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SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn intends to stand at the 2026 Holyrood elections, he has announced.
Flynn was re-elected as the MP for Aberdeen South in July’s general election.
He said if elected to the Scottish Parliament he would aim to hold his Westminster seat until the next general election, due in 2029, but would not accept two salaries.
Applications to stand as an SNP candidate in 2026 closed on Monday, though the formal selection process will not start until next year.
BBC Scotland News understands that former first ministers Nicola Sturgeon and Humza Yousaf have submitted applications, but are both yet to decide on whether to stand for re-election.
Flynn, writing in the Press and Journal, confirmed he was throwing his “bonnet in the ring”.
He said he hoped to win his party’s nomination for the Aberdeen South and North Kincardine seat, currently held by Audrey Nicoll.
The SNP Westminster leader added: “I don’t want to sit out the upcoming battles that our city, shire and country face in Holyrood.
“From funding the energy transition to funding childcare, from free higher education to higher household bills, from GP appointments to GDP growth, the debates will be many and varied.”
He also said he hoped to help the SNP build the case for independence.
Selection battle
Flynn told the Press and Journal it would not “fill him with any great delight” to go up against Nicoll for selection in Aberdeen South and North Kincardine.
Ahead of the 2021 Holyrood elections, the SNP changed internal rules to require MPs to resign their seat at Westminster to fight for selection to Holyrood.
This led to then-MP Joanna Cherry pulling out of the selection contest for the Edinburgh Central seat, claiming the rule change “hobbled” her in her selection bid.
Flynn said he believed party rules were “election-specific”.
In his column, he pointed to examples of SNP politicians who have held seats in both parliaments before, citing First Minister John Swinney and ex-First Minister Alex Salmond.
Flynn has been tipped as a future SNP leader, but he predicted there would not be a contest to replace Swinney for “very many years”, adding that he had full confidence in the first minister.
He told the Press and Journal: “I appreciate the desire that many people have to speculate in and around what my ambitions are or aren’t.
“Of course I want to do everything I possibly can to help my party and help my country and that will never change.”
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