Top SNP figures rule themselves out of deputy leadership race
2 min read
Two prominent SNP MPs have dropped out of the race to become the next deputy leader of the party.
Despite being early favourites, frontbenchers Joanna Cherry and Tommy Sheppard have both ruled themselves out of the contest for the senior role.
The race was sparked after Angus Robertson stepped down from the post last month, after losing his Westminster seat to Conservative Douglas Ross in last year’s general election.
The SNP’s Westminster Leader Ian Blackford, and Perth and North Perthshire MP Pete Wishart have also ruled themselves out as contenders.
In a tweet, Ms Cherry, the party's Justice and Home Affairs spokesperson, said she had decided she would "best further the cause of independence" by remaining in her current role.
An SNP source told PoliticsHome that the Edinburgh South-West MP had agreed to step aside from the contest on the understanding that Mr Sheppard would be running for the role.
But writing in The Herald, he said he had “plenty to be getting on with” in his role as SNP Cabinet Office spokesman and as “part of the wider campaign for independence.”
“I’m much more at ease as a protagonist than a referee,” he added.
“I want to be free to contribute and lead debate about the policy we should advocate and that’s harder if you’re running the policy-making machinery.”
But he warned that the contest had to be about more than deciding the timing for another referendum on Scottish independence.
Glasgow Cathcart MSP James Dornan is now the likely front runner in the race for the deputy leadership, while party activist Julie Hepburn has also announced she will run.
PoliticsHome Newsletters
PoliticsHome provides the most comprehensive coverage of UK politics anywhere on the web, offering high quality original reporting and analysis: Subscribe