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  1. The Unionist Party was the main centre-right political party in Scotland between 1912 and 1965. Independent of, although associated with, the Conservative Party in England and Wales, it stood for election at different periods of its history in alliance with a small number of Liberal Unionist and National Liberal candidates.

  2. The two unions survived because the party structure in the two kingdoms, Ireland and Scotland, provided a critical support. In Scotland, for most of the three year hundred years after 1707, a (sometimes grudging) unionism dominated the country's electoral politics and representation at Westminster.

  3. The Unionist Party was the main centre-right political party in Scotland between 1912 and 1965. [1] Contents. Origins. Ethos and appeal. Electoral record and the 1955 general election. Merger with the Conservative Party. Consequences of merger. Electoral performance. Party Chairmen. Footnotes. Further reading. External links.

  4. A broader definition, however, reveals what this article calls the ‘nationalist unionism’ of the Scottish Unionist Party (1912–65), and its surprisingly nuanced view of Scottish national identity as well as Scotland's place in the UK.

  5. 15 de feb. de 2022 · The Scottish Unionist Party (SUP), originally formed in 1986 in protest at Margaret Thatcher’s Anglo-Irish Agreement, has been re-registered with the Electoral Commission (EC) after not running candidates in major elections since 2007.