Events from the year 2015 in Scotland.
Incumbents
Law officers
Judiciary
Events
January
- 3 January â Eight people are reported missing after cargo ship capsizes in the Pentland Firth.
- 9 January â Hurricane-force winds cause travel disruption and leave tens of thousands of homes without power across Scotland.
February
March
April
May
- 7 May â At the UK general election, the Scottish National Party wins 56 out of the 59 seats in Scotland, making them the largest political party by both number of seats and popular vote. Only three seats are retained by pro-union parties:
- Orkney and Shetland, by Alistair Carmichael of the Liberal Democrats;
- Edinburgh South, by Ian Murray of Labour;
- Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale, by David Mundell of the Conservatives.
- In addition, Mhairi Black of the Scottish National Party, at twenty years of age, becomes the youngest elected MP since prior to the Reform Act 1832. Black is also the first person elected to Parliament under the provisions of the Electoral Administration Act 2006 which reduced the minimum age of candidacy from 21 to 18 years of age. She has unseated the then-Shadow Foreign Secretary, Douglas Alexander, 47 years old at the time of the election.
- 16 May
- The Church of Scotland votes to allow the ordination of gay ministers in civil partnerships.
- Jim Murphy announces his resignation as Leader of the Scottish Labour Party after the party's poor performance at the 2015 general election.
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
- 1 December â Report of discovery of fossilised dinosaur footprints on Skye.
- 2 December â Despite the fact Scottish MPs vote by 57 to 2 against UK air strikes in Syria, the UK Parliament overall votes by 397 to 223 in favour of air strikes.
- 4 December â The Forth Road Bridge is closed due to structural defects, and the Scottish Transport Minister, Derek Mackay, declares that it will not be reopened until January 2016.
- 5âÂÂ6 December â Peak of Storm Desmond, with heavy rain and strong winds, causing flooding across southern Scotland.
- 9 December â Election Court decides that although Liberal Democrat Alistair Carmichael had told a "blatant lie" in a TV interview, it had not been proven beyond reasonable doubt that he had committed an "illegal practice" that would invalidate his election as the Member of Parliament for Orkney and Shetland.
- 22 December â It is announced that the Forth Road Bridge will reopen for all vehicles except HGVs on Wednesday 23 December, ahead of schedule.
- 30 December â A section of the A93 west of Ballater collapses due to flooding caused by Storm Frank.
- 31 December â More than 1,700 same-sex couples have married in the first year after Scotland became the seventeenth country in the world to legalise same-sex marriage.
Deaths
- 17 February â George Mackie, Baron Mackie of Benshie, Liberal Democrat peer and politician (born 1919).
- 2 March â Dave Mackay, football manager (born 1934).
- 10 March â John Howard Wilson, rugby union player (born 1930).
- 19 April â Tom McCabe, Labour politician (born 1954).
- 2 May â Ryan McHenry, film director and social media personality (born 1987).
- 15 May â Flora MacNeil, singer in Scottish Gaelic (born 1928).
- 1 June â Charles Kennedy, Liberal Democrat politician and former party leader (born 1959).
- 11 June â Ian McKechnie, footballer (Hull City) (born 1941).
- 21 June â Jim Rowan, footballer (born 1934).
- 22 June â James Carnegie, 3rd Duke of Fife, nobleman (born 1929).
- 23 June â Jack Asher, shinty player and referee (born 1927).
- 5 July â Joseph McKenzie, photographer (born 1929).
- 17 July â John McCluskey, boxer (born 1944).
- 29 August â Graham Leggat, footballer (born 1934).
- 8 October â Jim Diamond, singer and songwriter (born 1951).
- 21 October
- William Murray, 8th Earl of Mansfield and Mansfield, nobleman and politician (born 1930).
- Ian Steel, cyclist (born 1928).
- 5 December
- Peter Cochrane, soldier and publisher (born 1919)
- William McIlvanney, novelist, short story writer and poet (born 1936).
The arts
See also
References