Reform UK entered the Scottish Parliament for the first time on Thursday 7 May 2026 with 17 of 129 seats, tying with Scottish Labour on 17 and outperforming the Scottish Conservatives on 12. The Reform Scotland group is led by Malcolm Offord, a Conservative life peer who defected to Reform during the campaign. The Scottish Greens took 15 seats, leaving the SNP's 58 (event-03) facing four opposition blocs no smaller than 12 seats apiece.
The 17-seat result undershoots the More in Common Holyrood MRP of 22 by five seats, the same uniform-swing under-projection-of-fragmentation pattern that produced England's 894-seat MRP miss (event-00) but at smaller scale on Scotland's mixed AMS ballot. Reform's projected vote share materialised; the seat conversion did not. Scotland's regional-list tier, which top-ups the constituency vote toward proportionality, absorbed Reform's vote efficiently in the central belt and Highlands and inefficiently along the east coast.
The parliamentary arithmetic shifts the opposition's centre of gravity. The Scottish Conservatives have led the principal-opposition role for the entire devolution era, with the partial exception of 2007-2011 when Labour held it. Reform on 17 against the Scottish Conservatives on 12 inverts a 26-year ordering. Holyrood's chamber procedures, including First Minister's Questions speaking allocations, opposition debate days, and committee chair distributions, follow group size; Russell Findlay's Scottish Conservatives now sit fourth in queue order behind Reform, Scottish Labour and the Scottish Greens.
The substantive question is whether Offord runs a Reform Scotland line on devolved policy or imports the Reform UK Westminster posture. Reform's England councils are testing council-Whitehall friction within 48 hours of taking office (event-07, event-09). Holyrood is not council-level: the Scottish Government controls policing, justice, health and education with a Treasury block grant. A Reform Scotland group running an opposition platform written for Westminster will hit the same lawful-advice friction in committee scrutiny that the LGA has flagged at council level , but with a far larger civil-service cohort and a Parliament that has already settled its devolution boundaries through 26 years of practice.
