Scotland (European Parliament constituency)

Scotland (Scots: Scotland, Scottish Gaelic: Alba [ˈal̪ˠapə] (listen)) was a constituency of the European Parliament created in 1999. It elected between eight and six MEPs using the D'Hondt method of party-list proportional representation every 5 years from 1999 until 2020, when the constituency was abolished after the United Kingdom left the European Union on 31 January 2020.

Scotland
Alba
European Parliament constituency
Location among the 2014 constituencies
Member stateUnited Kingdom
Created1999
Dissolved31 January 2020
MEPs8 (1999–2004)
7 (2004–2009)
6 (2009–2020)
Sources

Boundaries

The constituency's boundaries were the same as those of Scotland, one of the four countries of the United Kingdom.

History

The constituency was formed as a result of the European Parliamentary Elections Act 1999, replacing a number of single-member constituencies. These were Glasgow, Highlands and Islands, Lothians, Mid Scotland and Fife, North East Scotland, South of Scotland, Strathclyde East, and Strathclyde West.

The number of MEPs returned by the constituency was eight in 1999, seven in 2004, and six in 2009, 2014 and 2019.

After the result of the United Kingdom European Union membership referendum vote to leave the European Union in 2016, this constituency was abolished on 31 January 2020 following completion of the Article 50 withdrawal process.

MEPs for former Scottish constituencies, 1979–1999[1]
Election 1979 – 1984 1984 – 1989 1989 – 1994 1994 – 1999
Highlands
and Islands
Winnie Ewing
SNP
North East
Scotland
James Provan
Conservative
Henry McCubbin
Labour
Allan Macartney
SNP
to August 1998
Ian Hudghton
SNP
from November 1998
South of
Scotland
Alasdair Hutton
Conservative
Alex Smith
Labour
Lothians Ian Dalziel
Conservative
David Martin
Labour
Mid Scotland
and Fife
John Purvis
Conservative
Alex Falconer
Labour
Strathclyde
West
Adam Fergusson
Conservative
Hugh McMahon
Labour
Strathclyde
East
Ken Collins
Labour
Glasgow Janey Buchan
Labour
Bill Miller
Labour

Returned members

MEPs for Scotland, 1999 onwards
Election 1999 (5th parliament) 2004 (6th parliament) 2009 (7th parliament) 2014 (8th parliament) 2019 (9th parliament)
MEP
Party
Struan Stevenson
Conservative
Ian Duncan
Conservative
to September 2017
Nosheena Mobarik
Conservative
from September 2017
MEP
Party
Elspeth Attwooll
Liberal Democrat
George Lyon
Liberal Democrat
David Coburn
UKIP (2014–2018)
Independent (2018–2019)
Brexit Party (2019)
Sheila Ritchie
Liberal Democrat
MEP
Party
Neil MacCormick
SNP
Alyn Smith
SNP
to December 2019
Heather Anderson
SNP
in January 2020
MEP
Party
Ian Hudghton
SNP
Christian Allard
SNP
MEP
Party
David Martin
Labour
Aileen McLeod
SNP
MEP
Party
Catherine Stihler
Labour
to January 2019
Vacant Louis Stedman-Bryce
Brexit Party (2019)
Independent (2019)
MEP
Party
John Purvis
Conservative
Seat abolished
MEP
Party
Bill Miller
Labour
Seat abolished

Election results

Elected candidates are listed in bold. Brackets indicate the number of votes per seat won.

2019

Map of highest polling party in each Scottish council area;
  SNP
European Election 2019: Scotland[2][3]
List Candidates Votes % ±
SNP Alyn Smith2 (1)
Christian Allard (2)
Aileen McLeod (5)
Margaret Ferrier, Heather Anderson, Alex Kerr[4]
594,533
(198,177.67)
37.8 +8.8
Brexit Party Louis Stedman-Bryce (3)
Karina Walker, James Ferguson-Hannah, Stuart Waiton, Paul Aitken, Calum Walker
233,006 14.8 New
Liberal Democrats Sheila Ritchie (4)
Fred Mackintosh, Catriona Bhatia, Vita Zaporozcenko, John Edward, Clive Sneddon[5]
218,285 13.9 +6.8
Conservative Nosheena Mobarik (6)
Ian McGill, Shona Haslam, Iain Whyte, Andrea Gee, Michael Kusznir[6]
182,476 11.6 -5.6
Labour David Martin, Jayne Baxter, Craig Miller, Amy Lee Fraioli, Callum O’Dwyer, Angela Bretherton[7] 146,724 9.3 -16.6
Scottish Green Maggie Chapman, Lorna Slater, Gillian MacKay, Chas Booth, Mags Hall, Allan Faulds 129,603 8.2 +0.1
Change UK David Macdonald,1 Kate Forman, Peter Griffiths, Heather Astbury, Colin McFadyen, Cathy Edgeworth 30,004 1.9 New
UKIP Donald MacKay, Janice MacKay, Otto Inglis, Mark Meechan, Roy Hill[8] 28,418 1.8 -8.7
Independent Gordon Edgar[9] 6,128 0.39 New
Independent Ken Parke[9] 2,049 0.13 New
Turnout 1,561,226 39.9 +6.4

1 On 15 May, David Macdonald, the lead candidate for Change UK in Scotland, switched to endorsing the Liberal Democrats in order not to split the pro-Remain vote.[10]

2 Alyn Smith resigned his seat following his election to the Parliament of the United Kingdom in the 2019 United Kingdom general election, alongside Margaret Ferrier. He was replaced by Heather Anderson in January 2020.[11]

2014

Map of highest polling party in each Scottish council area;
  SNP
  Labour
European Election 2014: Scotland[12][13]
List Candidates Votes % ±
SNP Ian Hudghton, Alyn Smith
Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh, Stephen Gethins, Toni Giugliano, Chris Stephens[14][15]
389,503
(194,751.5)
29.0 −0.1
Labour David Martin, Catherine Stihler
Derek Munn, Katrina Murray, Asim Khan, Kirsty O'Brien[16]
348,219
(174,109.5)
25.9 +5.1
Conservative Ian Duncan
Belinda Don, Nosheena Mobarik, Jamie Gardiner, Iain McGill, Stuart Mcintyre[15][17]
231,330 17.2 +0.4
UKIP David Coburn
Kevin Newton, Otto Inglis, Denise Baykal, Hugh Hatrick, Malcolm Mackay[18][19]
140,534 10.5 +5.3
Scottish Green Maggie Chapman, Chas Booth, Grace Murray, Alastair Whitelaw, Anne Thomas, Steen Parish[20] 108,305 8.1 +0.8
Liberal Democrats George Lyon, Christine Jardine, Lisa Strachan, Richard Brodie, Jade Holden, Euan Davidson[20] 95,319 7.1 −4.4
Britain First James Dowson, John Arthur Randall, Jayda Kaleigh Fransen, Geoffrey Clynch, Margaret Dorothy Clynch, Jane Susan Shepherd 13,639 1.0 New
BNP Kenneth McDonald, David James Orr, Victoria McKenzie, Angus Jim Mathys, Paul Brandy Stafford, Stacey Jayne Fleming 10,216 0.8 −1.7
NO2EU John Odell Foster, Andrew Elliott, Murdo Maclean, Gail Morrow, Brian Smith, Richard Edward Veitch 6,418 0.5 −0.4
Turnout 1,343,483 33.5 +5.0

† Ian Duncan resigned his seat in September 2017, to take up a seat in the House of Lords and be appointed as Under-Secretary of State for Scotland. He was replaced by Nosheena Mobarik later in the month.[21]

2009

Map of the highest polling parties in each Scottish council area;
  SNP
  Labour
European Election 2009: Scotland[22][23][24][25]
List Candidates Votes % ±
SNP Ian Hudghton, Alyn Smith
Aileen McLeod, Drew Hendry, Duncan Ross, Gordon Archer
321,007
(160,503.5)
29.1 +9.4
Labour David Martin, Catherine Stihler
Mary Lockhart, Paul McAleavely, Kirsty Connell, Nasim Khan[26]
229,853
(114,926.5)
20.8 −5.6
Conservative Struan Stevenson
Belinda Don, Helen Gardiner, Donald G. MacDonald, Gerald Michaluk, PJ Lewis[27]
185,794 16.8 −0.9
Liberal Democrats George Lyon
Euan Robson, Robert Aldridge, Patsy Kenton, Douglas Herbison, Clive Sneddon[28]
127,038 11.5 −1.6
Scottish Green Elaine Morrison, Chas Booth, Kirsten Robb, Alastair Whitelaw, Ruth Dawkins, Peter McColl 80,442 7.3 +0.5
UKIP Peter Adams, Paul Hencke, Phillip Anderson, Matthew Desmond, Donald Mackay, Paul Wiffen, Kathleen Desmond[29] 57,788 5.2 −1.5
BNP Gary Raikes, Charlie Baillie, Deborah McKnight, Roy Jones, Max Dunbar, Elise Jones[30] 27,174 2.5 +0.8
Socialist Labour Louise McDaid, David Jacobsen, Katherine McGavigan, James Berrington, Claire Watt, James McDaid 22,135 2.0 New
Scottish Christian Sheila McLaughlan, John Smart, Brian Ross, Archie Linnegan, Christine Cormack, Isobel Anne Macleod 16,738 1.5 -0.3
Scottish Socialist Colin Fox, Angela Gorrie, Johanna Dind, Nick McKerrell, Raphie de Santos, Felicity Garvie 10,404 0.9 -4.3
Independent Duncan Robertson 10,189 0.9 New
NO2EU John Foster, Tommy Sheridan, Leah Ganley, Stuart Hyslop, Ajit Singh Uppal, Tom Morrison 9,693 0.9 +0.9
Jury Team Alan Wallace, John O'Callaghan, Stuart Brown, Kenneth Lees, Mev Brown, Austin Compson-Bradford[31] 6,257 0.6 New
Turnout 1,104,512 28.5 −2.4

2004

Map of the highest polling parties in each Scottish Westminster constituency; SNP in yellow, Labour in red, Conservatives in blue, and Liberal Democrats in orange.
European Election 2004: Scotland[32]
List Candidates Votes % ±
Labour David Martin, Catherine Stihler
Bill Miller, Kirsty O'Brien, Colin Smyth, Catriona Renton, Gemma Doyle
310,865
(155,432.5)
26.4 −2.3
SNP Ian Hudghton, Alyn Smith
Kenneth Gibson, Douglas Henderson, Alexander Nicholson, Alex Orr, Janet Law, Duncan Ross
231,505
(115,752.5)
19.7 −7.5
Conservative Struan Stevenson, John Purvis
Cameron Buchanan, Sebastian Leslie, Anne Harper, Paul Nelson, Douglas Taylor
209,028
(104,514)
17.8 −2.0
Liberal Democrats Elspeth Attwooll
Robert Aldridge, Alex Bruce, Karen Freel, Douglas Herbison, Clive Sneddon, Christine James, Jermaine Allison
154,178 13.1 +3.3
Scottish Green Chas Booth, Tara O'Leary, Martin Bartos, Moira Dunworth, Alastair Whitelaw, Katherine Joester, James Park 79,695 6.8 +1.0
UKIP Peter Troy, Philip Anderson, George Cormack, Michael Phillips, Janice Murdock, Donald Mackay, Peter Nielson 78,828 6.7 +5.4
Scottish Socialist Felicity Garvie, Nick McKerrel, Hugh Kerr, Catriona Grant, Lynn Sheridan, John Sangster, Andrew Rossiter 61,356 5.2 +1.2
Christian Vote George Hargreaves, William Thompson, Richard Russell, David Braid, Marion McNeill, Mary Hay, Rose Irtwange 21,056 1.8 New
BNP Steven Blake, Scott McLean, David Kerr, Stephen Burns, Bryan Dickson, Craig McComb, John Bean[33] 19,427 1.7 +1.3
Scottish Wind Watch Brendan Hamill, Sylvia Thorne, Charles Bennie, Jennifer Scobie, Bennie Palmer, Helen Pass, Richard Hammock 7,255 0.6 New
Independent Fergus Tait 3,624 0.3 New
Turnout 1,176,817 30.9 +6.2

1999

Map of the highest polling parties in each Scottish Westminster constituency; SNP in yellow, Labour in red, Conservatives in blue, and Liberal Democrats in orange.
European Election 1999: Scotland[34]
List Candidates Votes % ±
Labour David Martin, Bill Miller, Catherine Taylor
Christine May, Hugh McMahon, James Paton, John Clifford, Jeanette Bradley
283,490
(94,496.67)
28.7
SNP Ian Hudghton, Neil MacCormick
Anne Gillies, Gordon Wilson, Janet Law, Kris Browne, Ian Goldie, Josephine Docherty
268,528
(134,264)
27.2
Conservative Struan Stevenson, John Purvis
Anne Harper, Cameron Buchanan, Sebastian Leslie, Iain Mitchell, Peter Ramsay, Anthony Gilbey
195,296
(97,648)
19.8
Liberal Democrats Elspeth Attwooll
Robert Aldridge, Neil Mitchison, Heather Lyall, Clive Sneddon, Danus Skene, Karen Freel, Jayne Struthers
96,971 9.8
Scottish Green Marion Coyne, Eleanor Scott, Phil O'Brien, Graeme Farmer, Linda Hendry, Chris Ballance, Kay Allan, Alastair Whitelaw 57,142 5.8
Scottish Socialist Hugh Kerr, Rosie Kane, Harvey Duke, Catherine Stewart, Colin Fox, Shareen Blackall, Steve Arnott, Frances Curran 39,720 4.0
Pro-Euro Conservative Paul Dwyer, Joanna Lavender, Douglas McConchie, Richard Ashurst, Neasa MacEarlean, Oliver Grant, Alexander Skinner, James Waters 17,781 1.8
UKIP Alistair McConnachie, Donald Mackay, James McKenna, Stuart Brown, Matthew Henderson, Joseph Smith, Peter Nielson, John Mumford 12,459 1.3
Socialist Labour Louise McDaid, Christopher Herriot, Katharine McGavigan, Stephen Mayes, Patricia Graham, Colin Turbett, Margaret Stead, James Galloway 9,385 1.0
BNP Kenneth Smith, Scott McLean, Russell Bradley, Mark Allen, Paul Wilkinson, Robert Currie, David Kerr, James Mills 3,729 0.4
Natural Law James McKissock, George Stidolph, Diana Kras, Kenneth Blair, David Pettigrew, Iain Petrie, Anna Rawlinson, Thomas Pringle 2,087 0.2
Accountant for Lower Scottish Taxes Charles Lawson 1,632 0.2
Turnout 988,310 24.7

See also

Notes

    References

    1. "United Kingdom European Parliamentary Election results 1979–99: Scotland".
    2. "Who are the MEP candidates in Scotland?". BBC. 25 April 2019.
    3. "European Election 2019: UK results in maps and charts". BBC. 27 May 2019.
    4. "SNP reveal list for Euro elections as party go for three MEPs". The National. 20 April 2019.
    5. "Scottish Lib Dems unveil Euro election candidates". BBC News. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
    6. "The list of Conservative MEP candidates for Scotland". Conservative Home.
    7. "Scotland's main parties reveal candidates for European Parliament elections". The Scotsman. 19 April 2019.
    8. "EU candidates". UK Independence Party.
    9. "Who are the MEP candidates in Scotland?". 25 April 2019. Retrieved 26 April 2019.
    10. "EU elections: Change UK's lead candidate in Scotland quits". BBC. 15 May 2019.
    11. "New Scottish MEP sworn in - for four days". BBC. 28 January 2020.
    12. Council, The City of Edinburgh. "Nominations close in European Parliament Elections". Government of the United Kingdom.
    13. "Scotland (European Parliament constituency)". BBC News. 26 May 2014. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
    14. "Hudghton and Smith to stand for SNP at European Parliament elections". STV News. 29 July 2013. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
    15. "UK Polling Report".
    16. "Scottish Labour chooses candidates for European election". BBC News. 2 August 2013.
    17. "MEP selections start with Scotland".
    18. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 10 October 2013. Retrieved 7 October 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
    19. "Ukip unveils Scottish european 'shock troops'". The Scotsman. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
    20. "SCOTLAND EURO CANDIDATES 2014". UKpollingreport. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
    21. "Baroness to become new Scottish Tory MEP". BBC. 6 September 2017.
    22. "UK Scotland MEPs 2009–2014". European Parliament. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
    23. "European election candidates: Scotland". BBC News. 2 June 2009.
    24. "City of Edinburgh Council" (PDF).
    25. "European Election 2009 – UK Results – Scotland".
    26. "Labour's 2009 EP candidates – Jon Worth".
    27. "Conservative Party website. Retrieved 17 July 2008".
    28. "CIX ONLINE. Retrieved 17 July 2008". Archived from the original on 8 May 2009.
    29. UK Independence Party accessed 28 August 2008 Archived 8 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine
    30. "British National Party Scotland accessed 6 March 2009".
    31. "Carbase".
    32. "2004 Election candidates". UK Office of the European Parliament. Archived from the original on 4 October 2009. Retrieved 4 June 2009.
    33. "scotcand". 3 June 2004. Archived from the original on 3 June 2004.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
    34. "1999 Election candidates". UK Office of the European Parliament. Archived from the original on 28 August 2009. Retrieved 4 June 2009.

    Update needed?

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.