
SNP leader John Swinney rules out Holyrood talks with Reform UK
SNP leader John Swinney rules out Holyrood talks with Reform UK11 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleAngus CochraneSenior political journalistEPAJohn Swinney led the SNP to a fifth successive Holyrood...
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Key developments are emerging from the global stage. SNP leader John Swinney rules out Holyrood talks with Reform UK11 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleAngus CochraneSenior political journalistEPAJohn Swinney led the SNP to a fifth successive Holyrood election victory SNP leader John Swinney has ruled out any negotiations with Reform UK as his party seeks to return to government. While the SNP comfortably won a fifth successive Holyrood election, the party is seven seats short of a majority - meaning it will have to rely on help from other parties to reinstall Swinney as first minister and pass laws. Labour and Reform came joint second with 17 seats each, followed by the Greens on 15, the Conservatives on 12 and the Liberal Democrats on 10.
Reform's leader in Scotland, Malcolm Offord, accused Swinney of being "arrogant, petty and deeply undemocratic". SNP leader John Swinney will hold talks with opposition parties, except Reform UKSNP wins Scottish election as Reform and Labour tie for secondScottish election 2026: Results in maps and chartsSwinney told a news conference in Edinburgh that the SNP was by a "country mile" the leading party and would form the next government. He said the leaders of all other Holyrood parties would be invited individually to talks from next week - except for Reform.
The Details
Swinney pointed to successful budget negotiations with the Greens and Lib Dems earlier this year, and said the party had worked constructively with the Tories and Labour on other issues. However, the SNP leader said Reform's leader in Scotland, Malcolm Offord, would not be invited for talks. The SNP leader said that election results in England, where Reform racked up more than 1,400 councillors, and in Wales, where it is the second largest party behind Plaid Cymru in the Senedd, showed the urgent need for independence.
He warned that Nigel Farage was "galloping" towards Downing Street, which he said would be "catastrophic". Swinney told the news conference: "It is vital that we unite in Scotland to ensure our parliament is fully Farage-proofed. "That means having the power before 2029 to decide our own constitutional future without Farage being able to block us.
" He added that after Plaid Cymru's success, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland all had first ministers "committed to fundamental constitutional change". Independence ambitions Swinney said he had hoped to win an SNP majority to break the constitutional "logjam" and secure a second independence referendum. Such a vote would need to be signed off by the UK government, which has repeatedly refused to countenance the idea.
However, he insisted Holyrood had a mandate for such a vote, pointing out that between the SNP and Greens there were more pro-independence MSPs at Holyrood than ever before. The SNP leader also insisted that his ambition of holding a referendum in 2028 was realistic.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





