Nicola Sturgeon: The former FM whose independence dreams were never realised
She made history as the first woman to become Scotland’s first minister.
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.Nicola Sturgeon’s resignation was a surprise to many in politics – but the events that have unfolded since she left office have come as even more of a shock.
Four months after her resignation, which she insisted was “not a reaction to short-term pressures”, the former first minister has been arrested as part of an investigation into SNP funding and finances.
Police Scotland said on Sunday that she is in custody and being quizzed by detectives.
Her husband Peter Murrell – who was until recently the chief executive of the SNP – was arrested by police officers as part of a probe into party finances just a week after she tendered her resignation to the King.
It will prove a headache for successor Humza Yousaf who is trying to distance himself from the scandal as his party’s opinion poll ratings slide.
While Mr Murrell was later released without charge pending further investigations, images of police officers searching the couple’s home, with a tent erected on their front lawn, made headline news.
That arrest was the first as part of Operation Branchform, which has been investigating how more than £600,000 in donations to the party earmarked for an independence referendum have been used.
Colin Beattie, who had been the SNP treasurer, was also arrested as part of that investigation but like Mr Murrell was released without charge.
The arrests came just after Ms Sturgeon stepped down as both first minister and SNP leader after more than eight years in the job, with the former leader swapping running the government for hobbies such as hillwalking and also learning to drive.
She made history as the first woman to become first minister, and was also the longest-serving incumbent in that post – dealing with no fewer than five different Conservative prime ministers in her time in the job.
Ms Sturgeon, who joined the SNP at the age of 16, became first minister in November 2014 after predecessor Alex Salmond stood down in the aftermath of the independence referendum that year – which saw Scots vote by 55% to 45% to stay part of the UK.
Such was her popularity that just after taking over as SNP leader she addressed a sell-out crowd at Glasgow’s Hydro – an achievement usually reserved for pop and rock stars.
Membership soared, so that at one point under her leadership the party was the second largest in the UK, and in the 2015 general election the party enjoyed record-breaking success, winning all but three of the 59 seats up for grabs north of the border.
Ms Sturgeon used her time as first minister to champion causes such as women’s equality, the plight of youngsters in care, and climate change, declaring back in 2019 that the latter issue was an “emergency” the world’s political leaders needed to tackle.
Her time in the top job saw Glasgow host the Cop26 UN summit, insisting that the agreement reached there represented “progress” in tackling the issue.
That summit took place in November 2021, having been delayed by a year by Covid, which saw Ms Sturgeon widely praised for her approach, with the then first minister holding daily briefings to update Scots throughout much of the pandemic.
Her approach was contrasted with that of Boris Johnson, who was prime minister at the time, and who ended up being given a fixed penalty notice for breaching lockdown rules.
Leading the country through Covid is “by far the toughest thing I’ve done”, Ms Sturgeon said, when she announced her resignation.
She spoke then of the “brutality” of life as a politician, as she insisted the “time is now” for her to go.
That decision came after almost 24 years in the Scottish Parliament – she was amongst the MSPs elected in the first Holyrood elections in 1999 – and nearly 16 years in government.
When the SNP narrowly won the 2007 Holyrood election, Mr Salmond became first minister with Ms Sturgeon, who was depute leader of the party, becoming the deputy first minister.
While she led the SNP to electoral success – the party won every election in Scotland during her spell in charge – critics questioned her record.
She famously said people should judge her on her record on closing the attainment gap in Scotland’s schools, with her opponents insisting she failed to make enough progress on this
The controversial issue of gender recognition reform, which was championed by Ms Sturgeon, divided her party and attracted a storm of criticism from women’s rights campaigners.
Meanwhile, sexual harassment allegations brought against Mr Salmond saw her relationship with the man who had been her political ally and mentor crumble.
And while Mr Salmond was cleared of all the criminal charges brought against him, a Holyrood committee was set up to probe the Scottish Government’s handling of the allegations after the Court of Session ruled that this had been unlawful – with Ms Sturgeon grilled by the committee for the best part of a day.
An independent review later cleared the then first minister of breaching the ministerial code but the cross-party committee found by majority that she had misled the parliament.
Her tenure as first minister brought Scotland no closer to independence, with the UK Supreme Court ruling in November 2022 that the Scottish Parliament did not have the powers to hold a second referendum without the consent of Westminster.