John Swinney was sworn in as First Minister of Scotland at Holyrood's first sitting on Thursday 14 May 2026 and confirmed he will bring a Section 30 order request to a Holyrood vote within a week and publish a draft referendum bill inside his first 100 days. 1 2 Section 30 of the Scotland Act 1998 is the statutory mechanism by which Westminster permits Holyrood to hold a binding referendum.
The SNP won 58 of 129 seats on 7 May 2026 , seven below the 65-seat threshold Swinney himself set as the trigger for proceeding with a second independence vote. He intends to proceed regardless. The internal chamber arithmetic: SNP 58 plus Scottish Greens 15 equals 73, a pro-independence majority of MSPs. The external polling complicates him. Post-election YouGov polling shows 56 per cent of Scots would vote No against 44 per cent Yes , a 12-point shift away from the 50-50 tie YouGov measured in February 2026. Among Reform UK voters the No figure is 86 per cent.
The legal framework gives the Prime Minister the entire discretion. The 2012 Edinburgh Agreement, which delivered the 2014 vote, was a discretionary use of the Section 30 power, and the Supreme Court confirmed in its 2022 Reference by the Lord Advocate that Holyrood cannot legislate unilaterally. Labour's 2024 manifesto explicitly ruled out a Section 30 order; Wes Streeting, in his own pre-resignation comments in April, said the same . The legal route exists; the political route has been pre-closed at the other end.
The Section 30 vote, then, is procedurally serious and substantively performative. Holyrood passes the motion; Downing Street refuses; the SNP runs the next general election on a refusal it can attribute to a specific minister and a specific date. That is the value of the vote even when the outcome is foregone. Three election cycles in a row the SNP has framed its mandate ex-post: 2021's "de facto referendum", 2024's conditional Section 30 commitment, and now the 2026 seven-short pivot are the same procedural move.
