Humza Yousaf
Humza Yousaf (born 7 April 1985) is a Scottish politician who served as First Minister of Scotland and leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP) from March 2023 to April 2024.[1][2] Elected to the Scottish Parliament in 2011 as a regional member for Glasgow at age 26, he became the youngest government minister in Scottish history shortly thereafter, holding roles in external affairs, Europe, transport, justice, and health.[3][4] Yousaf's ascension to SNP leadership followed Nicola Sturgeon's resignation amid ongoing investigations into party finances, with Yousaf securing the position in a contest against opponents including Kate Forbes and Ash Regan.[5] His brief tenure prioritized Scottish independence advocacy despite stagnant public support, while navigating internal SNP divisions over issues like gender policy and climate targets embedded in the Bute House Agreement with the Scottish Greens.[6][2] Yousaf resigned after terminating the coalition with the Greens, a decision that triggered no-confidence votes from opposition parties and the aggrieved partners, which he deemed unwinnable; he cited underestimating the political fallout but defended the move as necessary for policy delivery.[6][5] Earlier, as Justice Secretary, he oversaw the passage of the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act 2021, which expanded protections against stirring up hatred but drew criticism for vague provisions potentially chilling expression, leading to thousands of complaints shortly after implementation.[7][4] His ministerial stints in transport and health were marked by persistent delays in infrastructure projects like ferry construction and rising NHS waiting lists exacerbated by pandemic backlogs.[2][4]Early life and education
Family background and upbringing
Humza Yousaf was born on 7 April 1985 in Glasgow, Scotland, to parents of Punjabi-Pakistani descent who had immigrated from South Asia. Yousaf has claimed that his clan is Rajput.[8][4] [9] His father, Muzaffar Yousaf, originated from Mian Channu in Punjab province, Pakistan, and moved to Glasgow in the 1960s with his family and limited command of English.[10] [9] His mother, Shaaista Bhutta, was born in Nairobi, Kenya, to a Punjabi family and also emigrated to Scotland during the same decade.[11] [12] Yousaf grew up in the Southside of Glasgow, where his parents emphasized the importance of education and professional achievement amid the challenges of immigrant life.[13] [14] Family expectations directed children toward stable careers such as accounting, medicine, or law, reflecting a focus on socioeconomic mobility.[12] The household engaged with politics, as his father joined the Scottish National Party in 1972 shortly after arriving in Scotland, though Yousaf has described his mother as a Labour Party supporter.[15] [13] He has a sister, Faiza Yousaf, who has publicly defended him against personal criticism.[16]Schooling and university studies
Yousaf attended a predominantly white Scottish state primary school during his early years before transferring to Hutchesons' Grammar School, a private fee-paying institution in Glasgow, for secondary education.[9][4] He matriculated at the University of Glasgow in 2003, pursuing a degree in politics and international relations.[17][18] Yousaf graduated in 2007 with an MA Honours.[17] While at university, he joined the Scottish National Party and became active in student politics, including founding an initiative to provide food parcels to asylum seekers in Glasgow.[17]Entry into politics
Initial activism and SNP involvement
Yousaf's initial political engagement occurred during his studies in politics and international relations at the University of Glasgow, where he served as president of the Glasgow University Muslim Students Association in 2005.[19][20] He joined the Scottish National Party (SNP) in 2005, citing inspiration from Alex Salmond's opposition to the Iraq War as a key factor in his decision.[21][22] After graduating in 2007, Yousaf took up roles supporting SNP figures, beginning as an office manager and aide to Bashir Ahmad, the party's first MSP of Asian descent.[1][23] He subsequently worked as a parliamentary assistant to Salmond, gaining experience in party operations and campaigning in Glasgow ahead of the 2011 Scottish Parliament election.[23][4]2011 Scottish Parliament election
Humza Yousaf was elected to the Scottish Parliament on 5 May 2011 as a list member for the Glasgow electoral region, representing the Scottish National Party (SNP).[24][25] At the age of 26, he became one of the youngest MSPs elected that year.[26] In the Glasgow region, the SNP secured two additional member seats through the regional list vote, with Yousaf and Bob Doris filling them after the party won two constituency seats but qualified for two more to achieve proportional representation. The SNP received 83,109 votes in the regional ballot, accounting for approximately 40% of the vote share.[26] The overall election resulted in an SNP majority, with the party gaining 69 of 129 seats, enabling Alex Salmond to continue as First Minister. Yousaf's election marked his transition from party activism to legislative office, where he initially focused on parliamentary committees.[24]Parliamentary and ministerial career (2011-2023)
Early MSP roles and committee work
Yousaf was elected as a Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for the Glasgow region on 5 May 2011, becoming the youngest MSP in the chamber at the age of 26.[3] [17] Upon election, he was appointed to the Justice Committee, where he contributed to scrutiny of legislation and policy in areas such as criminal justice and courts, and to the Public Audit Committee, which examined the use of public funds and the accounts of the Scottish Administration.[25] In addition to his committee duties, Yousaf served as Parliamentary Liaison Officer (PLO) to the Office of the First Minister, Alex Salmond, from 2011 to 2012, assisting in coordinating parliamentary business and supporting government initiatives within the Scottish Parliament.[25] [27] This role involved liaison between the executive and legislative branches, though specific contributions during this period are not extensively documented in public records.[27]Junior ministerial positions (2012-2018)
Yousaf was appointed Minister for External Affairs and International Development on 6 September 2012 by First Minister Alex Salmond, becoming the first Scottish Government minister from an ethnic minority background.[1] [3] In this junior role, he managed Scotland's international relations, trade promotion, and contributions to international development, including oversight of the Scottish Government's international development fund, which allocated £1 million annually to projects in Malawi, Rwanda, and Pakistan.[2] The position involved advocating for Scottish interests abroad amid the 2014 independence referendum campaign, though devolved powers limited direct foreign policy authority.[2] He held the external affairs portfolio until 21 November 2014, when First Minister Nicola Sturgeon reshuffled the government and appointed him Minister for Transport and the Islands.[28] In this capacity, Yousaf oversaw devolved transport matters, including rail franchising, road maintenance, aviation policy, ferry services via Caledonian MacBrayne, and connectivity for Scotland's island communities, which comprise over 90 inhabited islands supporting around 100,000 residents.[2] [29] Following the Scottish National Party's victory in the May 2016 parliamentary election—securing 63 of 129 seats—Yousaf retained the transport and islands brief in Sturgeon's new administration, serving until his elevation to Cabinet Secretary for Justice in June 2018.[2] [30] Key initiatives included efforts to improve inter-island ferry reliability and road infrastructure, though the period saw ongoing delays in the procurement of new CalMac ferries, later acknowledged by Yousaf as involving ministerial shortcomings in oversight.[29] [2] During his tenure, transport spending rose to £3.3 billion annually by 2017–18, focused on projects like the Aberdeen bypass and Highland rail electrification, but critics noted persistent rural connectivity gaps.[2] In February 2014, Yousaf abstained from the final vote on the Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Bill legalizing same-sex marriage, citing personal reasons, though former First Minister Salmond later claimed it stemmed from religious pressure.[17]Justice Secretary (2018-2021)
Humza Yousaf was appointed Cabinet Secretary for Justice on 26 June 2018, following a cabinet reshuffle by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon after Michael Matheson moved to transport.[31] He succeeded Michael Matheson in the role, overseeing Scotland's justice system amid challenges including prison overcrowding and evolving hate crime legislation. During his tenure, Yousaf focused on reducing reliance on short-term imprisonment and modernizing hate crime laws, though these efforts coincided with rising recorded violent crimes and prison populations.[32] A key policy was the expansion of the presumption against sentences of less than 12 months' imprisonment, introduced in 2019 to prioritize community alternatives and address overcrowding. By late 2019, short sentences fell by about 13% compared to the prior year, with over 1,300 such custodial terms issued in the final two months of 2019.[33] Yousaf highlighted early signs of a modest prison population reduction, attributing it to decreased short sentences, though the average daily prison population had risen from 7,464 in 2017-18 to 8,195 in 2019-20, reflecting Scotland's high incarceration rate of around 150 per 100,000 population—above the European average.[32][34] Critics noted persistent safety crises in prisons, with forecasts of further increases despite reforms.[35] Yousaf introduced the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Bill on 24 April 2020, aiming to consolidate and extend hate crime provisions to cover characteristics like age, disability, and sexual orientation, updating laws for the 21st century.[36] The bill passed in 2021 after amendments addressing free speech concerns, but it drew significant controversy over potential threats to expression, with opponents fearing it could criminalize misgendering or stir social divisions.[4] Yousaf defended it as tackling a "rising tide of hatred," though implementation later revealed implementation challenges, including thousands of complaints under the new act. Crime statistics under Yousaf showed mixed trends: the Scottish Crime and Justice Survey reported a 46% drop in victim-reported crime volume since 2010, which he welcomed as evidence of progress.[37] However, Police Scotland's recorded crimes rose 1% to nearly 250,000 offences in 2018-19, with violent crimes reaching their highest level in seven years.[38] These discrepancies highlight differences between survey-based and police-recorded data, the latter influenced by improved reporting and historical sexual offence investigations. Yousaf's tenure also saw court backlogs exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic from 2020, delaying justice delivery.[39] Overall, while reforms aimed at rehabilitation and prevention, empirical outcomes included sustained high imprisonment rates and debates over legislative impacts on civil liberties.Key justice reforms and Hate Crime Bill
During his tenure as Cabinet Secretary for Justice from February 2018 to May 2021, Humza Yousaf advanced reforms aimed at reducing reliance on short-term imprisonment and modernizing hate crime legislation. One significant initiative was the extension of the presumption against short custodial sentences. Originally established in 2011 for sentences of three months or less, Yousaf supported legislation to broaden this to sentences of 12 months or under, arguing that such terms were often ineffective for rehabilitation and contributed to high recidivism rates.[40] The Scottish Parliament approved the Presumption Against Short Periods of Imprisonment (Scotland) Order 2019 on June 26, 2019, by a vote of 83 to 26, with the policy emphasizing community-based alternatives, particularly for vulnerable groups like women, while preserving judicial discretion for serious offenses.[41] Early data indicated a decline in their use, with the proportion of court disposals involving sentences of 12 months or less dropping from 12.8% in April 2019 to 9.5% by November 2019.[32] Yousaf's most prominent legislative effort was the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Bill, introduced to the Scottish Parliament on April 30, 2020, and passed on March 11, 2021, receiving royal assent on April 23, 2021.[42] The Act consolidated existing hate crime provisions under the Public Order Act 1986 (as applicable to Scotland) and created new offenses of "stirring up hatred" based on protected characteristics, including age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, transgender identity, and variations in sex characteristics, but notably excluding sex itself.[42] It also repealed the common law offense of breach of the peace where it involved expressions of hatred, replacing it with statutory thresholds intended to balance victim protection with free speech safeguards, such as a defense for reasonable conduct in public interest discussions. Yousaf defended the bill as addressing a "rising tide of hatred" amid increasing reported incidents, citing data from Police Scotland on hate crimes rising from 3,263 in 2012-13 to 4,576 in 2019-20.[43] [44] The legislation faced substantial criticism for potentially chilling free expression, with opponents including the Law Society of Scotland, free speech advocates, and figures like author J.K. Rowling arguing that vague definitions of "stirring up" hatred—requiring behavior likely to incite others—could criminalize robust debate, particularly on transgender issues, given the bill's inclusion of that category without equivalent protections for biological sex.[45] Amendments during Stage 2 addressed some concerns, such as clarifying dwelling-house exemptions and free speech defenses, but detractors maintained the law's broad scope risked subjective enforcement, especially as implementation guidance emphasized context over intent.[46] Post-enactment, Police Scotland received over 8,000 complaints in the first week of enforcement on April 1, 2024, many deemed non-criminal, highlighting implementation challenges.[47] Yousaf rejected claims of overreach, attributing opposition to "disinformation" and insisting the Act mirrored existing UK-wide stirring-up offenses while providing explicit protections for expression.Health and Social Care Secretary (2021-2023)
Humza Yousaf was appointed Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care on 19 May 2021, following a Scottish Government reshuffle by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon after the 2021 Scottish Parliament election.[48] His role encompassed responsibility for NHS Scotland's recovery from COVID-19 disruptions, including elective care backlogs, acute services, and the integration of health and social care systems.[49] The appointment occurred during the waning phase of the pandemic, with Yousaf tasked with overseeing the mass vaccination rollout and transitioning to post-emergency operations.[50] Yousaf's tenure focused on NHS remobilization, including efforts to avert industrial action by nurses through pay settlements and commitments to workforce expansion.[51] He emphasized reducing health inequalities and advancing the 2021 Health and Social Care Bill to devolve powers to local partnerships, though implementation faced delays amid resource constraints.[52] Vaccination coverage in Scotland reached high levels under his oversight, with over 90% of eligible adults receiving at least one dose by mid-2021, contributing to declining case rates.[53] However, systemic pressures persisted, including staff burnout and infrastructure strain from prior lockdowns. NHS performance metrics deteriorated significantly during Yousaf's time in office. Inpatient and day case waiting lists, already elevated from pandemic deferrals, climbed to over 156,000 by early 2023, a 5.8% year-on-year increase, with long waits exceeding two years affecting thousands.[54] A&E attendance targets were routinely missed, with January 2024 recording the worst month for four-hour waits, reflecting trends that intensified from 2021 onward; only 66.1% of patients were seen within the standard in late 2023 data tied to earlier backlogs.[55] [56] By March 2023, approximately one in six Scots were on waiting lists, totaling over 820,000, prompting opposition accusations of mismanagement and failure to deliver promised recovery.[57] [58] Yousaf launched an NHS recovery plan in 2022 aiming to eliminate longest waits and boost capacity, but critics, including Scottish Labour, described it as inadequate given persistent ambulance handover delays and diagnostic backlogs.[55] Scotland lagged behind England in several recovery indicators, such as endoscopy and therapy waits, per independent analysis.[59] He left the post on 28 March 2023 upon assuming the First Minister role, with waiting lists at historic highs and no substantial reversal of pandemic-induced declines in elective procedures.[48]COVID-19 response outcomes
Humza Yousaf assumed the role of Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care on 20 May 2021, inheriting a vaccination program that had already administered first doses to over 80% of adults amid ongoing Delta variant pressures.[60] By November 2021, Scotland achieved 88% full vaccination coverage among those over 18, including 96% for over-40s, contributing to reduced hospitalization severity despite high case numbers.[60] Government statements attributed lower admission rates relative to cases to vaccine protection, even as Scotland recorded Europe's highest per capita infections in July 2021.[61] Hospital systems faced acute strain under Yousaf's tenure, with August 2021 marking record daily cases exceeding 6,000 and a "perfect storm" of factors overwhelming capacity, including A&E backlogs and staffing shortages.[62] By March 2022, COVID-19 hospitalizations peaked at 2,322 patients—surpassing prior winter highs—and Yousaf described the NHS as confronting its "biggest crisis," with bed occupancy strained and elective care suspended.[63] Omicron-driven surges in late 2021 and 2022 further pressured admissions, averaging 735 COVID inpatients weekly by December 2022, prompting renewed vaccine uptake appeals.[64] Outcomes included persistent indirect pandemic effects, with excess deaths rising post-initial waves; by early 2023, Scotland saw over 100 weekly excess mortality beyond pre-COVID norms, linked partly to delayed non-COVID care and A&E attendance failures where around 40 deaths occurred weekly in January 2023 amid performance declines.[65] Yousaf allocated £10 million for long COVID services in September 2021, though inquiries later highlighted unaddressed issues like DNACPR notices raised by bereaved families.[66] [67] A August 2021 government review under his oversight identified operational lessons but faced criticism for insufficient systemic reforms to mitigate ongoing vulnerabilities.[68]NHS waiting lists and performance metrics
During Humza Yousaf's tenure as Health and Social Care Secretary from May 2021 to February 2023, NHS Scotland's waiting lists for elective care expanded significantly amid post-COVID recovery efforts, with the total number of patients awaiting inpatient, day case, or outpatient treatment rising from approximately 603,000 at the start of his appointment to over 700,000 by early 2023.[69] [70] This growth occurred despite the Scottish Government's NHS Recovery Plan (2021-2026), which aimed to restore pre-pandemic performance standards, including 90% of patients receiving referral-to-treatment (RTT) within 18 weeks—a target suspended during the height of the pandemic but not reinstated under Yousaf's leadership.[71] Outpatient waiting times deteriorated, with around 480,000 patients awaiting first appointments as of December 2022, exceeding pre-pandemic levels.[70] In July 2022, Yousaf announced plans to eliminate two-year waits for outpatient appointments in most specialties by August 2022 and 18-month waits by December 2022, but these commitments were not met, with long-wait reductions proving insufficient to curb overall backlog expansion.[72] [73] By November 2022, one in seven Scots was on an NHS waiting list, prompting opposition calls for Yousaf's resignation.[74] A&E performance fell short of the 95% four-hour target consistently, with September 2022 marking the worst-ever monthly results, as Yousaf acknowledged the need for improvement but attributed pressures to seasonal factors and ongoing recovery.[75] Cancer waiting times reached a record low in June 2022, with nearly 24% of urgent referrals exceeding the 62-day standard for starting treatment, reflecting diagnostic and capacity constraints that persisted into 2023.[76] Diagnostic test waits for key procedures, such as endoscopies, also lagged, with over 148,000 patients pending eight prioritized tests by February 2023, though quarterly reductions in some over-52-week outpatient waits were cited by supporters as marginal progress.[77]| Metric | Key Target | Performance Under Yousaf (2021-2023) |
|---|---|---|
| Outpatient First Appointments | 95% within 12 weeks | ~59% compliance by late 2022; backlog grew to 480,000+ patients.[70] [78] |
| RTT (18 Weeks) | 90% completion | Suspended; no restoration, with lists expanding overall.[79] |
| A&E (4 Hours) | 95% seen/admitted/transferred | Often below 70%; worst monthly in Sep 2022.[75] [55] |
| Cancer (62 Days) | 95% start treatment | ~76% compliance in mid-2022; record lows reported.[76] |
SNP leadership and First Minister election (2023)
Context of Nicola Sturgeon's resignation
Nicola Sturgeon announced her intention to resign as First Minister of Scotland and leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP) on 15 February 2023, after serving in the roles since November 2014. In her statement at Bute House in Edinburgh, she explained that the position had become increasingly draining, stating, "The First Minister job extracts an enormous amount from you as a human being," and that after eight years, her long tenure had made her a liability rather than an asset to the independence cause. Sturgeon emphasized that her decision was not driven by any single policy failure but by a recognition that a new leader was needed to refresh the push for Scottish independence, which she described as bigger than any individual. She committed to remaining in office until her successor was elected and formally tendered her resignation to King Charles III on 28 March 2023, effective that day.[80][81][82] Although Sturgeon denied that "short-term pressures" influenced her timing, her resignation occurred amid several mounting challenges for the SNP government. A police investigation into the party's finances, Operation Branchform, had been ongoing since July 2021, focusing on the use of £666,953 raised for a second independence referendum campaign; her husband, Peter Murrell, the SNP's chief executive, was arrested on 5 April 2023 in connection with it and released without charge pending further inquiry. Additionally, public and internal party discontent had grown over the handling of transgender issues, particularly following the January 2023 case of Isla Bryson, a convicted rapist who, having self-identified as female, was initially placed in a women's prison before being transferred amid backlash. This coincided with the UK government's unprecedented use of Section 35 of the Scotland Act 1998 on 17 January 2023 to block the Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill, which Sturgeon had championed to simplify legal gender changes by removing the medical diagnosis requirement and reducing the waiting period from two years to three months.[81][83][81] Further strains included stalled progress on independence following the 2014 referendum's 55-45% rejection and the 2022 Supreme Court ruling against a unilateral second referendum without UK consent, alongside domestic issues like record NHS waiting lists exceeding 800,000 in late 2022 and widespread public sector strikes. These factors contributed to declining SNP poll ratings, with support for independence dipping below 45% in some surveys by early 2023. Sturgeon's exit triggered a leadership contest concluded on 27 March 2023, positioning her deputy and cabinet colleagues, including Humza Yousaf, as frontrunners to succeed her.[84][85][81]Leadership campaign dynamics and victory
Following Nicola Sturgeon's resignation on 15 February 2023, Humza Yousaf launched his leadership bid on 19 February, positioning himself as the continuity candidate aligned with Sturgeon's progressive policies and independence strategy.[86] He received key endorsements from Sturgeon herself and SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford, bolstering his support among party establishment figures and urban branches.[87] Yousaf emphasized competence in government delivery, though critics within the party highlighted delays in ferry construction and NHS performance during his ministerial tenures.[88] The contest featured three main candidates: Yousaf, Finance Secretary Kate Forbes, who appealed to socially conservative and rural members with critiques of government inefficiencies, and former Community Empowerment Minister Ash Regan, who resigned from cabinet in January 2023 over opposition to self-identification in gender recognition reforms and prioritized a dedicated independence campaign.[89] Televised debates on STV (7 March), Sky News (13 March), and BBC (14 March) exposed divisions, with Forbes challenging Yousaf's competence—citing specific failures like the £100 million-plus cost overruns on Ferguson Marine ferries under his transport oversight—and Regan accusing the party of losing focus on independence amid stalled referendum progress.[90][91] Yousaf defended his record by pointing to policy continuities, such as expanding free childcare, while downplaying internal rifts. Voting occurred via single transferable vote among SNP members and affiliates from 24 February to 2 March, with results announced on 27 March. Of 72,169 eligible voters, 50,494 valid ballots were cast, yielding a 70% turnout. Yousaf led the first round with strong affiliate support from trade unions, despite Forbes outperforming expectations among ordinary constituency members in some internal analyses.[92]| Round | Humza Yousaf | Kate Forbes | Ash Regan |
|---|---|---|---|
| First | 24,336 votes (48.2%) | 20,559 votes (40.7%) | 5,599 votes (11.1%) |
| Final (post-Regan elimination) | 26,032 votes (52.1%) | 23,890 votes (47.9%) | Eliminated |
Premiership (2023-2024)
Government formation and Bute House Agreement
Following his election as leader of the Scottish National Party on 27 March 2023, Humza Yousaf was nominated for the position of First Minister and secured election in the Scottish Parliament on 28 March 2023 with 71 votes, comprising support from all 63 SNP MSPs and the 8 Scottish Green MSPs.[96][97] He was formally sworn in as First Minister and Keeper of the Scottish Seal at the Court of Session in Edinburgh on 29 March 2023, taking an oath of allegiance to King Charles III.[98][99] With the SNP holding 64 seats in the 129-seat Scottish Parliament—short of a majority—Yousaf's government formation relied on the existing Bute House Agreement, a power-sharing arrangement originally negotiated between the SNP and Scottish Greens on 20 August 2021.[100] The agreement outlined a shared policy programme emphasizing climate action, economic recovery, and progression toward Scottish independence, while providing for the appointment of two Green co-leaders as cabinet secretaries to ensure legislative stability through combined parliamentary arithmetic of 72 seats.[100] Yousaf, who had pledged during his leadership campaign to uphold the deal, announced his cabinet reshuffle on 29 March 2023, retaining Scottish Green co-leaders Patrick Harvie as Cabinet Secretary for Transport and Lorna Slater as Cabinet Secretary for Culture, Gaelic and International Relations, thereby maintaining Green influence over portfolios aligned with their priorities such as net-zero emissions and biodiversity.[101] The Bute House Agreement facilitated the passage of government business by guaranteeing Green support on key votes, excluding areas like foreign affairs and constitutional matters reserved to the UK Parliament, though it drew criticism for prioritizing environmental policies potentially at odds with broader economic concerns.[100] Under Yousaf, the arrangement enabled initial stability, including approval of the 2023-24 Scottish Budget on 20 December 2023 with Green backing, despite opposition from other parties.[102] This cooperation extended the minority SNP administration into a functional majority government, though tensions over policy implementation, particularly climate targets, persisted from inception.[103]Domestic policy implementation
As First Minister, Humza Yousaf prioritized advancing Scottish independence within legal constraints, while implementing targeted reforms in education and public health. His administration shifted focus from legislative referendum bids—blocked by the UK Supreme Court's November 2022 ruling that Holyrood lacked authority without Westminster's consent—to electoral strategies for negotiation mandates.[104] In parallel, policies addressed persistent challenges in schooling and Scotland's elevated drug mortality rates, Europe's highest at over 1,200 deaths in 2022, though implementation faced reversals and dependencies on UK cooperation.[105] Yousaf's independence strategy emphasized securing a majority of Scotland's 57 Westminster seats in the upcoming UK general election as a proxy mandate to initiate talks with the UK government. Adopted at the SNP conference on October 15, 2023, this approach quelled internal party dissent by amending conference motions to require such a seat majority for negotiation legitimacy, rather than broader vote shares.[106] The party endorsed the plan the following day, framing it as a democratic pathway amid stalled referendum efforts.[107] However, polls indicated record-low public prioritization of independence, with only 20-25% citing it as a top issue, undermining potential momentum.[108] No formal negotiations ensued during his tenure, which ended in April 2024, as the strategy hinged on future electoral outcomes. In education, Yousaf's September 2023 Programme for Government pledged an Education Bill to create a new qualifications authority and independent inspectorate, aiming to enhance standards amid criticisms of attainment gaps.[109] Expansion of early years childcare to 1,140 hours annually for three- and four-year-olds by 2025 was reaffirmed as a core investment, building on prior commitments to boost workforce participation.[110] Yet, the government reversed a proposed legal minimum on pupil contact hours in December 2023, citing consultation feedback and flexibility needs, which drew accusations of diluting reform ambitions from teaching unions and opposition parties.[111] These decisions reflected a pragmatic recalibration, delaying broader structural changes inherited from predecessor Nicola Sturgeon. On drugs policy, Yousaf accelerated plans for Scotland's first supervised consumption facility in Glasgow, securing Lord Advocate approval on September 11, 2023, to exempt users from certain prosecutions during supervised use.[112] He allocated £2 million annually for the pilot and pressed Westminster against interference, with the UK government confirming on September 13 it would not obstruct devolved aspects, though federal drug laws on possession persisted.[105] Proponents argued the facility could reduce overdose deaths—numbering 1,051 in 2023—by providing sterile equipment and medical oversight, citing international models in Portugal and Canada.[105] Critics, including UK ministers, contended it risked normalizing hard drug use without addressing root supply issues, with evidence from similar sites showing modest harm reduction but no significant gateway to abstinence.[105] The pilot advanced amid Scotland's crisis, where opioid-related fatalities exceeded 80% of totals, but full operationalization extended beyond Yousaf's resignation.Independence strategy and referendum efforts
Following the UK Supreme Court's November 2022 ruling that the Scottish Parliament lacked authority to legislate for a second independence referendum without Westminster's consent, Humza Yousaf, upon becoming First Minister in March 2023, pledged to pursue alternative routes to advance Scottish independence.[113] His administration continued the Scottish Government's "Building a New Scotland" series of policy papers, originally initiated under Nicola Sturgeon, to outline the practical implications and benefits of independence.[114] In June 2023, Yousaf launched a paper titled "Creating a Modern Constitution for an Independent Scotland," proposing a written constitution that would embed rights such as access to a free National Health Service and protections against discrimination, while allowing for citizen-led initiatives and referendums.[115][116] Yousaf's strategy emphasized building public support through detailed prospectuses rather than immediate referendum legislation, with additional papers addressing democracy, currency, and other aspects during his tenure.[117] He had planned to release two further independence white papers before his resignation, focusing on unresolved economic and constitutional elements.[118] At the SNP's June 2023 conference in Dundee, Yousaf referenced the possibility of a referendum but provided ambiguous details, leading to varied interpretations among delegates regarding the timeline and mechanism.[119] In September 2023, Yousaf proposed a revised approach, suggesting that securing a majority of Scotland's 57 Westminster seats in the upcoming UK general election would provide a democratic mandate to negotiate independence with the UK government.[120] This plan, presented as a compromise to internal party dissent, marked the third adjustment to the SNP's independence strategy within a year and was adopted at the party's October 2023 conference in Aberdeen after amendments specified that such a majority would trigger negotiations rather than an immediate referendum.[121][107][106] The strategy also considered positioning the 2026 Scottish Parliament election as a de facto referendum on independence if Westminster seats did not yield the desired outcome.[122] However, these electoral tactics yielded no concrete progress toward a referendum, as the UK government under Prime Minister Rishi Sunak maintained opposition to granting a Section 30 order for a legal vote.[113]Education and drugs policy decisions
As First Minister, Yousaf prioritized expanding childcare provision, announcing in April 2023 plans to accelerate the rollout of funded early learning and childcare for children aged 1 and 2, alongside improvements for school-age children, as part of his initial policy prospectus.[123] In his September 2023 Programme for Government, he committed to rejoining key international education benchmarks, such as PISA and TIMSS, to better assess performance, while emphasizing efforts to close the socioeconomic attainment gap through targeted interventions and improved outcomes for disadvantaged pupils.[109] However, these initiatives faced implementation challenges, including persistent critiques of the SNP's long-term focus on the attainment gap without sufficient progress, as highlighted in independent analyses of Scotland's education delivery gaps.[124] Yousaf's administration encountered significant industrial action in the education sector, with multiple teacher and support staff strikes disrupting schools throughout 2023. In May 2023, teachers at Yousaf's former secondary school, Whitehill in Glasgow, participated in a one-day strike over pension changes, reflecting broader unrest among the Educational Institute of Scotland (EIS) membership.[125] Further strikes by teaching and non-teaching staff in September 2023 led to widespread school closures across multiple councils, prompted by rejections of a 5.2% pay offer deemed insufficient amid inflation; Yousaf appealed directly to unions like Unison to avert action but stated no additional funding was available for improved offers.[126][127] These disputes underscored tensions over teacher pay, recruitment, and retention, with over 100,000 pupils affected in some instances.[128] On drugs policy, Yousaf endorsed harm reduction measures, including support for Scotland's first supervised drug consumption facility (SDCF) pilot in Glasgow, outlined in the 2023-24 Programme for Government as evidence-based to reduce overdose risks.[109] Following the Lord Advocate's September 2023 guidance clarifying no prosecutions for users entering such facilities, Yousaf urged the UK Government not to obstruct the initiative legally, emphasizing its potential to address Scotland's high drug death rates—1,051 in 2023, the highest on record.[112][129] The £2.3 million Glasgow facility received approval in September 2023, allowing supervised injection of personal supplies, though operational delays pushed openings beyond his premiership.[130] Despite these steps, drug-related deaths continued to rise, drawing opposition criticism that Yousaf's government cut real-terms treatment funding and failed to deliver promised expansions, such as hundreds of new residential rehab beds—with only limited progress reported by March 2024, when Yousaf maintained targets remained "on track."[131][132] The Scottish Parliament passed enabling legislation in January 2024 for local authorities to establish SDCFs and drug-checking services, but delays in licensing and facilities opening highlighted enforcement gaps, with no operational sites by the end of Yousaf's tenure.[133] Critics, including Scottish Conservative and Labour figures, attributed ongoing failures to over-reliance on pilots without addressing underlying supply and abstinence-based treatment shortages.[134]Economic and fiscal management
During Humza Yousaf's premiership, the Scottish Government's fiscal management operated within the devolved powers established by the Scotland Act 2016, relying on block grant adjustments from Westminster alongside onshore revenues from income tax, land transaction tax, and landfill tax. The administration prioritized spending on public services and poverty alleviation, with the 2023-24 Programme for Government emphasizing three missions: equality, opportunity, and community, including measures to promote economic growth through investments in skills and infrastructure.[135][109] Finance Secretary Shona Robison presented the December 2023 budget for 2024-25, which froze council tax rates across Scotland despite earlier warnings of "difficult decisions" and potential rises, allocating approximately £3 billion to poverty reduction, household protection, and public services.[136][137][138] The budget maintained higher income tax rates for top earners—up to 46% for incomes over £125,140—resulting in Scotland's highest marginal rates in the UK, while announcing plans for the first issuance of Scottish government bonds to fund infrastructure without immediate tax hikes.[136][139] Fiscal outturns reflected tight margins, with 2023-24 expenditure totaling £54.0 billion against an approved budget of £54.3 billion, indicating minor underspending amid pressures from public sector pay deals and inflation.[140] The Scottish Fiscal Commission's assessments highlighted ongoing reliance on volatile revenues and long-term sustainability challenges, though specific critiques under Yousaf focused on the absence of bold reforms to address structural deficits.[141] Economic performance during this period showed stagnation and rising unemployment. Scotland's economy grew by 0.4% in the first quarter of 2023, but the unemployment rate jumped to 3.9% by September 2023, with nearly 40,000 additional jobless claims, reaching 126,000 unemployed by December 2023—a 30,000 increase from pre-Yousaf levels.[142][143][144] Youth unemployment peaked at its highest in years, with two-fifths of 16-24-year-olds economically inactive by mid-2024.[145] Public ratings of the government's economic handling fell to a net -25 score by late 2023, reflecting perceptions of inadequate growth strategies.[146] Critics, including parliamentary committees and independent watchdogs, argued the budget lacked coherence in balancing growth priorities with spending commitments, while the broader 10-year economic strategy suffered from insufficient political leadership and unclear targets.[147][148] Opposition sources highlighted u-turns on fiscal pledges, such as averting council tax hikes under pressure, as evidence of reactive rather than proactive management.[149][150]Health sector continuation and challenges
In assuming the role of First Minister in March 2023, Humza Yousaf continued oversight of the NHS Recovery Plan 2021-2026, originally launched under his predecessor as Health Secretary, which sought to eliminate COVID-19 backlogs by expanding primary care capacity and prioritizing face-to-face services.[71] In September 2023, he directed the Cabinet Secretary for Health to advance these commitments, including workforce recruitment and digital enhancements to reduce administrative burdens.[151] To address elective care delays, Yousaf pledged £300 million over three years in October 2023, with £100 million annually targeted at inpatient and day-case procedures to deliver approximately 50,000 additional treatments.[152] The initial £100 million tranche was released to health boards in April 2024, alongside £30 million for immediate productivity boosts like extended theatre hours.[152] In July 2024, further allocations supported waiting list reductions, though overall elective admissions lagged 15% behind pre-pandemic levels through mid-2024.[153][154] Persistent challenges undermined these efforts, with inpatient/day-case waiting lists surpassing 779,000 patients by June 2023—over seven times Yousaf's stated target of under 100,000—and remaining elevated into 2024 despite interventions.[69][155] By October 2024, only £30 million of the £300 million had been expended, prompting criticism of implementation pace.[156] Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) waits exemplified shortfalls: a March 2023 pledge to clear lists by that month went unmet, leaving over 5,000 children pending treatment as of September 2023.[157] Emergency department performance deteriorated further, meeting just 68% of the four-hour treatment standard in March 2023, well below the 95% benchmark, with trends showing no sustained recovery through 2024.[158] Cancer pathways also faltered, with compliance under the 62-day standard from urgent referral to treatment—intended for 95% of cases—operating significantly below target amid rising backlogs.[78] Workforce strains intensified pressures; a threatened junior doctors' strike in July 2023 was averted via a 12.4% pay uplift for 2023/24, but broader pay disputes and recruitment shortfalls contributed to service strains.[159] Yousaf faced parliamentary scrutiny over these metrics, defending progress while attributing constraints to UK fiscal policies.[160]Social and hate crime policies
The Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act 2021, originally introduced by Yousaf as Justice Secretary and passed by the Scottish Parliament on 11 March 2021, entered into force on 1 April 2024 during his premiership.[42][161] The legislation consolidated existing hate crime provisions under a single framework while expanding protected characteristics to include age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, transgender identity, and variations in sex characteristics; it also created a new offense of "stirring up hatred" against these groups, carrying a maximum penalty of seven years' imprisonment.[162][163] Implementation drew widespread criticism for potentially eroding free speech, with opponents arguing that vague definitions of "stirring up hatred"—requiring behavior "threatening or abusive" and likely to incite hatred—could capture non-criminal expressions, such as public misgendering or criticism of transgender ideology.[164][165] UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak described the law as a "chilling" threat to freedom of expression, while Scottish Catholic bishops and free speech advocates warned of its chilling effect on debate.[166][167] Yousaf rejected these as "disinformation and inaccuracy," maintaining that a high evidential threshold—necessitating intent and reasonable belief in incitement—would prevent misuse, and emphasizing the law's role in protecting vulnerable groups without targeting opinions.[168][163] In the Act's first week, Police Scotland received 7,152 online hate crime reports, a substantial surge, but recorded only 240 as actual crimes, with just 3.8% deemed to meet the criteria for further action; reports dropped to 1,832 in the second week.[169][170][171] By mid-April 2024, of 445 recorded hate crimes, only seven involved stirring-up offenses.[47] Subsequent data indicated a 63% rise in recorded hate crimes from April to October 2024, totaling 5,437 incidents, though Police Scotland attributed much of the initial volume to public awareness campaigns rather than genuine spikes in criminality.[172][169] Broader social policies under Yousaf prioritized reducing inequality through measures like expanded early learning and childcare to combat child poverty, framed as both anti-poverty and pro-growth initiatives in his 2023-24 Programme for Government.[109] His administration committed to "equality of opportunity" across backgrounds, including protections for minorities, while defending transgender rights amid ongoing tensions with gender-critical campaigners, though no major new legislation advanced during his tenure following the UK government's 2023 block on the prior Gender Recognition Reform Bill.[123][173] Critics from conservative and free speech perspectives contended that such emphases reflected an over-prioritization of identity-based protections at the expense of broader societal cohesion, potentially exacerbating divisions evidenced by the hate crime law's contentious rollout.[174][165]International relations and foreign policy
As First Minister, Humza Yousaf conducted international engagements to promote Scotland's global profile and advance the case for independence, engaging in what has been described as protodiplomacy despite the Scottish Parliament's limited constitutional authority over foreign affairs.[175] His activities included bilateral meetings with foreign leaders and officials, such as the Icelandic President and the Ukrainian Ambassador, and participation in events like COP28 in Dubai on December 2023, where he held discussions without mandatory UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) presence on at least five occasions.[176][177] These actions led to tensions with the UK government, including a public rebuke from Foreign Secretary David Cameron, whom Yousaf called "petty" for threatening to curtail Scottish ministers' overseas support unless protocols were followed.[178] Yousaf consistently advocated for an independent Scotland to rejoin the European Union, arguing that Scotland shares EU values and could contribute significantly to the bloc.[179] In June 2023, he visited Brussels to lobby EU officials directly, emphasizing that independence would enable Scotland to "claim its rightful place" in the EU and potentially adopt the euro to facilitate accession.[180][181] He linked EU rejoining to economic recovery, criticizing Brexit's impact on Scotland and positioning SNP support for EU membership as a key differentiator in UK elections.[182] On Ukraine, Yousaf reaffirmed Scotland's "steadfast" and "unconditional" support following Russia's 2022 invasion, attending memorial services on anniversaries, such as the second on 24 February 2024, and meeting Ukrainian parliamentary speaker Mykola Stefanchuk in April 2024.[183][184][185] However, his administration faced accusations of betraying Ukrainian refugees by cutting funding for support services in early 2024, prompting warnings from refugee groups.[186] Yousaf took a prominent stance on the Israel-Gaza conflict, repeatedly calling for an immediate ceasefire and condemning Israel's military actions as disproportionate, while highlighting what he described as Western double standards in responding to Gaza compared to Ukraine, attributing differences to racism against Muslims and people of color.[187][188] In January 2024, he addressed EU diplomats in Brussels on the issue amid UK government concerns, and his government allocated humanitarian aid to Gaza, which he defended against claims of personal conflict of interest linked to his Pakistani Muslim heritage.[189][190] Yousaf's positions on Pakistan were less formalized in policy terms during his premiership, though his family heritage from the country informed broader advocacy on issues affecting Muslim-majority nations, including criticism of Western foreign policy inconsistencies. No major bilateral initiatives with Pakistan were prominently pursued, with engagements focusing more on diaspora ties and global south perspectives rather than specific Scottish-Pakistani state relations.[12]Positions on EU, Ukraine, Gaza, and Pakistan
As First Minister, Humza Yousaf advocated for an independent Scotland to rejoin the European Union, emphasizing shared values and economic benefits. In a June 2023 visit to Brussels, he urged EU leaders not to close the door on Scottish membership, positioning Scotland as aligned with European principles despite the UK's Brexit departure.[180] In a November 2023 op-ed, Yousaf outlined a pathway for rejoining, arguing that independence would enable Scotland to restore pre-Brexit ties and participate fully in EU institutions.[179] During a June 2023 SNP Convention on Independence speech, he committed to preparing for EU membership as an independent state if the party secured electoral success, including establishing a Scottish Government envoy in Brussels to advance this goal.[191] Yousaf expressed strong support for Ukraine amid Russia's invasion, reaffirming Scotland's solidarity on key anniversaries. On the second anniversary in February 2024, he described Scotland's stance as one of "steadfast support," highlighting ongoing aid and engagement with Ukrainian refugees who had fled to Scotland.[192] He participated in a commemorative service on February 24, 2024, delivering a reading and stating, "We stand with Ukrainians," in recognition of their resistance.[183][193] This position aligned with broader UK and SNP backing for sanctions against Russia and military assistance to Kyiv, though Yousaf later, post-resignation, critiqued perceived inconsistencies in Western responses to conflicts by comparing Ukraine to Gaza.[194] On the Israel-Gaza conflict, Yousaf called for an immediate ceasefire shortly after the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, emphasizing humanitarian concerns and Palestinian rights. In a November 21, 2023, Scottish Parliament speech during a Gaza debate, he condemned violence on both sides but insisted Gaza must remain under Palestinian control with no right to expel residents, while urging recognition of Palestinian statehood.[195] His stance drew from personal ties, as his wife's family was trapped in Gaza, prompting him to highlight the humanitarian crisis and criticize delays in international action.[4] Yousaf's advocacy included pushing for UK suspension of arms sales to Israel and greater aid access, reflecting SNP policy priorities amid reports of over 40,000 Palestinian deaths by late 2023, though he faced accusations of one-sidedness for not equally condemning Hamas tactics.[195] Yousaf's positions on Pakistan were less prominently articulated in foreign policy during his premiership, influenced by his Pakistani heritage but focused primarily on domestic and EU matters. Of Punjabi descent with family roots in Mirpur, he occasionally referenced cultural ties but did not spearhead specific initiatives on Pakistani issues like Kashmir or internal governance. Post-premiership engagements, such as a May 2025 letter co-signed with Leo Varadkar urging de-escalation between Pakistan and India amid border clashes, suggest continuity in supporting regional stability, though no equivalent actions occurred while in office.[196] His commentary remained general, avoiding deep intervention in Pakistan's sovereignty disputes.Collapse of coalition and resignation
On 18 April 2024, the Scottish Government announced the abandonment of its statutory target to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 75% by 2030, citing unrealistic feasibility amid legal challenges and economic pressures, which provoked immediate backlash from the Scottish Green Party co-leaders Patrick Harvie and Lorna Slater, who described it as a "betrayal" of climate commitments central to the Bute House Agreement. Tensions escalated as the Greens indicated they could no longer support the minority SNP administration without concessions, prompting First Minister Humza Yousaf to convene an emergency cabinet meeting on 25 April 2024, where he decided to terminate the Bute House Agreement—a power-sharing arrangement with the Greens in place since August 2021 that had provided legislative stability through Green ministerial roles and policy cooperation.[197] [198] Yousaf's termination letter to Harvie and Slater, delivered that morning, stated the agreement had "served its purpose" but had become untenable due to irreconcilable differences, leading to the immediate dismissal of Slater as Minister for Green Skills, Circular Economy and Biodiversity, and Harvie retaining his role temporarily before stepping down. [199] The Scottish Greens responded by tabling a motion of no confidence in Yousaf on 26 April 2024, accusing him of a "cynical and incompetent" breach of trust that undermined progressive governance; this motion garnered support from opposition parties including the Scottish Conservatives, Labour, and Liberal Democrats, positioning Yousaf to face likely defeat in the 129-seat Scottish Parliament where the SNP held 63 seats—insufficient for a majority without Green backing. Faced with the prospect of losing the vote, which would force his resignation and potentially trigger a snap election, Yousaf announced his intention to resign as First Minister and SNP leader on 29 April 2024 during a press conference at Bute House, emphasizing that stepping down would allow the SNP to select a new leader to stabilize the government rather than risk broader instability.[200] [5] He formally tendered his resignation to the Scottish Parliament presiding officer later that day, effective upon the election of his successor, ending his 13-month tenure amid criticism from within the SNP for miscalculating the political fallout of preemptively ending the agreement.[6] The government's subsequent no-confidence motion against the administration as a whole was defeated on 1 May 2024 under acting First Minister John Swinney, preserving SNP minority rule.[201] In August 2024, Yousaf conceded that abruptly sacking the Green ministers had been a "mistake," acknowledging it exacerbated the crisis unnecessarily.[202]Post-premiership activities (2024-present)
Continued role as MSP
Following his resignation as First Minister on 29 April 2024 and the subsequent transition to John Swinney on 8 May 2024, Humza Yousaf resumed his position as a backbench Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for the Glasgow Pollok constituency, a role he had held since winning the seat from Labour in 2016.[4] In his final address from the front bench on 7 May 2024, Yousaf stated his intention to continue advocating for underrepresented voices from the backbenches, emphasizing constituency representation and policy scrutiny.[203] Yousaf's parliamentary contributions post-resignation have been limited, primarily consisting of targeted questions and brief interventions rather than leading debates or committee work. On 11 June 2025, he submitted a question (S6O-04782) inquiring how Scottish Government public procurement practices align with international law obligations.[204] Similarly, on 25 June 2025, he raised a question (S6O-04841) regarding the delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza amid ongoing conflict.[205] These interventions reflect a focus on foreign policy and international issues, consistent with his prior ministerial emphases, though they represent a subdued presence compared to his leadership tenure.[28] Further backbench activity included a brief comment on 14 May 2025 during discussions on the oil and gas sector, where Yousaf interjected with skepticism toward opposition critiques.[206] On 3 September 2025, he contributed to a debate on Palestine, critiquing positions articulated by Labour figures including Anas Sarwar and UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy.[207] No motions proposed by Yousaf are recorded in parliamentary records since May 2024, indicating a role centered on constituency casework and selective scrutiny rather than legislative initiation.[28] This lower-profile engagement has coincided with external part-time roles in public speaking and climate advisory work announced in August 2025, while maintaining his MSP duties.[208]Decision to retire at 2026 election
On 17 December 2024, Humza Yousaf announced that he would not seek re-election as a Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for Glasgow Pollok at the 2026 Holyrood election, effectively retiring from frontline politics after over two decades in elected office.[209][210] Yousaf, who had served as an MSP since 2011, described the decision as marking the "right time" to depart the Scottish Parliament, following his resignation as First Minister in April 2024 and subsequent role as a backbench MSP under John Swinney's leadership.[209][211] The announcement came amid a broader trend of MSPs opting not to stand again, with at least 32 such declarations by early 2025, reflecting factors like political fatigue and shifting party dynamics within the SNP.[212] Yousaf's tenure had been marked by challenges, including the collapse of the SNP-Green coalition that precipitated his premiership's end, though he defended that move in contemporaneous interviews as necessary to prioritize SNP policy delivery over external alliances.[213] He did not specify personal or professional motivations beyond timing, but the decision aligns with his reduced visibility since leaving government, focusing instead on occasional external commentary.[211] Yousaf's exit leaves the Glasgow Pollok seat open for selection by the SNP, potentially influencing constituency dynamics ahead of the election scheduled no later than 7 May 2026.[214] His statement emphasized a forward-looking departure, signaling an intent to pursue opportunities outside elected politics while maintaining ties to the independence movement.[4]Personal travels and external engagements
In the period following his resignation as First Minister on 29 April 2024, Humza Yousaf has maintained a relatively low public profile regarding personal travels, with no major international family visits or holidays publicly documented amid his ongoing role as a Member of the Scottish Parliament until the 2026 election.[4] His activities have centered on family matters, including the birth of a daughter shortly after leaving office, and expressions of concern over potential relocation due to perceived rising Islamophobia in the UK during the August 2024 riots, though no such move has occurred.[4][215] Yousaf has pursued external engagements focused on public speaking and advocacy, particularly in forums addressing Muslim community issues and global policy. In April 2025, he delivered a speech at the Global Donors Forum, during which he met with the organization's team as part of his transition to advisory roles outside government.[216] On 25 September 2025, he keynoted the launch of the Muslim Impact Forum at Palestine House in central London, emphasizing civil rights, economic empowerment, and foreign policy in a filmed conversation.[217] These appearances align with his appointment as a strategic advisor to the forum, aimed at enhancing Muslim representation in UK politics.[218] Further engagements include a planned dialogue on the Gaza conflict and Palestinian future at the Beyond Borders Festival, alongside the Palestinian ambassador, and a joint event titled "Surviving Politics" with Michael Gove at the University of Glasgow on 28 January 2025.[219][220] Yousaf is also scheduled to participate in "An Evening with Humza Yousaf," hosted by MPAC in Chandler, Arizona, on 8 November 2025, marking a transatlantic trip tied to his profile as Europe's first Muslim head of government.[221] These activities reflect a shift toward international and community-oriented platforms rather than official governmental duties.Political positions
Scottish nationalism and independence
Humza Yousaf has consistently advocated for Scottish independence throughout his political career in the Scottish National Party (SNP), aligning with the party's core objective of dissolving the United Kingdom. As a member of the Scottish Parliament since 2011, he supported the 2014 independence referendum campaign and subsequent efforts to secure a second vote.[191] Upon assuming the role of First Minister in March 2023, Yousaf pledged to prioritize independence in the SNP's agenda, positioning it as central to the party's UK general election strategy.[222] In June 2023, at the SNP's Independence Convention in Dundee, he committed to making independence the "front and centre" issue for voters, arguing it would enable Scotland to address economic and social challenges more effectively.[223] Yousaf oversaw the continuation of the Scottish Government's "Building a New Scotland" series of prospectuses outlining post-independence policies. In June 2023, he launched a paper on creating a written constitution for an independent Scotland, emphasizing protections for rights and democratic processes.[115] A subsequent July 2023 prospectus detailed plans for Scottish citizenship and passports, proposing automatic eligibility for residents and dual nationality options.[224] These documents aimed to renew the case for independence by addressing practical governance structures, though critics noted their speculative nature amid stalled referendum progress.[114] Facing internal party divisions, Yousaf adjusted the SNP's independence strategy multiple times in 2023. Initially favoring a de facto referendum via Holyrood elections, he shifted toward seeking a majority of Scottish seats in the UK general election as a mandate for independence negotiations with Westminster.[104] This approach was endorsed at the SNP's October 2023 conference in Aberdeen following amendments to quell rebellion, marking the third strategic pivot within the year.[121] Despite these efforts, the strategy yielded limited electoral success, with the SNP securing only nine seats in the July 2024 general election, far short of a majority.[4] In January 2024, Yousaf urged Scottish voters to support the SNP over Labour to advance independence, framing it as essential for escaping Westminster's influence.[225] He argued at the London School of Economics in March 2024 that independence would benefit not only Scotland but also reform the broader UK political system.[226] Following his April 2024 resignation as First Minister, Yousaf maintained advocacy for independence, including in a December 2024 Oxford Union address linking it to broader progressive goals.[227] He had planned additional prospectuses on net zero and pensions before his departure but did not publish them.[118]Social issues: identity politics and free speech
Yousaf has emphasized the need for increased ethnic diversity in Scottish public institutions, framing underrepresentation as evidence of systemic racism. In a 10 June 2020 speech to the Scottish Parliament as Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care, he stated that Scotland's institutions remain "systemically racist" and listed specific examples of ethnic minority absence in leadership, including no non-white equivalents to the Permanent Secretary in the health department, fewer than four out of 1,400 senior doctors from ethnic minorities, and only 23 out of 23,000 regular police officers from BME backgrounds.[228][229] He argued that such disparities contribute to poorer health outcomes for minorities during the COVID-19 pandemic, attributing them to structural barriers rather than individual merit deficits.[230] The speech provoked backlash, with a selectively edited clip circulating online leading Elon Musk to label Yousaf a "blatant racist" in October 2023 for allegedly promoting anti-white sentiment.[231] Fact-checking outlets countered that Yousaf's remarks targeted institutional underrepresentation to advocate for merit-based diversity initiatives, not racial denigration, though critics contended the focus on race over competence exemplified identity politics prioritization.[232] In April 2025, Yousaf described labeling young white men as inherently privileged as "deeply unhelpful," signaling a partial retreat from blanket privilege narratives while maintaining support for targeted diversity efforts in underrepresented sectors.[233] On gender-related identity issues, Yousaf has aligned with expansive transgender protections. As an MSP, he voted in favor of the Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill in 2022, which sought to simplify legal gender self-identification by removing medical diagnosis requirements.[234] In May 2025, he acknowledged the SNP's handling of the blocked legislation as a "mistake" due to insufficient cross-party consensus, yet reaffirmed commitment to advancing trans rights.[235] Regarding the 2023 case of Isla Bryson, a convicted rapist housed initially in a women's prison after self-identifying as female, Yousaf stated Bryson was "not a genuine trans woman" exploiting the system, prompting a policy review to prioritize biological sex in prisoner placements.[236] As First Minister in April 2024, he pledged that transgender women would be covered under proposed misogyny laws, arguing the legislation targets "anyone affected by misogyny" irrespective of birth sex, a stance critics viewed as diluting sex-based protections for women.[237] Yousaf's legislative record intersects identity politics with free speech concerns through the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act 2021, which he introduced as Justice Secretary and which took effect on 1 April 2024. The law expands "stirring up hatred" offenses to cover age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, and transgender identity, alongside existing race provisions, with penalties up to seven years' imprisonment; it omits a "dwelling defense" present in English equivalents, allowing private speech to be prosecutable if reported.[238][164] Defending the bill in July 2020, Yousaf asserted it sets a "very high" evidentiary bar, requiring proof of intent to stir hatred via threatening or abusive conduct, and does not criminalize offensive opinions alone.[238] Critics, including UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and free speech advocates, warned of a "chilling" effect on expression, particularly debates over gender identity, citing vague thresholds that could deter public discourse.[166][162] The law's implementation faced immediate tests, including over 7,000 complaints in its first week, many deemed non-criminal. Author J.K. Rowling challenged it via social media posts misgendering transgender women and asserting biological sex as immutable, prompting police review; on 3 April 2024, authorities concluded no crime occurred, a outcome Yousaf described as "not surprising" given the high threshold.[239] Supporters credited the act with enhancing protections against targeted abuse, while detractors, noting Scotland's left-leaning institutional biases in media and policing, argued it incentivizes subjective complaints over objective harm, potentially privileging protected identities in public debate.[240][162]Economic views and interventionism
Humza Yousaf advocated for an interventionist economic approach, combining public investment in key sectors with progressive taxation to promote growth and reduce inequalities. In a January 2024 speech, he outlined the Scottish National Party's vision for industrial policy in an independent Scotland, emphasizing direct government intervention to target specific industries, such as renewables, and arguing that such investment spending would elevate GDP and long-term productive capacity.[241] He linked this strategy to broader independence benefits, claiming large-scale government action could make households £10,000 better off annually by unlocking economic potential.[242] Under his leadership as First Minister, the Scottish Government pursued expansive fiscal policies, including a £25 million boost to the Just Transition Fund in 2023 to support renewable energy transitions and job creation in green sectors.[243] The 2023-24 budget implemented higher income tax rates across multiple bands, with individuals earning over £28,850 facing greater tax burdens than counterparts elsewhere in the UK, framed as a means to fund public services and tackle poverty.[244] [245] Concurrently, Yousaf endorsed a council tax freeze for 2023-24 to shield lower-income households from rising costs, while reallocating £80 million to housing interventions amid homelessness pressures.[246] [247] Yousaf's framework prioritized a "wellbeing economy" model, rethinking priorities toward social solidarity over pure market liberalism, as articulated in his March 2024 London School of Economics speech on prosperity through public-led dynamism.[248] [249] This included commitments to higher public spending levels on devolved services like health and social security, recommitted in early 2023 despite fiscal constraints from UK-wide block grants.[250] Critics, including business groups, contended that these tax hikes and spending patterns risked deterring investment and necessitating spending reviews for sustainability, with Scotland's higher taxes alienating enterprises amid stagnant productivity growth under prolonged SNP governance.[251] [252]Controversies and criticisms
Governance failures in justice and health portfolios
As Justice Secretary from 2014 to 2021, Humza Yousaf oversaw a Scottish prison system plagued by chronic overcrowding. By January 2019, 710 single cells were occupied by two prisoners each, contributing to a total of over 1,400 inmates doubled up in such conditions across the estate.[253][254] A 2019 report by the Council of Europe's anti-torture committee described conditions as reaching "emergency" levels, citing overcrowding, rising violence, and excessive use of segregation units.[255] Despite legislative changes presuming against sentences under 12 months to reduce the prison population, short-term custodial sentences continued at high levels, with over 1,300 issued in late 2019 alone, exacerbating capacity strains.[33] Yousaf's tenure also included the passage of the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act 2021, which expanded offenses related to stirring up hatred based on characteristics like age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, and transgender identity. The legislation drew widespread criticism for its vague definitions and potential to chill free speech, with opponents arguing it criminalized robust debate under threat of prosecution.[164][165] Upon implementation in April 2024, Police Scotland recorded over 3,000 complaints in the first few days, including vexatious ones, highlighting enforcement challenges and fears of misuse against public figures and artists.[256][257] In the health portfolio from 2021 to 2023, Yousaf managed NHS Scotland amid the COVID-19 aftermath, but waiting lists surged under his leadership. When he assumed the role, approximately 603,000 patients awaited diagnosis or treatment; by mid-2023, this figure had risen by over 175,000.[69] Official data showed 18,390 patients died while on waiting lists in the year to March 2023, amid year-long waits increasing despite pledges to eradicate those over 52 weeks.[258][259] Yousaf's COVID-19 response faced scrutiny during the UK inquiry, where he admitted to "winging it" as Health Secretary and apologized for the government's failure to retain WhatsApp messages, with accusations of deliberate deletions and withholding information from the probe.[260][261][262] These issues compounded perceptions of inadequate preparedness and transparency, as Scotland learned of UK policy shifts via media rather than direct coordination in some instances.[263] Critics, including opposition leaders, labeled his health stewardship "catastrophic," pointing to one in seven Scots on lists by 2023.[264]Leadership style and decision-making errors
Yousaf's leadership as First Minister was characterized by opponents as impulsive and insufficiently consultative, with decisions often prioritizing short-term political expediency over long-term stability. Critics, including columnists in Scottish media, argued that his approach demonstrated a lack of depth in navigating complex parliamentary arithmetic, particularly evident in his management of minority government dynamics following Nicola Sturgeon's resignation.[265] [266] This style contributed to perceptions of inexperience, as Yousaf inherited a SNP fractured by internal debates on policy priorities such as climate targets and social reforms, yet struggled to unify the party or build broader alliances.[267] A pivotal decision-making error occurred on April 25, 2024, when Yousaf unilaterally terminated the Bute House Agreement, a power-sharing arrangement with the Scottish Greens established in 2021 to secure legislative support for the SNP minority government. The move followed tensions over the Scottish Government's abandonment of its 75% carbon emissions reduction target by 2030—announced on April 18, 2024—and its handling of the Cass Review on gender identity services, which prompted Green threats to withdraw but left Yousaf without secured backing from opposition parties like Labour or Conservatives.[198] [197] [102] This precipitated no-confidence motions from both the Greens and Alba Party, forcing Yousaf's resignation on April 29, 2024, after just over a year in office, as he concluded he could not guarantee victory in the ensuing votes.[268] [269] Yousaf later conceded in August 2024 that ending the agreement was a personal mistake, attributing it to misjudging the political fallout amid SNP internal pressures and policy divergences with the Greens.[202] Opposition figures, including Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar, highlighted this as symptomatic of broader governance shortcomings, such as failure to reset SNP strategy on independence or address electoral vulnerabilities, with polls showing SNP support declining to around 30% by early 2024.[149] [270] During his final First Minister's Questions on May 2, 2024, Yousaf acknowledged errors across his ministerial career, including as First Minister, though he defended the substantive policy shifts like emissions targets as pragmatic responses to unrealistic commitments.[271] These admissions underscored critiques from analysts that Yousaf's tenure exacerbated SNP divisions rather than resolving them, contributing to a leadership vacuum.[272]Claims of bias, Islamophobia accusations, and ethical lapses
Yousaf has been accused of racial bias following a January 2020 speech in the Scottish Parliament, in which he stated that "the level of racism that we face [as a family] is predominantly, almost exclusively, from white people."[231] This remark drew criticism for implying a disproportionate focus on white individuals as sources of racism, leading Elon Musk to label Yousaf a "blatant racist" on October 27, 2023, and later a "super racist" who "loathes white people" in August 2024, citing the speech as evidence.[231][273] Yousaf rejected the characterization, accusing Musk of amplifying racial tensions and unchecked racism on the platform X.[274] Critics have also pointed to the 2021 nursery incident as indicative of bias or misuse of discrimination claims. In August 2021, Yousaf publicly alleged that Little Scholars nursery in Dundee discriminated against his daughter on racial or religious grounds by denying her a place, prompting his wife Nadia El-Nakla to file a £30,000 damages claim in November 2021.[275] The nursery rejected the allegations, attributing the decision to capacity limits and emphasizing its inclusive policies.[276] The claim was dropped in February 2023 without settlement or apology, with the nursery owner stating there "never was any discrimination" and describing the action as based on false premises that damaged the business's reputation.[277][278] Yousaf has repeatedly accused political opponents and media of Islamophobia, often in response to scrutiny over policy or personal matters. In March 2024, during a dispute over a Scottish government donation to UNRWA for Gaza aid, he described questions about the funding's motivations as an "outrageous smear" and "Islamophobic attack" on his family, despite the querying MSP denying any prejudice and insisting the concerns were substantive.[189] He has similarly labeled the Conservative Party as "institutionally Islamophobic" in March 2024, citing its handling of issues like Gaza, and warned in August 2024 that rising anti-Muslim sentiment amid UK riots could force his family to leave the country.[279][215] Critics, including commentators, have argued that such accusations serve to deflect legitimate criticism rather than address verifiable prejudice, pointing to a pattern including the retracted nursery claim initially framed as discriminatory.[280] Ethical concerns have arisen from allegations that Yousaf misled the Scottish Parliament on multiple occasions. In September 2023, opposition MSPs urged him to self-refer to the parliamentary standards watchdog after evidence suggested he knowingly provided false information on a government claim, though he refused an external probe.[281][282] More prominently, in November 2023, he faced accusations of lying about the handling of WhatsApp messages for the UK COVID-19 inquiry; initially, he and Deputy First Minister Shona Robison stated no formal request had been received, but documents later confirmed one was made in June 2023, prompting Yousaf to apologize for "shortcomings" in disclosure while denying intentional misleading.[283][284] In March 2025, campaigners called for an ethics inquiry into potential ministerial code breaches by Yousaf and predecessor Nicola Sturgeon, citing undeclared or mishandled matters during their tenures.[285]Electoral history
Regional and constituency elections (2011-2021)
Yousaf was first elected to the Scottish Parliament on 5 May 2011 as one of two Scottish National Party (SNP) members on the Glasgow regional list, following the mixed-member proportional representation system. The SNP secured 83,109 votes (39.8% of the regional vote), an increase of 12.8 percentage points from 2007, entitling the party to two additional seats after constituency results.[26] In the 2016 Scottish Parliament election on 5 May, Yousaf contested and won the Glasgow Pollok constituency seat, previously held by Labour, marking an SNP gain. He received 15,316 votes (54.8% share), a 10.1 percentage point increase from the SNP's 2011 constituency performance in the area, defeating Labour's Johann Lamont by a majority of 6,482 votes. Turnout was 45.5%. This victory contributed to the SNP's sweep of all eight Glasgow constituencies.[286][287]| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Change from 2011 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Humza Yousaf | SNP | 15,316 | 54.8 | +10.1 |
| Johann Lamont | Labour | 8,834 | 31.6 | -15.8 |
| Thomas Haddow | Conservative | 2,653 | 9.5 | +3.8 |
| Isabel Nelson | Liberal Democrats | 585 | 2.1 | 0.0 |
| Ian Leech | TUSC | 555 | 2.0 | +2.0 |
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Change from 2016 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Humza Yousaf | SNP | 18,163 | 53.7 | -1.1 |
| Zubir Ahmed | Labour | 11,058 | 32.7 | +1.1 |
| Sandesh Gulhane | Conservative | 1,849 | 5.5 | -4.0 |
| Nadia Kanyange | Green | 1,651 | 4.9 | +4.9 |
| James Speirs | Liberal Democrats | 522 | 1.5 | -0.6 |
| Others | Various | 556 | 1.7 | N/A |