
When the topic shifts from policy to family, a politician experiences a certain kind of silence that John Swinney attributes to a quiet science. Sitting opposite Brian Taylor in front of an Edinburgh Fringe audience at The Herald’s Unspun Live event in August, he refrained from making the customary political digressions. Simply put, he stated that things at home are “not too good.” Elizabeth Quigley, his wife, has had secondary progressive multiple sclerosis for more than 20 years, and the way he talked about it that night—calm, a little worn out, almost apologetic—suggested a man who has long since stopped acting as though his marriage and his career are two different things.
In 2000, Quigley received a diagnosis, the same year Swinney assumed the SNP’s leadership. There’s an odd symmetry there, one of those coincidences that only seem significant in retrospect. At the time, she was a prominent and astute journalist for the BBC. She would later produce a documentary on multiple sclerosis and, somewhat reluctantly, become one of Scotland’s most well-known proponents of the illness. She once told the Daily Record that she just kept “being Elizabeth”—a statement that may seem simple on paper, but it takes on a different meaning when you take into account what a person with a degenerative illness must endure for 25 years.
| Profile: Elizabeth Quigley & John Swinney | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Elizabeth Quigley |
| Spouse | John Swinney, First Minister of Scotland |
| Profession | BBC Scotland journalist and reporter |
| Health Condition | Secondary progressive multiple sclerosis |
| Year of Diagnosis | 2000 |
| Years Living with MS | Over 25 years |
| Marriage | Married John Swinney in 2003 |
| Child Together | Son, Matthew (teenager) |
| Advocacy Role | Patron, Perth and Kinross branch of MS Society Scotland |
| Public Work on MS | Television documentary, radio programmes for the BBC |
| Mobility Support | Walking stick indoors, walker or wheels outdoors |
| John Swinney’s Current Role | First Minister of Scotland (since 8 May 2024) |
| Political Party | Scottish National Party (SNP) |
The Swinneys tied the knot in 2003. In 2010, they welcomed a son, Matthew. And at some point during those years, the illness changed from something controlled to something more severe, as MS frequently does. By the time Humza Yousaf resigned in the spring of 2024, Swinney had already taken a clear break from front-line politics in 2023, citing his belief that he had overburdened his family. He has repeatedly stated that he would not have accepted the position at all if Yousaf had resigned a month earlier. He acknowledged that Elizabeth “was not doing well” in April.
That seems like one of the most truthful statements made by a first minister in recent memory. When asked about family, the majority of leaders exhibit a kind of practiced warmth. Swinney takes a different approach. Unusually, he sounds both a little relieved to be saying it aloud and a little guilty. He said the same thing, but in different words, to The Times in May 2025: his wife’s illness had almost prevented him from leading the nation.
Even though they hardly ever make the front pages, the political repercussions are real. According to him, the experiences he and Elizabeth had together had a direct influence on his decision to vote against the assisted dying bill in Scotland. He maintained that people with degenerative or terminal illnesses should be protected rather than subjected to additional pressures. The position originated in a particular place, whether you agree with it or not. It originated at home.
I remember a little detail from an interview I did in 2017. While on vacation in Tiree, Elizabeth noticed a sign for beach wheelchairs. “Where my boys go, I go,” she declared. It’s the type of line that doesn’t neatly fit into a political profile, and perhaps that’s why. She has stated for years that Scotland has the highest rate of multiple sclerosis (MS) in the world, but the disease still primarily affects people in private, in living rooms and kitchens, with little changes that no one takes pictures of.
It seems as though Swinney’s public persona—the cautious, somewhat stiff manager of a battered SNP—is also a man who constantly checks his watch and considers the journey back to Perthshire. He informed the Fringe audience that he needed to adjust, so he was returning home that evening rather than staying in Edinburgh. It was a throwaway line. It was also perhaps the most illuminating thing he said that night.

