Dear All
The votes are in, the result is official but there is no
surprise, well at least for me, I said the Labour contest would end with Kezia
Dugdale as leader, and Alex Rowley as Deputy.
George Laird right again.
Ken Macintosh has had two attempts now to be leader, each
attempt ended in failure, when he stood against Johann Lamont; that was his
window of opportunity.
When he said he could be First Minster next year and that he
was winning, I was very sceptical, during the Scottish independence campaign,
he wasn’t a leading figure. A couple of weekends before the vote on the 18th
September, I came across him and his family in B & Q in Darnley, to say the least I was highly
surprised.
You may remember I wrote a post because someone was asking
me in a worried fashion how the vote was going, I said just as Francis Drake
played bowls, George Laird was doing gardening, actually more supervising, then
doing the thing myself, some people……..
Anyway, since the vote, Ken Macintosh hasn’t impressed but
credit where due he was onto something when he said the Labour Deputy leader
should be a councillor. I thought this idea was one of exceptional merit but he
needed more. And in some respects he was up against the Labour ‘machine’, the
party think I assume that because Kezia Dugdale is a woman that they think she
is best place to take on unpopular Nicola Sturgeon.
It doesn’t work that way, and unless Kezia Dugdale rises to
the new challenges she is going to find in the most painful way how lonely
leadership is when things go terribly wrong. Jim Murphy had about 8 months
before he experienced the worst Labour result since 1918 for the party in
Scotland.
He was seen as the most popular figure coupled with
experience so Labour rallied round him.
That ended badly.
Dugdale, the favourite to win the contest, won 72.1% of the
vote, while Mr Macintosh was backed by 27.9%.
Holyrood could be another ‘1918’ event which would put
pressure on Kezia Dugdale, if I was in Labour, I would try to win in 2016 as
normal, but the job of Dugdale is to rebuild the Labour Party in Scotland along
with Alex Rowley or they will find they will down to having a rump support
which does win enough seats. The Scottish Conservatives have and are
experiencing what that is like, it isn’t pretty.
The new deputy leader has aalso been elected, that person is
Alex Rowley; in some respects he was the only realistic option on the ballot
paper. I was never convinced by Richard Baker and although I wanted to see a
councillor hold the post as Deputy, I didn’t think Gordon Matheson could pull
it off, and he still has ‘local’ trouble in the Glasgow Councillor Group, half
his councillors want him out. He gave it a go and it didn’t pay off, that is the
trouble with gambling, sometimes the dice roll not in your favour.
So, Alex Rowley is Deputy leader; his task along with Kezia
Dugdale is to rebuild the party, get in new fresh blood and try and set the
party back on an even keel.
Dugdale said:
"I know that the
past few months have been incredibly difficult for Labour members across the
country. I know this because I have been out on the doorsteps, I have been
there with you. But I have a message for Labour Party members out there
knocking their pan in for this party that we all love: we are down but we are not
out."
She added:
"I will work night and day over the coming weeks and
months to make you proud, to honour that trust that you have put in me today,
to give you some hope, to renew your faith in our abilities to transform the
communities that we seek to serve.
"And I have a message for the people of Scotland too:
take another look at the Scottish Labour Party."
On the reasons why people aren’t voting Labour, she said:
"Firstly, a large part of the population have simply
switched off from us. It's not so much that they don't like what they hear;
they have stopped listening to us altogether. Secondly, those who are willing
to give us a hearing say that they don't know what we stand for any more”.
Right on the first part and right on the second part!
But she failed to explain why they stopped listening; the
reason for that is that certain Labour MPs and other elected people had stopped
listening to people and helping constituents address their complaints?
What good is electing someone when you seek their help they
take their huge taxpayer salary and just ignore you?
This year at the Westminster election, the people of
Scotland did a cull of Scottish Labour MPs bar one, next year; the public
judging by polls could do exactly the same and wipe out every first past the
post MSPs in the Labour Party.
This could happen!
Prior to the Glasgow Council Election of 2012, the Labour
Group at the Council experienced the period in their history, things were
popping out into the public domain which led to the massive cull prior to the
election.
Out of 45 seats contested, the Labour Party won 44, culls
work!
Having said culls work, this simply cannot be the only
solution to Labour’s deep seated problems, there has to be a vision and that
vision must centre on community first.
The Scottish Labour needs to bring in a complete ban on
councillors second jobs working for MPs and MSPs. Another matter is raising a
councillor’s salary to £30,000 a year so that they can be councillors full time
and not part time. Anyone who talks a paid second job during the hours of 8 am
to 5 pm gets £18,000.
It will become apparent between now and the end of the year
whether Kezia Dugdale and Alex Rowley will be able to change Scottish Labour,
after that the Scottish election for Holyrood will make any change impossible
during a full blown election campaign.
So, they better get cracking because the clock on their
leadership started the second the result of the contest was announced.
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University
ReplyDeleteDugdale as a priority needs to show strong leadership within Labour, and make it clear what her policies are , and that she does not necessarily follow the Westminster party line.
She also needs to highlight the cracks in the SNP ranks. If I'm right, two sitting MSPs have been deselected. That means the SNP leadership is wanting the Yes men and women in Holyrood next year. Wonder if Sturgeon has the guts to try the same tactic with Christine Grahame.
I agree, real task to change the party around George.
ReplyDeleteThe SNP according to the Herald are going to fight the election on their record well there's a lot to attack there. The new powers will be through so there must be clear proposals what to do with them.
ReplyDelete