Nicola Sturgeon

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Nicola Sturgeon
Sturgeon in 2021
First Minister of Scotland
In office
20 November 2014 – 28 March 2023
MonarchsElizabeth II
Charles III
DeputyJohn Swinney
Preceded byAlex Salmond
Succeeded byHumza Yousaf
Leader of the Scottish National Party
In office
14 November 2014 – 27 March 2023
Deputy
Preceded byAlex Salmond
Succeeded byHumza Yousaf
Deputy First Minister of Scotland
In office
17 May 2007 – 20 November 2014
First MinisterAlex Salmond
Preceded byNicol Stephen
Succeeded byJohn Swinney
Depute Leader of the Scottish National Party
In office
3 September 2004 – 14 November 2014
LeaderAlex Salmond
Preceded byRoseanna Cunningham
Succeeded byStewart Hosie
Ministerial offices
Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing
In office
17 May 2007 – 5 September 2012
First MinisterAlex Salmond
Preceded byAndy Kerr
Succeeded byAlex Neil
Parliamentary offices
Gordon Jackson
Majority9,593 (38.5%)
Member of the Scottish Parliament
for Glasgow
(1 of 7 Regional MSPs)
In office
6 May 1999 – 3 May 2007
Personal details
Born
Nicola Ferguson Sturgeon

(1970-07-19) 19 July 1970 (age 53)
Irvine, Ayrshire, Scotland
Political partyScottish National Party
Spouse
(m. 2010)
Parents
  • Robin Sturgeon
  • Joan Kerr Ferguson
Alma materUniversity of Glasgow
Cabinet
Signature
WebsiteParliament website

Nicola Ferguson Sturgeon (born 19 July 1970) is a Scottish politician who served as

Glasgow Southside (formerly Glasgow Govan
) from 2007.

Born in

Cabinet Secretary for Infrastructure, Capital Investment and Cities, which saw her in charge of the legislative process for the 2014 Scottish independence referendum. The defeat of the Yes Scotland
campaign resulted in Salmond's resignation as SNP leader.

Sturgeon was

House of Commons. The SNP continued to enjoy electoral successes throughout Sturgeon's nine years in office, but lost 21 seats in the 2017 general election. Despite losing her majority, Sturgeon secured a second term in office in 2016, forming a minority government
.

Sturgeon led the

Section 30 order. From 2022, Sturgeon received heavier criticism for her positions on gender reforms. On 15 February 2023, Sturgeon resigned the leadership of the SNP; she was succeeded by her health secretary, Humza Yousaf
, the following month.

Early life and education

Nicola Ferguson Sturgeon

Sturgeon was a quiet child and has been described by her younger sister as "the sensible one" of the two.[14] Sturgeon was shy and has said that she "much preferred to sit with my head in a book than talking to people".[14] She developed a passion for books and reading which continued into adult life. She has described herself as being an "austere" teen whose style tended towards goth, adding that "if you see pictures of me back then, you would struggle to know whether I was a boy or a girl".[14] Sturgeon was a fan of Wham! and Duran Duran, and enjoyed spending Saturday nights at Frosty's Ice Disco in Irvine.[citation needed]

Sturgeon attended

Diploma in Legal Practice the following year.[citation needed] During her time at the University of Glasgow she was active as a member of the Glasgow University Scottish Nationalist Association and the Glasgow University Students' Representative Council.[citation needed
]

Legal career

Following her graduation, Sturgeon completed her legal traineeship at

Law Centre and a Money Advice Centre in Glasgow from 1997 until her election to the Scottish Parliament in 1999.[15][16]

Early parliamentary career

Early political years

Official parliamentary portrait, 1999

In her early teens, Sturgeon joined the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) and in 1986, at the age of 16, she became a member of the Scottish National Party (SNP), quickly becoming the party's Youth Affairs Vice Convener and Publicity Vice Convener. She joined the SNP following an assumption by her English teacher, who was a Labour councillor, she would be a Labour supporter. In the 1987 UK General election, Sturgeon got her first taste of campaigning, going door-to-door to get her local SNP candidate, Kay Ullrich, elected to Westminster. Despite Ullrich failing to win the seat, Sturgeon ploughed her political energy into the Young Scottish Nationalists (now Young Scots for Independence), joining its national executive when she was 17.[17][18][19]

In an interview with the BBC's Woman's Hour, Sturgeon revealed that it was Margaret Thatcher who inspired her to enter politics, because, due to rising unemployment in Scotland at the time, she developed "a strong feeling that it was wrong for Scotland to be governed by a Tory government that we hadn't elected".[20]

Thatcher was the motivation for my entire political career. I hated everything she stood for.

— Nicola Sturgeon, Sturgeon's views on Margaret Thatcher

Sturgeon became the youngest ever parliamentary candidate in Scotland in the

Strathclyde Regional Council in 1994, and for the Bridgeton ward on Glasgow City Council in 1995.[citation needed
]

In the mid-1990s Sturgeon and Charles Kennedy went together on a political study visit to Australia.[21][22]

The

Mohammed Sarwar and Mike Watson, along with an energetic local campaign,[citation needed] resulted in Glasgow Govan being the only Scottish seat to see a swing away from Labour in the midst of a Labour landslide nationwide. Sarwar did, however, win the seat with a majority of 2,914 votes.[23] Shortly after this, Sturgeon was appointed as the SNP's spokesperson for energy and education matters.[citation needed
]

SNP in opposition

Sturgeon speaking to the Scottish Parliament, 2003

Sturgeon stood for election to the

Shadow Minister for Children and Education
from 1999 to 2000.

As Shadow Education minister, Sturgeon backed Labour's efforts to repeal Section 28 – a Westminster law that banned the promotion of homosexuality in schools. There was, however, significant public opposition to repeal and an unscientific postal vote on the issue – organised by SNP donor Brian Souter – suggested most Scots wanted to keep the clause. Acknowledging this, Sturgeon suggested: "That is why the SNP have urged a policy for many months that we believe can provide people with the necessary reassurance, by providing a statutory underpinning to the guidelines, and resolve this difficult debate. We believe that the value of marriage should be clearly referred to in the guidelines, without denigrating other relationships or children brought up in other kinds of relationship." The compromise had the support of Souter but an amendment to that effect was voted down by MSPs who expressed concerns it would stigmatise children from single parent and unmarried families.[25]

Sturgeon served as

Shadow Minister for Justice from 2003 to 2004. She also served as a member of the Education, Culture and Sport Committee and the Health and Community Care Committee.[26]

2004 SNP leadership election

Sturgeon and Alex Salmond in 2007

On 22 June 2004, John Swinney resigned as Leader of the SNP following poor results in the European Parliament election. His then-depute, Roseanna Cunningham, immediately stood for the leadership. The previous leader, Alex Salmond, at the time refused to stand.[27] On 24 June 2004, Sturgeon also entered the leadership contest, with Kenny MacAskill as her running mate.[28] The political columnist Iain Macwhirter declared that while she "didn't inspire great warmth", she was "quick on her feet, lacks any ideological baggage and has real determination – unlike... Roseanna Cunningham".[29]

However, once Cunningham emerged as the favourite to win,[29] Salmond entered the contest and Sturgeon subsequently withdrew from the contest and declared her support for Salmond, standing instead as his running mate for the depute leadership. It was reported that Salmond had privately supported Sturgeon in her leadership bid, but decided to run for the position himself as it became apparent she was unlikely to beat Cunningham.[30] The majority of the SNP hierarchy lent their support to the Salmond–Sturgeon bid for the leadership, although MSP Alex Neil backed Salmond as leader, but refused to endorse Sturgeon as depute.[31]

On 3 September 2004, the leadership contest resulted in Salmond and Sturgeon elected as Leader and Depute Leader respectively.

House of Commons, Sturgeon led the SNP at the Scottish Parliament until the 2007 election, when Salmond was elected as an MSP.[33]

Leader of the Opposition; 2004–2007

As leader of the SNP in the Scottish Parliament, she served as the

local income tax.[34] Sturgeon quickly grew a reputation in Holyrood as opposition leader, becoming known as "nippy sweetie" – Scottish slang for the "sharp-tongued and strong-minded".[35]

Deputy First Minister of Scotland (2007–2014)

Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing.[44]

Health Secretary (2007–2012)

Fort William
, 2011

Sturgeon served as

Health policy

Sturgeon also outlined a guaranteed maximum 18-week wait for patients after they had seen their GP and vowed to do away with deferred or "hidden" waiting lists. She ordered a review of the thorny issue of hospital car parking charges – as high as £7 in some areas – and launched an inquiry into the infection of NHS patients with Hepatitis C and HIV from tainted blood products.[47]

2009 swine flu pandemic

As Health Secretary, Sturgeon became more widely known internationally for her handling of the

2009 flu pandemic.[50][51]

On 26 April 2009, the Scottish Government confirmed that two people who had returned from Mexico had been admitted to

swine influenza A (H1N1) virus.[54] Authorities in both Scotland and England stated that there were no plans to trace the fellow airline passengers who may have travelled alongside the couple, since the authorities do not classify them as "close contacts".[55][56]

On 11 June, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the influenza virus a pandemic.[57] Sturgeon told the Scottish Parliament that containment of the virus had failed and that the Scottish Government was taking steps to mitigate the spread of the virus. "We have seen a rapid increase in the number of confirmed cases in Scotland over the past 10 days", she told Parliament. "Based on this experience, Health Protection Scotland has expressed the view that sustained community transmission appears to be taking place."[58] Four days later, a Scottish woman with underlying health conditions died at the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Paisley.[59][60] This marked the first death in Scotland and Europe.[61]

Minimum pricing unit

To tackle

windfall profit from alcohol retailers.[63]

Infrastructure Secretary (2012–2014)

St Andrews House following the signing of the Edinburgh Agreement
, October 2012

At the

Cabinet Secretary for Infrastructure, Capital Investment and Cities and an additional role overseeing the referendum on Scottish independence, essentially putting her in charge of the SNP's referendum campaign.[64]

In 2012 she pledged to build a high-speed railway line between Glasgow and Edinburgh by 2024, cutting journey times between the two cities to under 30 minutes.[65] Sturgeon said the Scottish Government would "not wait" for Westminster to build a high-speed line to Scotland. However, in 2016 the plan was abandoned and the Scottish Government blamed Westminster.[66]

2014 Scottish independence referendum

Scottish Independence Referendum Bill
, 2013

Salmond put Sturgeon in charge of the Scottish Government's legislative process for a

referendum on Scottish Independence and she was essentially in charge of the SNP's referendum campaign.[64]

In December 2012, Sturgeon said that she believed that independence would allow Scotland to build a stronger and more competitive country, and would change spending priorities to address "the scandal of soaring poverty in a country as rich as Scotland".[67]

While campaigning for a Yes vote in August 2013, she told The Guardian that if Scots voted for the Union: "Will there be another referendum round the corner? No. We can't bind our successors, but we've made very clear our belief that constitutional referenda are once-in-a-generation events."[68]

In November 2013, Sturgeon joined Salmond to launch Scotland's Future – the Scottish Government's prospectus for independence.[69] Sturgeon was one of the white paper's most high-profile media champions and frequently debated its contents with opposition politicians and sceptical Scots. When the British Government turned down the Scottish Government's idea of a formal currency union – on the grounds that the rationale for sharing a currency with a foreign country was "not clear" – Sturgeon accused Westminster of trying to "bully Scotland" and said it would "cost their own businesses hundreds of millions in transaction costs".[70][71]

During the campaign, the European Commission said that if Scots decided to leave the United Kingdom, it would also mean leaving the European Union. Scotland would then have to reapply for EU membership and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso predicted this would be "extremely difficult, if not impossible".[72] In July 2014 Sturgeon said this would put at risk the right of EU citizens to continue living in Scotland: "There are 160,000 EU nationals from other states living in Scotland, including some in the Commonwealth Games city of Glasgow. If Scotland was outside Europe, they would lose the right to stay here."[73][74]

On 19 September 2014, independence was rejected in the Scottish independence referendum, with 55.3% of the voters voting no and 44.7% voting yes.[75] Following the defeat of the Yes Scotland campaign, Salmond resigned as First Minister and Leader of the SNP. Sturgeon immediately entered the election to replace him, and received huge support from the SNP hierarchy.[76][77][78] Sturgeon said that there would be "no greater privilege" than to lead the SNP. On Salmond's resignation, Sturgeon said:

The personal debt of gratitude I owe Alex is immeasurable. He has been my friend, mentor and colleague for more than 20 years. Quite simply, I would not have been able to do what I have in politics without his constant advice, guidance and support through all these years. [...] I can think of no greater privilege than to seek to lead the party I joined when I was just 16. However, that decision is not for today.

Following the referendum defeat, Sturgeon said that "further devolution is the route to independence".[79] She also opined that Scottish independence was a matter of "when, not if".[80]

Leadership of the Scottish National Party

Sturgeon outside Bute House in Edinburgh upon her appointment as First Minister, 2014

On 24 September 2014, Sturgeon officially launched her campaign bid to succeed Salmond as Leader of the Scottish National Party at the November leadership election.[81][82] It quickly became apparent that no other candidate would be able to receive enough required nominations to run a credible leadership campaign.[83] Upon launching her campaign, Sturgeon also resigned as Depute Leader, triggering a concurrent depute leadership election; the MSPs Angela Constance and Keith Brown and the MP Stewart Hosie all nominated themselves to succeed Sturgeon as Depute Leader.[84][85]

Nominations for the SNP leadership closed on 15 October, with Sturgeon confirmed as the only candidate. SNP convener Derek Mackay publicly congratulated Sturgeon as de facto leader in waiting, saying that she would be "a fantastic new leader" for both the SNP and for Scotland.[86] On this date, Sturgeon also came out on top in a trust rating opinion poll, conducted for the SNP, which indicated that 54% of the Scottish population trusted her to "stand up for Scotland's interests".[87]

At a speech in Dundee's Caird Hall on 7 November, Sturgeon pledged to be "the most accessible First Minister ever" when she took over. She also promised to hold a monthly Facebook question and answer session with members of the public, regular town hall meetings and that the Scottish Cabinet would meet outside Edinburgh once every two months.[88]

Sturgeon was formally acclaimed as the first female Leader of the SNP on 14 November 2014 at the Autumn Conference in Perth, with Hosie as her depute. This also made her First Minister-Designate, given the SNP's absolute majority in the Scottish Parliament.[89] In her first speech as leader, Sturgeon said that it was "the privilege of her life" to lead the party she joined as a teenager.[90]

Although Salmond officially tendered his resignation as First Minister on 18 November 2014, Sturgeon was not sworn in until two days later. From 18 November until her official appointment on 20 November, she served as the acting First Minister, essentially the First Minister-elect.[91]

First Minister of Scotland (2014–2023)

First term (2014–2016)

On 20 November 2014, Sturgeon was sworn into office at the

Lord Gill,[92][93] after receiving the royal warrant of appointment by Queen Elizabeth II.[94] She became the first woman to hold office.[95][96] During her first First Minister's Questions after being sworn in, Sturgeon tried to strike a conciliatory tone, saying that she came into her new post "with an open mind and a willingness to hear proposals from all sides of the chamber."[97]

First cabinet

The departure of

Sturgeon's cabinet was 50/50 gender balance, with five men and five women, including herself.[102]

Sturgeon and Prime Minister David Cameron at 10 Downing Street, 14 December 2015

2015 Westminster landslide