And another very interesting result. Disastrous for the Tories
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgqzdl8lxyo
What a strange angle to focus on NS. The reduction in the tory vote seems to be, at best, an afterthought in the media coverage, including your own link where the tories aren't even mentioned until virtually the end of the piece.
Surely the big stories here (as the rest of the media seems to agree) are:
1. That Labour won completely unexpectedly and against virtually all predictions.
2. The rise in Reform and
3. The collapse in the SNP vote
And on the third point - if you think that an 11% reduction in the tory vote (which took them from an irrelevant 3rd to an irrelevant 4th) was 'disastrous', surely the much greater (16%) reduction in the SNP vote which meant they went from winning to losing was far worse.
And to my mind the really interesting thing here is the vote shifts against the pre-election view that Reform would eat into the other unionist party votes (particularly Labour and the Tories) with the non-unionist SNP being reasonable immune. But that isn't what we saw at all - the overall rise to 26% in the votes for Reform almost perfectly balances the combined fall in the SNP (16%) and the tories (11%). Rather than the SNP being immune it was Labour who retained their vote-share pretty well, dropping just 2% and actually that can be accounted for by the other significant newbie, the Greens, whose 2.6% pretty well perfectly balances the reduction in Labour and the LibDems.
So the overall swing here is a major swing (26%) from SNP and tories to Reform and a much, much smaller (2.6%) swing from Labour/Lib-Dems to the Greens.
The point being that there seems to be plenty of ex-SNP voters happy to jump to Reform (against prediction) and if that holds at an overall Holyrood election that could have a very significant impact.