarios where Sarwar could
end up as first minister without the votes of Reform MSPs.
Interlopers
The SNP
remain firm favorites in this race.
Numerous
polls point to them not just being on course to win, but headed for an overall
majority on their own.
Leader
John Swinney has stemmed the bleeding of its support that occurred during the
chaotic and short-lived reign of previous SNP Leader Humza Yousaf.
Yet there
is little evidence he has added much support for a near two-decade old
government which is viewed unfavorably by a majority of Scots.
This
gives opposition figures hope, as did another poll Thursday afternoon placing
the SNP on a vote share which would represent its lowest at a Holyrood election
since 2007.
“The SNP
are not markedly more popular today than they were in July 2024,” pollster John
Curtice noted this week, referring to the 2024 general election in which the
SNP was comfortably defeated by Labour. “But the vote for Labour in Scotland
has collapsed in much the same way as it has done across Britain as a whole.”
Labour’s
dire fortunes at Westminster — with Prime Minister Keir Starmer tanking in the
polls two years after winning a landslide — weigh heavy on Sarwar, who called
on Starmer to quit in February.
The
Scottish Labour leader insisted in an interview with POLITICO after launching
his manifesto that the decision had been “politically liberating” for him
despite being “difficult” on a personal level.
Sarwar
says he reached a “tipping point” where “week after week” he was trying to make
inroads on bread-and-butter issues like a scandal-hit Glasgow hospital, but was
instead “getting asked questions about the judgements made somewhere else.”
Yet
Sarwar — who once campaigned on his close relationship with Starmer — has seen
no uptick in his own favorability ratings since he called on his old ally to
quit.
And now
Farage’s outfit is messing with the calculus, potentially splitting the vote
among parties like Labour who oppose the SNP’s drive for Scottish independence.
“Reform has fragmented the unionist vote,” Curtice said. “The rise of Reform
has created a pathway for John Swinney’s party to continue to dominate the
Holyrood parliament.”
Interlopers
A
half-hour TV debate on Channel 4 Tuesday between the leaders of Scotland’s six
parties wasn’t expected to create major news. It did.
Amid
questioning from Sarwar about Reform’s migration policies, Malcom Offord —
Reform’s man in Scotland — claimed that Sarwar came “bouncing up” to him at the
start of the campaign and said that the parties should work together to defeat
the SNP.
Sarwar
denied the claim. But already the SNP spin team had leapt into action to
amplify the row.
As well
as amplifying the possibility of Labour relying on Reform votes to end up in
Bute House, the seat of Scotland’s government, the intervention was also a boon
to Swinney — who has long tried to use the difference in Farage’s popularity
north and south of the border as a driver for his goal of independence.
“The best
way to deal with that particular issue is to elect a majority of SNP MSPs
because that will lock Reform out of our politics,” Swinney told POLITICO
Thursday, when asked at his manifesto launch if he was concerned by the
potential for Reform votes to elect Sarwar as first minister and deprive him of
power.
Reform’s
rise, with the party set to pick up at least a dozen MSPs via the proportional
list vote on current polling, looks set to hurt Labour and the Scottish
Conservatives the most, according to Curtice.
Those on
the other side of the debate meanwhile believe Farage could motivate their
voters to fight harder. “Certainly some of the new members in my branch have
said to me: I’ve voted Green for a for a long time … but actually I really feel
the motivation to actually do something at the moment,” Greens co-leader
Gillian Mackay said in an interview with POLITICO.
“It’s
fair to say that the rise of the far-right,” — a label Reform rejects — “will
motivate people in the opposite direction,” Mackay added. She predicted her
party will win 13 seats on May 7.
“We’ll
either do much better than expected and come close to power or have a shocker
as the Nats win a majority,” a Scottish Labour candidate said. “I can’t see
much of a middle ground.”
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