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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. Notable opponents of unionism are the Scottish National Party (SNP) and the Scottish Green Party. The Scottish Socialist Party (SSP) and Solidarity seek to make Scotland an independent sovereign state and a republic separate from England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

  3. The Scottish Conservative & Unionist Party (Scottish Gaelic: Pàrtaidh Tòraidheach na h-Alba, Scots: Scots Tory an Unionist Pairty, often known simply as the Scottish Conservatives and colloquially as the Scottish Tories) is part of the Conservative Party (UK) active in Scotland.

  4. Scottish Unionist Party may refer to: Unionist Party (Scotland) (1912-1965), sometimes known outside Scotland as the Scottish Unionist Party. Scottish Unionist Party (1986), a small political party in Scotland, from the mid-1980s to the present day.

  5. The British Unionist Party (BUP) is a Scottish unionist political party founded in December 2015 as A Better Britain – Unionist Party by activists from the Better Together campaign against Scottish independence.

  6. The Scottish Unionist Party (SUP) is a minor political party in Scotland. As a unionist party, it advocates keeping Scotland (along with England, Wales and Northern Ireland) in the United Kingdom. It is also anti-devolution, advocating the abolition of the Scottish Parliament.

  7. The ‘unionism’ of the new Unionist Party reflected concerns over Home Rule and Irish nationalism, as well as the historic interconnections between the politics of the West of Scotland and those of the North of Ireland. But Scottish Unionism, as formulated in 1912, was not just about the Irish.