A Voter’s Guide for Aberdeen South – SNP/Scottish Government vs Reform UK 

With the Aberdeen South by-election just two weeks away on 18 June 2026, this short cut-out-and-keep guide has been written specifically for voters in Aberdeen South and Aberdeenshire. 

The area is at a crossroads: we still depend on North Sea oil and gas jobs, yet we’re also facing the huge challenge of a fair energy transition, rising living costs, and the need for strong local support for families and communities. 

This report compares what the SNP-led Scottish Government is actually delivering right now (through devolved powers and funding) against the promises being made by Reform UK. 

It focuses on the issues that matter most here – the environment and wildlife, social and community services, child and family support, and the reality of energy policy. Everything is based on current facts and official programmes so you can read it, check the sources yourself, and decide what’s best for your family and your constituency.

Condensed Report: SNP/Scottish Government vs Reform UK – Environmental, Wildlife/Ecology, Social/Community, and Child/Young Family Supports in Aberdeen South & Aberdeenshire (as of 3rd June 2026). 

Author: Meidas Scotland

Core Context for the Region

Aberdeen South and Aberdeenshire rely on North Sea oil/gas for jobs but face transition pressures. Offshore licensing and major energy policy remain reserved to Westminster (UK Government under Labour/Ed Miliband). Onshore licensing is devolved. SNP/ScotGov delivers via the £500m Just Transition Fund (JTF) and devolved programmes. Reform UK holds regional MSP seats and local councillors (e.g., Duncan Massey in Lower Deeside), but no government power here. Their Scotland manifesto pledges depend on future gains.

Environmental, Wildlife & Ecology

SNP/ScotGov (delivering now):

JTF funds 181+ community/green projects (£4.5m+ since 2022) in Aberdeen/Aberdeenshire/Moray, including biodiversity, habitat restoration, community gardens, renewables, and urban greening. Year 5 Participatory Budgeting (2026) offers £50k/project for local eco-initiatives. Broader Nature Restoration Fund supports peatlands/woodlands/coast.

Reform UK (Scotland manifesto pledges):

Scrap all net-zero targets, subsidies, and quangos; prioritise North Sea oil/gas as “primary energy system.” No dedicated wildlife, biodiversity, or habitat funding/projects for the region. Local campaigning focuses on reversing “green damage” to oil jobs.

Verdict: SNP provides funded, on-the-ground restoration; Reform offers deregulation-focused opposition.

Social/Community Changes, Social Care & Devolved Benefits

SNP/ScotGov:

JTF supports community cohesion, skills, and regeneration in oil-affected areas. Local poverty/childcare funds and social care budget uplifts flow to Aberdeenshire Council. 

Social Security Scotland (executive agency of the Scottish Government):

Headquartered at Agnes Husband House on Dundee’s waterfront, this agency delivers all devolved benefits (e.g., Scottish Child Payment, Adult/Child Disability Payments, Best Start Grants). It has a strong reputation for being more compassionate, kinder in tone, and less adversarial than the UK Government DWP system it partly replaced. Its three-word mission/core values — “Dignity, fairness and respect” — are prominently displayed on the homepage and branding, drawn directly from the Social Security (Scotland) Act 2018 principles. 

These values are “at the heart of everything we do” and shape the Charter, decision-making, and client interactions. Aberdeen South/Aberdeenshire families access these supports seamlessly (online, phone, or local drop-ins), providing a more person-centred alternative to reserved UK benefits.Reform UK:

Pledges greater council flexibility, “locals first” housing, law/order, and tapered carer support. No new funded Aberdeenshire-specific initiatives delivered, and no control over Social Security Scotland.

Children & Young Families – Quality of Life & Health

SNP/ScotGov:

Scottish Child Payment (£28.20/child/week) helps ~12% child poverty rate locally. Free childcare (9 months–P7), breakfast clubs, family hubs, JTF greenspaces, and Social Security Scotland’s family payments boost early development, nutrition, and nature access (linked to better mental/physical health in rural/coastal Aberdeenshire).Reform UK:

Broader tax cuts, energy bill relief, rent-to-buy housing, and education reforms (trades focus) to ease family finances. No specific child payment or expanded childcare pledges.Verdict on “who cares more” for these issues: SNP shows clearer measurable delivery and investment in restoration, social supports (including the compassionate devolved benefits system), and child/family programmes reaching communities today.

Reform UK Energy Price Claims: Reality Check

Reform’s pitch to license more North Sea oil/gas for lower bills is constrained: Westminster controls offshore licensing and has banned new exploration via the May 2026 Energy Independence Bill (existing fields continue). Energy prices are international-market driven; new fields take years and “make no difference to bills” per government analysis. Reform would need UK-wide power for change; in Holyrood it can only oppose SNP net-zero measures. 

SNP continues pushing full energy devolution (recent vote 70-54), rejected by Westminster—full control would require independence or major new devolution. Thus, Reform’s energy influence remains prospective in this Scottish context, while SNP’s JTF and Social Security Scotland deliver transition and family supports now.

Overall Bottom Line for Aberdeen South/Aberdeenshire Families:

SNP/ScotGov has the track record of funded, area-specific projects on environment/wildlife, community regeneration, compassionate devolved benefits, and child supports. 

Reform offers a local campaigning voice and alternative vision prioritising traditional energy jobs/deregulation—but most outcomes (especially energy prices and new initiatives) hinge on gaining greater power. Energy policy realities limit Reform’s immediate leverage here. 

Check gov.scot (JTF/Social Security Scotland) or reformuk.scot for latest local updates.


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2 thoughts on “A Voter’s Guide for Aberdeen South – SNP/Scottish Government vs Reform UK 

  1. ‘The Oil sector needs supporting. Instead of importing Oil.’

    The oil & gas sector needs supporting; the transition to renewable energy and the establishment of a resilient national energy system for Scotland needs supporting. The businesses, workers and communities in Scotland that have been dedicated to oil & gas production and reliant on its use need supporting during the energy transition.

    The issue of export replacement may not be so easy to resolve:

    From the Climate Intelligence Unit (January 8, 2024) British fuel from new North Sea licences would make up less than 1% of a tank of petrol. (https://eciu.net/media/press-releases/2024/british-fuel-from-new-north-sea-licences-would-make-up-less-than-1-of-a-tank-of-petrol )

    ‘Professor Gavin Bridge, Fellow of the Durham Energy Institute at Durham University, said: “The reality is very little of the oil pumped from the North Sea is refined and sold on British soil, and even then the price is largely dictated by international markets.’

    ‘Dr Simon Cran-McGreehin, Head of Analysis at ECIU said: “New licences are a distraction from policies that would have a real, lasting impact on the UK’s energy independence. Oil from new fields such as Rosebank will be traded internationally – as the government has admitted, this oil is not earmarked for the UK and it won’t make any real difference to UK prices.’

    The article notes that for example just ‘6% (or 1 in 16 litres) of diesel used by UK customers in 2022 had come from UK oil fields via UK refineries.

    Why is this so? From Mosselmans and Tudball (March 11, 2026) North Sea oil and gas – how much oil and gas remains in the UK Continental Shelf, where does it go, and how is this changing? UK Parliament Post.

    ‘Why are we exporting? – The UK exports primary oil that it produces from the UKCS as it lacks appropriate refining capacity to meet domestic demand for oil-based products. This is because UK refineries are designed to process primary oil with a lower sulphur content than oil extracted from UKCS. In 2024 7.7% of the oil used in UK refineries to make petroleum products came from the UKCS.

    Remarkable statistics?

      Liked by 2 people

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