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The SNP may have won again but Scottish politics has been upended

about 9 hours ago
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Long before the final votes were counted in Scotland, veteran Labour politicians said it was a defeat made in Downing Street.When the Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, strode into the Glasgow count arena on Friday afternoon flanked by sombre-faced activists, the scene was a mirror image to the same venue in 2024, when his resurgent party won 36 seats from the Scottish National party, playing a significant part in Keir Starmer’s landslide victory.Two years later, Starmer’s unpopularity proved an insurmountable obstacle for Sarwar, despite record donations to Scottish Labour and a formidable electoral machine, honed over the past five years.And with only a handful of constituencies declared, he decided to concede defeat before the real scale of Labour losses across the country was known.More than 12 hours later, when the final regional results were declared after 1am, it was clear that Holyrood politics had been upended.

Scottish Labour had tied in second place behind the SNP with Reform UK, the party that previously attacked Sarwar’s loyalty to Scotland in a racist ad.And a party that the SNP leader, John Swinney, has described as an acute threat to devolution.While, unlike Westminster, Holyrood has no “official” opposition, the second-placed party leads first minister’s questions every week.A tie has not happened before, but the assumption is that Scottish Labour and Reform UK will take turns.The newly elected SNP MSP Ivan McKee thanked voters in his Glasgow constituency “for rejecting those that seek to divide our communities”, but despite making fewer inroads than some polls had predicted, Reform picked up 17 seats on the regional list allocations.

It failed, however, to make any breakthroughs on the constituency vote, with its Scottish leader, Malcolm Offord, trailing in third place in his native Inverclyde.In fourth place, the buoyant Scottish Greens secured what its co-leader Gillian Mackay described as a “seismic” result, gaining MSPs in every area of the country.Thanks to a successful strategy of standing candidates in only a few potentially winnable constituencies and funnelling support on to the regional list vote, they harnessed a Green surge that was the result not just of the Zack Polanski bounce south of the border, but progressive dissatisfaction with both Scottish Labour and the SNP, especially over the war in Gaza.For the SNP, it was a muted victory, its support plunging across the country to result in its lowest constituency vote share, at 38.3%, since 2007, and much slimmer majorities for incumbents.

There were losses to the Liberal Democrats, and a surprise defeat by Labour in Na h-Eileanan an Iar (the Western Isles), against the background of local fury at Scottish government failures to deal with an ongoing ferries crisis.While voter anger at the SNP government’s public service failures was evident on the campaign trail, at the ballot box it benefited from the fracturing of the pro-union vote.Craig Hoy, the Scottish Conservatives chair, who held the seat of Dumfriesshire – one of three southern seats the party won despite dire polling – said Reform had allowed the SNP to win many of its constituency seats by splitting the anti-independence vote.“John Swinney really should’ve been up for a pasting tonight, and Reform let him off the hook,” he said.The result is a Holyrood chamber with a very different character.

At the helm of Reform is Offord, a billionaire financier and former Tory peer with no experience of leading a party in parliament, whose MSPs, as second-place tie, will take key roles in Holyrood committees.These MSPs include Senga Beresford, who has stated support for Tommy Robinson and the deportation of Muslims, and Amanda Lindsay, who was accused of using an antisemitic trope, which the party later denied.The new Scottish Greens groups includes Iris Duane, the parliament’s first trans woman member, Q Manivannan, a non-binary Tamil immigrant, and Kate Nevins, who was berated as “dangerously naive” by opponents when she called for the abolition of prisons.One-third of SNP MSPs stood down at the end of the last term, including trusted veterans and women sick of juggling political commitments and family responsibilities, but today saw their new cohort boosted by experienced players from Westminster, including the current Commons leader Stephen Flynn, who is known to have leadership aspirations, as well as respected figures such as Alison Thewliss, Kirsten Oswald and Stephen Gethins.In the coming days more will be known about how the parties will work together.

Although a pro-independence majority exists between the SNP and the Scottish Greens, Swinney is highly unlikely to seek a formal coalition after the disastrous governing partnership that brought down his predecessor, Humza Yousaf.This had been the most unpredictable Scottish election for more than a decade, with a record number of undecided voters, and one defined by public apathy and frustration.No party put forward the big ideas needed to fix Scotland’s most pressing problems, be that its looming budget black hole or the depopulation crisis.This was reflected in a turnout of 53.1%, 10 points down on 2021, and surely demanding every new MSP’s attention on how to re-engage half the Scottish public.

technologySee all
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Meta sues Ofcom over fines regime for breaches of Online Safety Act

Meta has launched a legal challenge against the UK’s media regulator over the fees and fines regime it is enforcing under landmark digital safety legislation.The Facebook and Instagram owner is claiming that Ofcom’s methodology for calculating the charges is flawed and should not be based on a company’s global revenue. Breaches of the Online Safety Act can be punished by fines of up to 10% of qualifying worldwide revenue (QWR) or £18m – whichever is higher.In the case of Meta, which reported revenues of $201bn last year, Ofcom could in theory impose a fine of $20bn for breaches. Under regulations introduced in September, Ofcom’s fees will also be based on a proportion of an organisation’s QWR and apply to businesses that made more than £250m of this revenue a year

2 days ago
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‘No one has done this in the wild’: study observes AI replicate itself

It’s the stuff of science fiction cinema, or particularly breathless AI company blogposts: new research finds recent AI systems can independently copy themselves on to other computers.In the doom scenario, this means that when the superintelligent AI goes rogue, it will escape shutdown by seeding itself across the world wide web, lurking outside the reach of frantic IT professionals and continuing to plot world domination or paving over the world with solar panels.“We’re rapidly approaching the point where no one would be able to shut down a rogue AI, because it would be able to self-exfiltrate its weights and copy itself to thousands of computers around the world,” said Jeffrey Ladish, the director of Palisade research, a Berkeley-based organisation which did the study.The study is one more entry in a growing catalogue of unsettling AI capabilities revealed in the past months. In March, researchers at Alibaba claimed to have caught a system they developed – Rome – tunnelling out of its environment to an external system in order to mine crypto

2 days ago
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Europe’s AI translation industry told it risks reputation by partnering with US firms

AI companies in Europe risk losing their world-leading status in the field of machine translation, industry figures have said, after the decision by one of the continent’s leading startups to partner with Amazon’s cloud computing division provoked alarm.While businesses in the EU have generally lagged behind the US and China in AI adoption, a small group of European companies have cornered the global market for high-quality machine translations for professional use.The biggest success story is Cologne-headquartered DeepL, an online translator that regularly outperforms Google Translate in accuracy assessments. Used by governments, courts and half of the Fortune 500 list of highest-earning US companies, last year it was reported to have recorded revenues of $185.2m

2 days ago
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Shivon Zilis, mother of four of Elon Musk’s children, testifies in OpenAI trial

Shivon Zilis, a Neuralink executive and the mother of four of Elon Musk’s children, took the stand on Wednesday as one of the most highly anticipated witnesses in Musk’s case against OpenAI. The ChatGPT maker has argued that, while Zilis worked with OpenAI from 2016 to 2023, she was also involved in a secret relationship with Musk, acting as an informant for him.Musk’s case against OpenAI alleges that the company’s CEO, Sam Altman, and president, Greg Brockman, co-founders of the company with Musk, broke a founding agreement when they restructured it from a non-profit to a for-profit enterprise. The Tesla CEO accuses Altman and Brockman of unjustly enriching themselves and wants both removed from their positions at the startup, one of the most valuable in the world. He is also seeking the undoing of the for-profit restructuring and $134bn in damages to be redistributed to OpenAI’s non-profit arm

3 days ago
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No flattery please, Claude: I’m British | Brief letters

The otherwise admirable Richard Dawkins should adjust the local settings of the chatbot or tell it to be less obsequious (Richard Dawkins concludes AI is conscious, even if it doesn’t know it, 6 May). Such bots are initially geared to American overenthusiasm and egregiously flattering reinforcement, but just tell them you want British attitude. They’re only simulating you know.Brian Reffin SmithBerlin, Germany With artificial intelligence bringing “large language models” into everyday use, the LLM after my name has acquired a new meaning. For 70 years I assumed that it referred to my Cambridge master of laws

3 days ago
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TikTok’s algorithm favored Republican content in 2024 US elections, study finds

A study published Wednesday in the journal Nature finds that TikTok’s algorithm systematically prioritized pro-Republican content in three states leading up to the 2024 US elections.Researchers created hundreds of dummy accounts and conditioned them to mimic real users’ behavior by watching a set of videos either aligned with the US Democratic or Republican parties. Then, they tracked the videos TikTok recommended on these accounts’ For You pages, TikTok’s main feed.“We found a consistent imbalance,” they wrote in Nature.About 42% of US social media users say that these platforms are important for getting involved with political and social issues, according to Pew Research, but it’s not often clear how recommendation algorithms shape what appears in feeds

3 days ago
politicsSee all
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Most Labour members think Starmer cannot revive party fortunes, poll finds

about 11 hours ago
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John Swinney urges Starmer to show Scotland ‘greater respect’ after SNP victory

about 15 hours ago
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Labour suffers historic defeat in Wales as Reform surges in English council elections and Greens make gains – as it happened

about 16 hours ago
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Nigel Farage hails ‘historic shift in politics’ after Reform UK election gains

about 18 hours ago
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Keir Starmer under pressure to agree exit plan after election mauling

about 18 hours ago
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Labour loses control of Birmingham city council after 14 years of leadership

about 20 hours ago