LONDON (AP) — Alex Salmond, the former Scottish first minister who spent decades championing and nearly achieving Scottish independence from Britain, has died. He was 69 years old.
Mr Salmond, one of the most polarizing figures in British politics in the early part of this century and the leader of the Scottish National Party who led Scotland to the brink of independence in a 2014 referendum, died in Lake North Macedonia. The resort town of Ohrid, local media reported.
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A statement from the office of former North Macedonian President Djordje Ivanov said: “Sadly, former Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond, who was one of the panellists at the Cultural Diplomacy Forum held in Ohrid yesterday, passed away suddenly today.” About.
Tributes poured in from across the political spectrum, with Labor Prime Minister Keir Starmer calling him a “monumental figure” in Scottish and British politics.
“He left a lasting legacy,” Starmer said. “As Scotland’s first minister, he cared deeply about Scotland’s heritage, history, culture and the communities he represented.”
Mr Salmond served as First Minister of Scotland from 2007 to 2014 and twice as leader of the Scottish National Party, from 1990 to 2000 and from 2004 to 2014. Mr Salmond led an independence movement in the 2014 referendum, but lost, gaining more votes. He received 45 per cent of the vote, but subsequently resigned from the top job and was replaced by his long-time ally Nicola Sturgeon. The ensuing split between the two dominated Scottish politics for many years.
After learning of Ms Salmond’s death, Ms Sturgeon said: “Obviously I cannot act as if the events of the past few years that led to the breakdown of our relationship had not happened, and it is beyond me to try to do so.” It’s not the right thing to do.” “But the fact remains that over the years Alex has been a very important person in my life. We formed one of our partnerships.”
In 2019, Mr Salmond was charged with sexual assault and attempted rape following accusations from nine women he had worked with as prime minister or for the party. Mr Salmond called the charges a “deliberate fabrication for political purposes”. Mr. Salmond was acquitted following a trial in March 2020.
A year later, he founded a new party called Alba (Scottish Gaelic for Scotland), which made little inroads into Scottish politics and called for a new independence referendum at all costs. .
Current SNP leader John Swinney said he was “deeply shocked and saddened by Mr Salmond’s untimely death”.
“Over the years, Alex has made a huge contribution to political life, not only in Scotland but across the UK and beyond,” he said. “He brought the Scottish National Party, which had been on the fringes of Scottish politics, into government and moved Scotland closer to becoming an independent country.”
Mr Salmond said he learned about the dream of Scottish independence at his grandfather’s knees and chose to join the SNP at university in 1973 after his British girlfriend teased him so much about his separatist feelings. .
Salmond’s academic and professional background enabled him to become Scotland’s most economically optimistic and far-sighted politician. At the University of St. Andrews. He double majored in medieval history and economics, reflecting his love of lost Caledonia. In his twenties, he worked as an economist, first for British local government in Scotland, and then for the Royal Bank of Scotland, analyzing North Sea oil, the country’s most active industry.
He won a seat in the British Parliament in 1987 and became party leader within three years. He supported Tony Blair’s Labor government in the late 1990s, which created a devolved Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh, but although the reforms did not lead to independence, the country was given self-government for the first time since its union with England in 1707. gave it a taste. Under the new settlement approved in a referendum, the Scottish Parliament will have broad domestic powers, including policy on health and education, but no foreign policy powers.
Salmond then held a very public forum to advance his dream of full independence and, as his government had varying powers, particularly on social issues, asked the government of Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron to They succeeded in persuading them to hold a vote. Until the results were known, the situation was considered a close call.
Although the independence movement lost, Mr Salmond’s SNP capitalized on that support and has dominated Scottish politics ever since. Since then, the SNP has been in government based in Edinburgh, but it suffered a disaster in this year’s general election, losing most of its seats in the House of Commons to Labor. The next Scottish election is due to take place in 2026.
Konstantin Testorides contributed to this report from Skopje, North Macedonia.