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UK Local Elections 2026
8JUL

Electoral Calculus projects first SNP majority since 2011

3 min read
10:13UTC

An Electoral Calculus Holyrood MRP published on 7 April 2026 projects the SNP on 67 seats, two above the 65-seat majority line, on fieldwork from 4,105 respondents taken 13-31 March.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Electoral Calculus's 7 April MRP is the first Holyrood model since 2011 to project an outright SNP majority.

Electoral Calculus published a Multilevel Regression and Post-stratification (MRP) model of the 6 May 2026 Holyrood election on 7 April 2026, based on a fieldwork sample of 4,105 respondents taken between 13 and 31 March. The model projects the Scottish National Party on 67 seats, two above the 65-seat majority threshold in the 129-seat chamber. All 67 projected seats come from constituency wins; Electoral Calculus allocates the SNP zero regional list seats.

The projection is methodologically unusual because the Additional Member System (AMS) was designed to prevent exactly this outcome. Regional list seats are distributed by a corrective formula that subtracts constituency wins from each party's vote share, meaning constituency over-performance normally drains a party's list entitlement. Electoral Calculus director Martin Baxter has argued the 67-seat projection requires the SNP to concentrate its vote above the model's historical tolerances, a scenario produced by five-party fragmentation of the anti-SNP vote rather than by any SNP surge.

The model is the first Holyrood projection of an outright SNP majority since 2011. No such majority has occurred since Alex Salmond's 2011 win, which produced the 2014 independence referendum on a 55-45 No result. A projected repeat lands on a chamber already losing a record 39 MSPs to retirement, and reframes the April campaign around a question the polling had not previously been asked to answer.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Scotland elects its parliament using a system with two types of seats: 73 local constituency seats (won in head-to-head races) and 56 regional list seats (awarded proportionally to correct for how lopsided the constituency results were). The system was designed specifically to stop any one party winning a majority. Despite that design, the SNP won a majority once — in 2011 under Alex Salmond. That majority produced the 2014 independence referendum, which Scotland voted 55-45 to stay in the UK. A polling model published on 7 April 2026 projects the SNP winning another majority — 67 seats, two above the 65 needed. First Minister John Swinney has said this would give him a mandate to push for a second independence vote. The model works out this way because the parties opposed to the SNP are now splitting their votes between five different options, which reduces the built-in correction mechanism. One month is a long time in politics. The SNP has been projected to win majorities before polling day twice since 2011 and failed both times.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The projected SNP majority emerges from five-party fragmentation of the unionist and centre-right vote, not from any surge in SNP support. The Electoral Calculus model projects the SNP on a vote share similar to or below 2021, but with the anti-SNP vote split across Scottish Labour, Scottish Conservatives, Scottish Liberal Democrats, Scottish Greens and Reform UK.

This fragmentation reduces the efficiency of the AMS correction, because the formula distributes list seats proportionally among all parties, including smaller ones whose small vote shares produce small list-seat returns.

The deeper structural cause is the UK-wide realignment since the 2014 referendum. Scottish Conservative support rose to 31 seats in 2016 on Ruth Davidson's unionist platform, then has declined steadily. Reform UK's entry into Scottish politics at regional list level draws predominantly from the 2016-2021 Scottish Conservative voter base — voters who were never SNP-friendly but who are now distributing their votes across two right-of-centre options rather than one.

Escalation

The projection is directionally escalatory for Scottish independence politics: a confirmed majority would immediately test whether the UK government's position that a Section 30 order is required for a legal referendum can hold against a renewed SNP mandate.

The Scottish Government's 2021 Supreme Court referral on unilateral referendum legality produced a definitive ruling that Holyrood cannot legislate for a binding referendum without Westminster consent. A majority does not change the legal position; it restarts the political negotiation.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    An SNP majority would immediately place a Section 30 request for a second independence referendum on John Swinney's agenda, requiring the UK government to formally respond.

    Short term · 0.8
  • Risk

    Reform UK on 14 Holyrood list seats would become the official opposition at Holyrood, with the staffing, scrutiny and profile rights that entails — and no constituency seat base in Scotland.

    Short term · 0.65
  • Precedent

    If the AMS majority is achieved despite the system's corrective design, it would prompt renewed academic and political debate about whether AMS as configured is fit for purpose in a five-party era.

    Medium term · 0.72
  • Risk

    Scottish Conservative collapse to nine seats would leave the centre-right unionist coalition in Holyrood without sufficient seats to sustain a credible opposition, potentially forcing a de facto Reform-Conservative alliance.

    Short term · 0.68
First Reported In

Update #1 · Wales rewrites parliament no voter has used

Electoral Calculus· 7 Apr 2026
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