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Former Moray and Nairn MP and MEP Winnie Ewing dies aged 93


By Scott Maclennan

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WINNIE Ewing, an icon of the Scottish independence movement and past Moray and Nairn MP, has died aged 93.

Winnie Ewing pictured in her heyday.
Winnie Ewing pictured in her heyday.

Ms Ewing will go down in history as the MSP who formally reopened the Scottish Parliament in 1999 as a Highlands and Islands SNP MSP.

She told the first session: "I want to begin with the words that I have always wanted either to say, or hear someone else say: 'The Scottish Parliament, which adjourned on March 25, 1707, is hereby reconvened.'”

Her election as a Westminster MP in 1967 was a turning point in the nationalist cause and marked the beginning of the modern SNP's later electoral success.

Winnie Ewing was born on July, 10 1929 and trained and practised as a lawyer before entering politics full-time – she joined the SNP in 1946.

She won the 1967 Hamilton by-election triumph which became one of the best known victories in Scottish political history. Not only did voters elect a nationalist MP but a woman when it was still relatively rare.

But she lost the seat in 1970, only to return in 1974 when she again famously won against the sitting Scottish secretary Gordon Campbell to take the seat of Moray and Nairn.

Ms Ewing went on to the European Parliament where she sat from 1975 to 1999, becoming known as Madame Ecosse and being given the title Mother of the European Parliament.

Then, in the first Scottish Parliament elections, she took up a place as MSP for the Highlands and Islands region – before making her famous opening remarks.

In July 2001, she announced her intention to stand down as a list MSP for the Highlands and Islands ahead of the Scottish Parliament elections.


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