The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

2017 Council Election

V-Day: Scotland goes to the polls.

- KATRINE BUSSEY

Scots will elect 1,227 councillor­s today to represent them on the country’s 32 local authoritie­s.

And with councils having power over key areas such education and social care, not to mention bin collection, the ballot is much more than just a dress rehearsal for June’s General Election.

A key battlegrou­nd will be Glasgow, where Labour has held overall control since 1980.

But with the party’s fortunes on the wane, Nicola Sturgeon’s party now has the opportunit­y to secure victory in an authority which was once part of Labour’s Scottish heartlands.

The SNP are fielding 56 candidates in the contest for Glasgow City Council, out of a total of 625 hopefuls who are standing across Scotland.

The Tories, who are enjoying a surge in support under Ruth Davidson, are also fielding more candidates than in the last local government election in 2012, with the party having 380 candidates.

The Scottish Greens have put forward a record 219 candidates, an increase of 139 on 2012, when 14 councillor­s were elected.

In contrast, Labour has 44 fewer people standing than in 2012, with 453 candidates.

Five years ago it won 488,703 first preference votes and saw 394 of its people elected – putting the party second behind the SNP, who secured 503,233 first preference votes and returned 425 councillor­s.

However, the single transferab­le voting system (STV), which makes it harder for parties to win outright control of local authoritie­s, meant the SNP won overall control of just two councils, Angus and Dundee.

At the same time, Labour won majority control in four areas, holding on to power in Glasgow and North Lanarkshir­e, and winning Renfrewshi­re and West Dunbartons­hire, where previously no party had had a majority.

Meanwhile, both the Tories and the Liberal Democrats will be looking to make gains, after returning 115 and 71 councillor­s, respective­ly, last time round. The STV voting system, in which people rank candidates in order of preference, meant no party was in overall control in 26 of the 32 local authoritie­s.

As a result coalitions were formed in many councils, while some have been operating as minority administra­tions.

The SNP could end up the largest party in 23 of Scotland’s 32 councils, a new report by polling expert Professor John Curtice predicted.

The study, carried out for the Electoral Reform Society, meanwhile warned Labour could be facing “heavy losses” , adding that the party “seems unlikely to retain control of any of the four councils where it won an overall majority in 2012”.

Labour would have a “good night” if it remained the largest party on one council and ended best placed to be the junior partner in a coalition in as many authoritie­s as possible, the website Britain Elects said.

Its report on the Scottish council elections said: “After their poor showing in 2016, 2015 and... the latest polls, if Labour wants to retain relevance in Scotland they must do so by showing it somewhere in this year’s council elections. East Lothian could be their saving grace. Though they may lose the status of largest party, they and the Tories could retain enough seats to keep the SNP out and continue a coalition.”

It added: “We know the Conservati­ves are going to do well in Scotland compared to 2012, but as to how well is yet to be seen.

“A good night for them would be to out-poll Labour in seats and votes, overtake them in Dumfries and Galloway, and become the largest party on a number of authoritie­s north of the Forth. Angus, Aberdeensh­ire and Moray all seem candidates for this.

“Elsewhere, Perth and Kinross and Stirling are an outside chance.”

Today more than four million Scots are eligible to have their say as polling stations open for the local council elections. Of course, substantia­lly fewer will actually cast their vote. However, these remain important elections. It is all too easy to become disillusio­ned with national politics. The constant toing and froing over Brexit (something most Scots did not want in the first place) and the possibilit­y of a second independen­ce referendum (again, something Scots have already voted against) have dominated the political scene to such an extent it would be easy to forget mere matters such as education, housing, health and employment.

But away from the bombastic rhetoric within the debating chambers of Holyrood and Westminste­r, decisions that affect our everyday lives are being taken.

They are taken not by MPs or MSPs, but by local councillor­s in cities and towns across the country.

Today’s poll may well have been overshadow­ed by the announceme­nt of a snap general election to be held in just a month, but this is no time for voter fatigue to set in.

So if you care about local schools, employment opportunit­ies, road maintenanc­e, bin collection­s — or just about any other aspect of local, everyday life you can think of — consider heading out to the polling station.

After all, despite the plethora of recent plebiscite­s, this remains a relatively rare chance to make a difference.

 ?? Picture: SWNS. ?? Count staff at Meadowbank Stadium, Edinburgh, participat­e in a training session ahead of the official count.
Picture: SWNS. Count staff at Meadowbank Stadium, Edinburgh, participat­e in a training session ahead of the official count.
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