MSPs are to be given a vote on “ double jobbing ” following the row over SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn’s Holyrood bid . Mr Flynn sparked a backlash after announcing his intention to run for the Scottish Parliament in 2026 while continuing as an MP. Now Tory MSP Graham Simpson has said he will resubmit an amendment to ban “dual mandates”.
Under his proposal, all MPs elected to Holyrood would need to stand down from Westminster within eight days. Mr Simpson previously planned to table the amendment to elections legislation, but withdrew it after SNP ministers offered a consultation on the matter. He told the Daily Record: “Being an MSP is a full-time job and anyone lucky enough to have the honour of being elected to the Scottish Parliament should be doing so on that basis.
“Given the outcry over what Stephen Flynn plans to do, I will be re-tabling my amendments to the elections bill, which will ban double jobbing. All parties must do the right thing and back this.” Mr Flynn set off a political firestorm inside his own party when he announced he was seeking the candidacy in the Aberdeen South and North Kincardine seat, which overlaps with part of his Westminster constituency, but is held by Audrey Nicoll.
Asked on the BBC’s Sunday Show about the reaction, Mr Flynn said: “There’s always going to be a strong reaction to someone seeking to do things differently, I’ve experienced this before in politics. “It’s not something which is particularly pleasant, it’s not something which is particularly comfortable, particularly when you’re dealing with people who you know really well. You’re dealing with, in my case, a colleague who overlaps almost entirely with the constituency that I currently represent at Westminster.
“This is not a pleasant situation for either of us. All I’m seeking to do is ask the members who vote for us, who ultimately decide who their candidate is going to be, to make a decision.” The SNP has been critical in recent years of dual mandates – where a single person sits in both Westminster and Holyrood – and regularly attacked former Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross when he did so.
The party even changed internal rules ahead of the 2021 election to ensure MPs seeking election would have to quit before they would be allowed to run. The change was widely seen as an attempt to prevent then-Edinburgh South West MP and frequent internal party critic Joanna Cherry from standing. The party’s ruling body – the National Executive Committee (NEC) – could decide to scrap the rule for contests ahead of 2026.
But if not, Mr Flynn said he would continue his work as an MP and campaigning for Scottish independence “from the bench or from the stands”. Mr Flynn has been seen as a potential future leader of the party, but insisted his attempt to run for Holyrood was not to further his own ambitions. “I’m ambitious, I’m seriously ambitious for Aberdeen and for Scotland,” he said.
“I don’t believe that there’s going to be a leadership contest in the Scottish National Party for a long, long time. “Because John Swinney is going to win the Scottish Parliament elections in 2026, he’s going to continue as First Minister and should there be a future leadership election it will be in the dim and distant future.”.
Politics
MSPs to vote on double jobbing ban amid row over Stephen Flynn's Scottish Parliament bid
Stephen Flynn sparked an internal party backlash after announcing his intention to sit in both Holyrood and Westminster