Russell Findlay told The Scotsman: "I will absolutely not be resigning this weekend." 1 The Scottish Conservatives fell to 12 seats at the 7 May 2026 Holyrood election and lost all five of their constituency MSPs; the party is now tied for fifth with Scottish Labour . Findlay framed defeat as "a necessary, albeit painful, stage in a long-term rebuilding process" and declined John Swinney's invitation to post-election talks.
Sandesh Gulhane, a Scottish Conservative MSP, has not ruled out an ouster bid. Whether Findlay survives depends on whether the parliamentary group's no-confidence mechanism is triggered in May or June 2026, and on what terms Gulhane and other regional MSPs move. Scottish Tory rules require a parliamentary-party vote of no confidence, not a separate membership ballot; the threshold therefore sits lower than the 81 figure paralysing Labour at Westminster (event 3), and the trigger sits with a 12-MSP caucus.
Findlay is the only major-party leader at Holyrood still refusing post-election talks with the new First Minister. Anas Sarwar of Scottish Labour, Lorna Slater of The Greens, and the Reform UK group have all accepted Swinney's invitation. The isolation is procedural: Findlay's caucus stays outside the inter-party scaffolding while Holyrood's committee chairs, opposition rotation, and Section 30 vote machinery are being assembled in May 2026. Reform UK entered Holyrood on 17 seats , now tied with Scottish Labour for third, which means the Conservatives are no longer automatically inside the second-opposition slot either.
The rebuilding framing has a precedent problem. Scottish Conservatives have run the same line after 2007, 2016, and 2024; the pattern is consistent and the bottom of the trajectory keeps moving down. "Long-term rebuilding" has been the institutional posture of a party that has not yet located the floor.
