November 10, 2024

MP Joanna Cherry dropped in SNP frontbench reshuffle

Joanna Cherry #JoannaCherry

Joanna Cherry

image copyrightPA Media image captionJoanna Cherry has been an SNP MP since 2015

Joanna Cherry has been dropped from the Scottish National Party’s frontbench team at Westminster.

The Edinburgh South West MP said she was sacked from the justice position “despite hard work, results and a strong reputation”.

Ms Cherry, an advocate, played a key role in a number of Brexit legal challenges.

The SNP said it had made a number of changes to its Westminster team ahead of the upcoming Holyrood election.

Move questioned

As the SNP Westminster reshuffle was announced, Ms Cherry tweeted: “Despite hard work, results and a strong reputation I’ve been sacked today from the SNP front bench.”

The reshuffle revealed that Anne McLaughlin MP has now been appointed as the party’s Westminster spokeswoman on justice and immigration.

Ms Cherry is a close ally of former party leader Alex Salmond and has been vocal in the party’s debate on transgender.

But Ms Cherry dropped her campaign after the SNP’s governing body changed its rules meaning she would have to resign as an MP first.

Former justice secretary and East Lothian MP Kenny MacAskill questioned the move.

Writing on Twitter, he said: “This is the leadership’s call but many of us find this inexplicable and harmful to our cause.”

Presentational grey line

Analysis box by Glenn Campbell, BBC Scotland political editor

Joanna Cherry is one of the brightest and ablest MPs in the SNP group at Westminster.

She played a leading role in successful legal battles with the UK government during the Brexit process to cancel the shutdown of parliament and to establish that cancelling Brexit was an option.

Nicola Sturgeon was among those to celebrate the Edinburgh South West MP’s successes but they have also come into conflict.

Ms Cherry has criticised leadership strategy over independence and its plans to make gender self-identification possible. She has also spoken up in support of Alex Salmond.

I am told that some in the SNP group at Westminster had lost confidence in her and were preparing to write to the group leader, Ian Blackford, to say so. He has pre-empted their complaints.

As an ordinary backbencher, Joanna Cherry may feel freer to speak her mind. But my sense is the SNP leadership is signalling a willingness to take a firmer line against internal dissent.

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