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Obituary: Independence icon and Moray politician Winnie Ewing dies aged 93


By Scott Maclennan

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ANY list of Scottish politicians who forever changed post-war Scottish and British politics must include Winnie Ewing – an SNP icon that "truly made Moray her home".

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Winifred Margaret Ewing (née Woodburn) was born July 10, 1929 in Glasgow, where she grew up. Educated at Battlefield School and Queen’s Park Senior Secondary School, she entered the University of Glasgow in 1946.

Ms Ewing was the wife of Stewart Ewing, who died in 2003, and the mother of Fergus, Annabelle and Terry.

She graduated with an MA and LLB, before qualifying and practising as a solicitor and notary public.

But it was at Glasgow University that Ms Ewing joined the student nationalists’ association.

Ms Ewing also studied law at The Hague Academy of International Law in 1954 and 1955 and spoke fluent Dutch, later becoming secretary of the Glasgow Bar Association between 1961 and 1967.

In autobiography Stop the World she wrote that she first became a Scottish nationalist at the age of nine, after hearing a band play The Road to the Isles on a trip “doon the watter” to Kilchatten Bay in Bute.

Winnie Ewing: 'Stop the world Scotland wants to get on.'
Winnie Ewing: 'Stop the world Scotland wants to get on.'

‘Stop the world, Scotland wants to get on’

Ms Ewing’s political rise began in May 1967, when Labour MP for Hamilton Tom Fraser resigned from parliament to become chairman of the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board.

No one thought she could win the subsequent by-election, but a 37 per cent swing from Labour and the Conservatives saw her to victory and she made her now famous comment: “Stop the world, Scotland wants to get on.”

The win was a massive breakthrough for the SNP, which had always been on the periphery of mainstream politics and had never been considered a serious electoral force.

It showed that people would vote for an SNP candidate if they were the right person – a prologue to the huge yellow wave which swept the SNP to power in 2007 and 2011, as voters in traditional Labour areas turned SNP.

Ms Ewing remained MP for Hamilton until 1970.

However, despite losing her seat, the SNP have maintained a constant House of Commons presence ever since.

In autobiography Stop the World Ms Ewing revealed that politics was in the family as her father George was a member of the Independent Labour Party.

Only after his death did she discover that he joined the SNP in July 1967.

Winnie Ewing arrives at Westminster.
Winnie Ewing arrives at Westminster.

Moray and Nairn

Proving she was not just a flash in the pan, Ms Ewing contested and won the supposed safe Conservative seat of Moray and Nairn in 1974, which was then held by Secretary of State for Scotland Gordon Campbell.

Her win marked the start of a lifelong connection with Moray and she would go on to live at Miltonduff for many years.

Twice in a row she routed candidates from the two establishment parties and, in her telling Commons maiden speech, she argued fervently in support of extending the franchise to those 18 and over.

She argued: “There are moral and intellectual reasons why it is good sense to make people responsible at the age of 18 if not sooner – and I mean fully responsible in every sense of the word.”

This pre-empted the SNP's later slashing of Scotland's voting age from 18 to 16.

Former Northern Scot Editor: “She was just so different”

Pauline Taylor had a bird’s eye view of Ms Ewing's career as a champion of Moray and the Highlands and Islands, working at the Scot from 1979 to 2007 as a senior reporter, news editor, and editor from 2000 to 2007.

Discussing Ms Ewing's impact and achievements, she said: "She took the Moray seat for the SNP against all the odds in 1974, shook up the establishment and was a colourful and approachable figure who truly made Moray her home.

"She founded a political dynasty, put Scotland firmly on the map of Europe, and worked tirelessly for her country and her people.

"Whatever your political leanings, she was someone to be admired for her tenacity and energy, for her compassion and fortitude, but she was also immense fun to be with."

Pauline also made the important point that it wasn’t until 1970 that the SNP had put up a candidate in Moray.

“It was amazing that Winnie won the seat in the first place; it was such a shock. The SNP had never even contested the seat until the previous general election in 1970," she said.

“Many in the local establishment were horrified when she got elected.

“Winnie coming in was like a breath of fresh air. She was just so different. She turned up for everything.

“Winnie was known as the fishermen’s friend for a good reason, but everything she tried to do was stifled by the UK government.

"At Westminster, there was no will to save the fishing industry – fishing was no more than a bargaining chip in Europe.”

Ms Ewing held onto the seat when a second general election was held in October, after the February ballot resulted in a hung parliament, but she lost in 1979 – but like many great politicians set-backs became opportunities.

At home in the European Parliament

Ms Ewing first became a member of the European Parliament in July 1975, just prior to direct elections.

She held the SNP’s European portfolio at Westminster and defeated fellow MP George Reid in a vote among the party’s group of 11 to take up the seat offered by the Prime Minister Harold Wilson.

At an Irish reception in the European Parliament, Ireland’s Prime Minister Jack Lynch said: “There is a young woman here who is striving for her country to get the rights that we in Ireland have so long fought for.”

No wonder then that she said: “I quickly found myself very much at home in the European Parliament, as I had never done at Westminster.”

In the 1979 general election she lost Moray and Nairn to the Conservatives by 420 seats – one of nine SNP MPs who failed to achieve re-election – but again overcame the loss to win the Highlands and Islands seat in the European Parliament.

She went on to establish an extensive network to advance Scotland’s interests in Europe and that is reflected in the range of parliamentary groups she was a member of during her time in Strasbourg,

They ranged from the European Progressive Democrats (1979-84); European Democratic Alliance (1984-89); Rainbow Group (1989-94); European Radical Alliance (1994-99).

Winnie Ewing campaigning.
Winnie Ewing campaigning.

Madame Ecosse

Madame Ecosse, as she came to be known, secured Objective One assistance status for the Highlands and Islands prior to the 1989 European election.

This opened-up major resources for infrastructure and employment projects and was a massive achievement, spearheaded by Ms Ewing after the government of Margaret Thatcher failed to press the case.

Madame Ecosse struck again by bringing the Lomé Convention – a trade and aid agreement between Europe and African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries, with a Joint Parliamentary Assembly of delegates – to Inverness.

She later joked in her autobiography: “The invitation was enthusiastically welcomed by many, including the Tory Group, but not by Labour.

"Janey Buchan [MEP] said that there were not enough hotels in Inverness, whilst others argued behind the scenes that there were not enough brothels.

"I knew that I was quite unable to deal with the second point, but that the first was simply not true.”

Lomé eventually came to Inverness in September 1985 – the only time it ever met in the UK.

Cliodhna Dempsey, a retired Irish official from the European Parliament, who from 1977-82 worked with the European Progressive Democrats (EPD) that Winnie joined in 1979.

In September 1980, Winnie hosted the EPD group in Inverness.

During their week-long visit – which included a trip to Skye – she made sure the members understood the unique challenges of her constituency in terms of its scale, geography, and peripherality.

Cliodhna said: “Getting the group to Scotland so soon after joining was undoubtedly quite a coup, and certainly put Scotland on the map for all those concerned . . she excelled at ‘showing not telling’.”

She remained in post until 1999 but by this time a new parliament was about to open and she would play no small part.

Making history again

Ms Ewing entered the new Scottish Parliament at its first election in May 1999 as the top-ranked SNP candidate in the Highlands and Islands list. She stepped down from the European Parliament the following month.

As the eldest member, the honour of presiding over its first session fell to her, which she opened with the following words: “I have the opportunity to say a few words, and I want to start with words I’ve always wanted either to say or hear someone say: the Scottish Parliament, adjourned on the 25th day of March in the year 1707, is hereby reconvened.”

As an MSP, she championed many issues she had pursued as an MEP, including fighting for the fishing industry and development assistance for the Highlands and Islands.

Objective One status was lost in 2000, being downgraded to transitional funding.

Fighting to the end, Winnie pointed out that things would have been different had Scotland “been able to present its own case in Europe.”

After two years in the new Scottish Parliament Ms Ewing retired.

'Scotland will mourn'

Her career was bookended by her two most famous phrases, spoken more than 30 years apart.

When she entered Westminster in 1967 she said: “Stop the world, Scotland wants to get on.”

When she opened the Scottish Parliament for the first time in 292 years she said: “The Scottish Parliament, adjourned on the 25th day of March in the year 1707, is hereby reconvened.”

Six years after her retirement, Alex Salmond would become Scotland's first SNP leader.

Current First Minister Humza Yousaf summed it up: “Without Winnie – without her breakthrough by-election victory in Hamilton in 1967, her dedication to the cause of Scottish independence, and her promotion of Scotland’s interests in Europe over many years – the SNP would never have achieved the success we have, and self-government for Scotland would never have become the priority it did.

“Not just the SNP and independence supporters, but people across Scotland will mourn Winnie’s death. The nation will feel her loss, which will of course be felt most keenly by her family and many friends all around the world.

“From the bottom of my heart, I say thank you, Madame Écosse, for your service to our party, our movement and our country.”


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