Latest headlines
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Victory for the SNP with 63 seats - two short of a majority
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Conservatives are the second largest party on 31 seats - but Labour on 24 lost 13 seats
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Scottish Greens are the fourth largest party with six seats, ahead of the Lib Dems who won five
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See the changing political map of Scotland
Scoreboard
Party | Candidates | Votes | % | Net percentage change in seats |
---|---|---|---|---|
Party
SNP Scottish National Party |
Candidates Mark McDonald | Votes 17,339 | 56.0% | Net percentage change in seats +0.7 |
Party
CON Scottish Conservatives |
Candidates Liam Kerr | Votes 5,709 | 18.4% | Net percentage change in seats +10.3 |
Party
LAB Scottish Labour |
Candidates Greg Williams | Votes 5,672 | 18.3% | Net percentage change in seats −10.1 |
Party
LD Scottish Lib Dems |
Candidates Isobel Davidson | Votes 2,261 | 7.3% | Net percentage change in seats +1.3 |
Change compared with 2011 |
Turnout and Majority
Scottish National Party Majority
11,630Turnout
50.6%Constituency Profile
The constituency includes the northern part of Aberdeen and some of its rural hinterland. The parts of the city that are included in the seat are mainly residential and made up in part by council estates such as Northfield, Mastrick and Summerhill. The rest of the seat is rural in character, apart from Dyce and Bridge of Don, as both areas are home to sizeable industrial estates.
Part of its boundary hugs the River Don and runs down along the coast past Royal Aberdeen Golf Course to the Donmouth Nature Reserve.
After a closely fought 1999 Holyrood election, the old Aberdeen North seat was won by Labour's Elaine Thomson. But the SNP's Brian Adam won the constituency at the 2003, 2007 and 2011 Holyrood elections. He died in April 2013 and the by-election that followed was won by SNP candidate Mark McDonald.