A series of flashpoints over LGBTQ+ rights, Westminster's veto of Holyrood law, and environmental and economic policy have brought younger, equality-driven activists to the brink of resigning their party memberships and threatened the breakup of the SNP's governing alliance with the Scottish Greens.
On Monday afternoon, the party will learn who its 72,000 members have chosen to succeed Sturgeon as leader after her shock resignation last month. Humza Yousaf, now widely regarded as the frontrunner, has pledged to continue the equalities agenda that defined the Sturgeon era.
His main rival, Kate Forbes, an evangelical Christian whose opposition to abortion and equal marriage nearly derailed her campaign in its first week, has been highly critical of the outgoing first minister's record, challenging her model of progressive taxation and an urgent transition away from oil and gas exploration.
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