The SNP's deputy chief in Westminster, Mhairi Black, has introduced she's going to stand down as an MP on the subsequent election, as she is "tired" of the "toxic environment".
Speaking to the News Agents podcast, she described parliament as "a poisonous place", the place you do not know if relationships are "genuine" or simply folks "looking for opportunities".
And whereas she understood how some might get "absorbed into the world" of Westminster, it was "still alien to her" after 10 years of working there.
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The SNP's Westminster chief, Stephen Flynn, mentioned she was "a class of her own", whereas former SNP chief and first minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon, referred to as her a "unique talent".
Ms Black gained her seat of Paisley and Renfrewshire South within the 2015 basic election on the age of 20 - one of many youngest MPs to ever be elected.
She was nonetheless in her closing 12 months of college and managed to oust Labour's shadow international secretary Douglas Alexander within the vote.
After holding a variety of spokesperson roles for her celebration over eight years, she shot up the ranks to be SNP's deputy chief in Westminster when Mr Flynn took over as leader, changing Ian Blackford.
But simply six months into that position, she has confirmed her plans to exit.
"'I am tired' is a big part of it, and the thing that makes me tired is Westminster," she mentioned. "I think it is one of the most unhealthy workplaces you could be in.
"It's a poisonous setting. It is simply your complete design of the place and the way it features is simply the alternative of every little thing I discover comfy."
Ms Black added: "It is certainly a toxic place, whether or not that is due to, you already know, what folks can get away with in it or the variety of private motivations people have and ulterior motives for issues. It is simply not a pleasant place to be in.
"Of course, I work very closely with colleagues, but I suppose I'm talking more about how it is difficult to know if somebody, certainly from other parties, is talking to you because there is a genuine relationship there or whether they are looking for opportunities."
The MP additionally mentioned she might "never really switch off" when working in Westminster and the "unsociable hours" means it "feels like you are spending a lot of your life there".
"In the run-up to the next election, I've realised that'll be almost 10 years that I will have been elected, so a third of my life has been in Westminster, which gives me the ick," she mentioned.
But Ms Black would not remorse her time in parliament, "fighting for what I believe in".
"I can understand why people get absorbed into the world of Westminster," she mentioned. "How folks can spend 40 years working there because it is a world unto itself, it's got it's own culture and sort of history and everything.
"But it's simply nonetheless alien to me."
Tweeting after the announcement, Ms Sturgeon said she was "each gutted by and completely understanding" of her decision.
"Her causes resonate," tweeted the former leader, who stood down from her post earlier this year. "But what a lack of a singular expertise, not simply to the SNP however to politics usually. I solely hope it is non permanent.
"The world needs more Mhairi Blacks in politics, not fewer. I hope we will see her in the Scottish Parliament in future."
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