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Davidson is engaged to
her Irish partner Jen Wilson and is an outspoken advocate for gay marriage.
Last summer she gave the
annual pride lecture for Amnesty International in Northern Ireland.
"I was probably the
only unionist protestant who was marrying an Irish Catholic that they could
find to advocate gay marriage," she said earlier.
"I would dearly
love to see equal marriage in Northern Ireland. The arguments that are being
used against it now are exactly the same arguments that were used in Scotland
and Ireland, but the sky hasn't fallen in."
- 'Hard road back' -
Scottish Conservatives
previously had just one MP in Scotland, prompting the joke from the still
dominant but now badly bruised Scottish National Party that there were more
pandas at Edinburgh zoo -- two.
The ebullient Davidson
has turned a party once consigned to the scrapheap into a fighting force with
her jovial media persona and forceful opposition to Sturgeon's hopes for
independence.
Following Thursday's
vote, Sturgeon admitted that the independence issue had been a factor in her
party's losses and that she would "listen to voters".
Davidson on Friday
declared independence hopes "dead".
Scotland rejected
independence by 55 percent in a 2014 referendum but the SNP went from strength
to strength the following year.
It won all but three of
the 59 Scottish seats in the British parliament and swiftly laid plans for a
second independence referendum.
In this week's election,
the party won just 35 seats.
Davidson can take much
of the credit for that.
Never shy of performing
entertaining stunts or appearing on comedy programmes, she shone as one of the
most charismatic figures in an otherwise dour campaign.
Davidson was elected the
party's Scotland leader in 2011.
She cemented her
position in 2016 by leading the Conservatives to second place in the Scottish
Parliament election, winning a quarter of the 129 seats in the Edinburgh-based
legislature.
Davidson cast her first
vote as a teenager in 1997 -- the year Tony Blair's New Labour ended 18 years
of Conservative British rule.
"I watched every
single Conservative seat in Scotland fall, so I've waited a really long time
for a comeback," she told AFP before the election.
"If this proves to
be that time then it will have been a really hard road back."
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