LONDON: Scotland’s leader Humza Yousaf resigned on Monday, further opening the door to the UK opposition Labour Party regaining ground in its former Scottish heartlands in a national election.
The brother-in-law of Humza Yousaf, Scotland’s First Minister, has been charged with abduction and extortion in relation to the case of a man who died after falling from a window.
First things first: I know quite well both Humza Yousaf, Scotland’s First Minister, and Stephen Kerr, the Tory MSP who has been prominent in asking questions about how the Scottish government decided to make a donation to an organisation working in Gaza.
It is a measure of how badly things are going for Humza Yousaf, the leader of the Scottish National Party, that Rishi Sunak – despite being pretty beleaguered himself – could score a direct hit on him last week in remarks to Scottish Conservatives before their annual conference. The Prime Minister said that the two great achievements of Mr Yousaf’s first year as Scotland’s first minister were the courts throwing out Nicola Sturgeon’s preposterous self-ID gender laws, and the loss of his health m
The mother-in-law of Humza Yousaf has described how she and her husband felt like the elderly couple from a scene in the Titanic film as their hopes ebbed of surviving the Israel-Hamas conflict.