Beatrice Wishart

Beatrice Wishart is a Scottish Liberal Democrats politician who has been the Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for Shetland since 2019. Wishart currently serves as spokesperson for both Connectivity and Rural Affairs for her party, and is Deputy Convener for the Rural Affairs and Islands Committee. She was elected at the 2019 Shetland by-election, after the sitting Liberal Democrat MSP Tavish Scott stepped down.

Political career
Wishart stood in the 2017 Scottish local elections as an independent candidate for Shetland Islands Council, being elected as one of four members for the Lerwick South ward. After the election she was appointed depute convenor of the council.

In July 2019 she was selected as a candidate for the Scottish Liberal Democrats for the 2019 Shetland by-election scheduled for 29 August, having been associated with the party for the previous decade – running the offices of Alistair Carmichael, MP for Orkney and Shetland, and the outgoing MSP for Shetland, Tavish Scott. The campaign was hard-fought; the SNP spent £100,000 on the by-election – more money than the party spent during the entire EU referendum – and there was a swing of over 14% to their candidate. Wishart held the seat for the Scottish Liberal Democrats with a majority of 1,837 votes or 15.5%. She made her maiden speech in the Scottish Parliament on 10 September 2019, which concerned immigration into Scotland after Brexit.

Shortly after being elected, Wishart was appointed as education spokesperson for the Scottish Liberal Democrats, and was made a member of the Scottish Parliament's Education and Skills Committee. Wishart, who had previously worked on the Shetland Islands Council's Education and Families Committee, stressed her belief that "getting a high quality education helps people meet their full potential in life". From February 2020, Wishart also sat on the Scottish Parliament's Culture, Tourism, Europe and External Affairs Committee, taking over from Mike Rumbles.

In a letter to Nicola Sturgeon in April 2020, Wishart suggested that the Shetland Islands could be "the ideal place to pilot an exit strategy from lockdown", which had been put in place in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Wishart cited as "encouraging" statements made by Hugh Pennington, emeritus professor at the University of Aberdeen, who had noted that "there could soon be a case for a geographical lifting of restrictions – such as in some of the Scottish islands and the Highlands and Grampian". Later that month, Wishart was appointed as a member of the Scottish Parliament's COVID-19 Committee.

At the 2021 Scottish Parliament election, Wishart was re-elected with a majority of 806 votes, the third smallest majority of that election.

In May 2021, following the Scottish Parliament election, Wishart left the Education and Skills Committee, the Culture, Tourism, Europe and External Affairs committee, and the COVID-19 Committee, and was appointed Deputy Convenor of the Rural Affairs, Islands and Natural Environment Committee, which was renamed the Rural Affairs and Islands Committee in February 2023.

Wishart is a member of 23 Cross-Party Groups (CPGs) in the Scottish Parliament. Notably, she is the Convener for the CPG on Brain Tumours and the CPG on Nordic Countries, Co-Convenor for the CPG on Crofting and the CPG on Mental Health, and Deputy Convenor for the CPG on Fisheries and Coastal Communities, the CPG on Islands, the CPG on Men’s Violence Against Women and Children, the CPG on Oil and Gas, the CPG on Poverty, the CPG on Space, and the CPG on Women Against State Pension Inequality (WASPI).