Latest headlines
- Victory for the SNP with 63 seats - two short of a majority
- Conservatives are the second largest party on 31 seats - but Labour on 24 lost 13 seats
- Scottish Greens are the fourth largest party with six seats, ahead of the Lib Dems who won five
- See the changing political map of Scotland
Scoreboard
| Party | Candidates | Votes | % | Net percentage change in seats |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party SNP Scottish National Party | CandidatesJoe Fitzpatrick | Votes16,070 | 57.8% | Net percentage change in seats+0.2 |
| Party LAB Scottish Labour | CandidatesJenny Marra | Votes7,242 | 26.1% | Net percentage change in seats−5.4 |
| Party CON Scottish Conservatives | CandidatesNicola Ross | Votes2,826 | 10.2% | Net percentage change in seats+3.5 |
| Party LD Scottish Lib Dems | CandidatesDaniel Coleman | Votes1,008 | 3.6% | Net percentage change in seats−0.7 |
| Party TUSC TUSC | CandidatesJim McFarlane | Votes642 | 2.3% | Net percentage change in seats+2.3 |
Change compared with 2011 | ||||
Turnout and Majority
Scottish National Party Majority
8,828Turnout
51.6%Constituency Profile
Dundee was once famed as a city of "jute, jam and journalism", but it is being remodelled as the "city of discovery" in order to attract more tourism and inward investment. The jute mills are gone, but the constituency remains a busy industrial area, with light engineering a source of employment. The city is also marked out for its role in the video games industry.
The area is dominated by large housing estates, but there are also middle-class pockets around the hill known as Dundee Law and the west end. The seat also contains the bulk of the student quarter serving the city's two universities, along with Ninewells Hospital and Dundee Airport.
Labour won the seat with a narrow majority in the first Holyrood election of 1999 and retained it in 2003. However, the SNP's Joe Fitzpatrick won the 2007 poll and retained the seat in 2011.