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MSPs sworn in for new term at Scottish Parliament
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MSPs have been officially sworn into the Scottish Parliament following the Holyrood election. All 129 parliamentarians - including 64 first-time MSPs - swore allegiance to the King, either by affirmation or oath during a ceremony in the chamber. The statements were made in a variety of languages, including Scots, Gaelic, Hindi, Polish, Mandarin and French. On the first day of parliamentary business since last week's election, members will also vote to elect a new presiding officer, Holyrood's version of the speaker. MSPs donned traditional floral decorations during the ceremony. SNP MSPs wore white roses - a nod to Hugh McDiarmid's 1931 poem The Little White Rose. The Conservatives also wore a white rose - though it was not linked to the nationalist poet. Labour MSPs had their traditional red rose, Reform UK a Scottish heather, the Greens what appeared to be a fuchsia pink gerbera and the Liberal Democrats a mini-mixed bouquet. Some parliamentarians also wore traditional dress reflecting their various backgrounds. The SNP's Karen Adam, carer to her deaf father, made her statement in sign language. Moray representative Laura Mitchell was among those to use a prop during the ceremony. She held a stave of the Clavie - a piece of charred wood from the annual Burghead fire ritual - which is meant to bring good luck. Later, MSPs will elected a new presiding officer. The presiding officer chairs debates in the chamber, selects speakers in debates and represents the parliament at home and abroad. The role comes with a ยฃ136,112 salary, with the successful candidate required to resign their party membership to take up the neutral post. Four candidates are in the running to succeed former Green MSP Alison Johnstone as presiding officer - Liberal Democrat Liam McArthur, who served as a deputy in the role in the last parliament, as well as the SNP's Kenny Gibson, Stuart McMillan and Clare Haughey. Gibson chaired Holyrood's finance committee in the last parliament, where he was known not to pull any punches - including on the SNP government. He has vowed to liven up proceedings, saying during a hustings event that chamber business had become "dull". Clare Haughey, the former convener of the health committee, is seen as the SNP leadership's top pick, while long-time backbench MSP Stuart McMillan is believed to have an outside chance to succeeding Johnstone. The parliament will choose the new presiding officer, as well as two deputies, in a secret ballot. The SNP's Clare Adamson, Labour's Claire Baker and Tory Miles Briggs are understood to be in the running for the deputy role, which comes with a ยฃ114,297 salary. Next week, MSPs will choose a first minister. The SNP's John Swinney is the firm favourite after his party won a comfortable election victory. Q Manivannan, originally from India, is on a student visa which is due to expire at the end of the year. Swinney says the meeting will discuss the constitution but Sir Keir says it is just to talk about "shared issues". The party claims that Independent Green Voice tricked voters by using a similar name and logo. Helen McDade, one of Reform's 17 new MSPs, has called for other parties to stop "posturing". The final results of the Scottish Parliament election in the Highlands and Islands were announced 16 hours after the start of counting.
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