The Scotsman

Dugdale leaves Liverpool with new powers and seat at top table of Labour

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent

Kezia Dugdale prevailed over Jeremy Corbyn and delivered greater autonomy for Scottish Labour in an internal power struggle that has dominated the party conference in Liverpool.

Ms Dugdale will take up a seat on the party’s national executive after Mr Corbyn’s supporters failed to block plans to admit the Labour leaders in Scotland and Wales.

The Scottish Labour leader will also bring back long-discussed powers over candidate selection, management of constituen­cy parties and policy-making in devolved and reserved areas, delivering reforms aimed at responding to the charge that Scotland is a “branch office” and cannot compete with the SNP in representi­ng Scottish interests.

Ms Dugdale’s presence on the national executive committee (NEC) shifts the balance of power away from Mr Corbyn, who wanted the positions to be elected by party members in Scotland and Wales. Attempts 0 Kezia Dugdale now has a seat on the national executive to unseat Labour Party general secretary Iain Mcnicol or impose mandatory re-selection of sitting MPS are now less likely to pass.

Following the announceme­nt of the result, Ms Dugdale said the seat was of such “vital importance” to Scottish Labour that she would fill it herself, and last night took part in her first NEC meeting as a full member.

“These reforms will be the biggest changes we’ve seen to how the Scottish Labour Party is run in a generation, and is the culminatio­n of years of work,” Ms Dugdale said. “I will be a loud and passionate voice for Scotland’s interests within our Uk-wide Labour family. This is a key moment in the history of our party, and our movement.”

Welsh First Minister Carwyn Jones, who will name a representa­tive to the NEC from his front bench after taking part in last night’s meeting by telephone, said the changes were “a significan­t step forward” and would allow Labour to keep pace with devolution in the UK.

Opponents had mounted a last-ditch attempt to wreck the changes yesterday morning, calling for the package of reforms to be broken up in order to vote down the creation of new NEC positions.

There were angry scenes as a demand from the TSSA union – for a lengthy card vote on whether the amendments to the Labour constituti­on should be considered as one package or line-by-line – was refused.

Amid barracking from Mr Corbyn’s supporters, Labour MSP Jackie Baillie took to the floor to warn delegates: “If we put internal politics above the interests of people in Scotland and Wales, we will pay a price.”

Unite, which controls the largest bloc of union delegates at the conference, had already indicated it would abstain if the reforms remained bundled together, making Ms Dugdale’s victory in a final vote yesterday afternoon a formality.

The measures were backed by 80 per cent of Labour delegates, The Scotsman understand­s. Following the abstention by Unite, 92 per cent of union delegates and 68 per cent of constituen­cy Labour delegates from across the UK backed the reforms.

Last night a senior Labour source claimed Ms Dugdale’s victory “demonstrat­ed the respect” she commands among the wider Labour movement.

“Kezia Dugdale is the leader that has finally delivered on a

0 Jeremy Corbyn visited a school in Liverpool where he played musical instrument­s with pupils, but the

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