The Scotsman

Corbyn claims victory

- Analysis Brian Wilson

it had been assumed Mr Corbyn was a lame duck, who would be forced to quit as leader following a humiliatin­g defeat by the Tories.

But helped by Mrs May’s uninspirin­g Tory campaign, Mr Corbyn emerged from the election with his reputation enhanced, even though there remain many in the party who believe a more mainstream leader is required to actually win an election.

With the Conservati­ves failing to win an outright majority, Mr Corbyn yesterday declared that Labour was “ready to serve this country” and repeated his call for Mrs May to stand down.

Even though Labour took 57 fewer seats than the Conservati­ves, Mr Corbyn claimed victory.

“I think it’s pretty clear who won this election,” he said at Labour’s headquarte­rs in central London.

“We are ready to do everything we can to put our programme into operation.

“There isn’t a parliament­ary majority for anybody at the present time, the party that has lost in this election is the

Kezia Dugdale was singing in the rain after the election results. She is pictured, top right, with some of Labour’s new MPS while party activists were in party mood as they

Conservati­ve Party, the arguments the Conservati­ve Party put forward in this election have lost. I think we need a change.”

Mr Corbyn said he would not make any coalition deals or pacts but would instead put forward Labour’s own programme for government.

Asked if there would now be another election, Mr Corbyn said: “Parliament must meet and Parliament will have to take a decision on what happens.

“When a government puts forward the Queen’s Speech, we will put forward our point of view, we are of course ready to serve.

“We have a huge mandate from a huge increase in our support to carry forward a programme that challenges austerity, that challenges poverty and challenges inequality.”

In Scotland, Ms Dugdale was delighted to return seven MPS in an election that many had thought would end up in Labour being wiped out north of the Border.

But Ian Murray comfortabl­y held his Edinburgh South seat with anti-independen­ce referendum voters helping him to the largest majority in Scotland of 15,514.

Defying expectatio­ns, the new Glasgow North East MP Paul Sweeney, a community worker, achieved Labour’s second biggest swing north of the Border, recapturin­g what wasoncesco­tland’ssafestsea­t from the SNP

In the other gains, all from the Nationalis­ts, North Lanarkshir­e councillor Hugh Gaffney won Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill with an 8.7 per cent vote increase and an 1,586 majority.

South Lanarkshir­e councillor

Ged Killen took Rutherglen and Hamilton West with a 265 majority and 2.3 per cent increase in the vote.

In the east, Shelter Scotland staffer Danielle Rowley, 27, who is also daughter of Scottish Labour deputy leader Alex Rowley, became the party’s youngest Scottish MP, winning Midlothian with an 885 majority and 6.2 per cent vote increase.

Primary school teacher Martin Whitfield took East Lothian with a 5.1 per cent increase and 3,083 majority.

Fife Council deputy leader Lesley Laird won Gordon Brown’s old seat of Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeat­h with a 259 majority and 3.5 per cent increase.

tom.peterkin@scotsman.com

Theresa May and Nicola Sturgeon have the same bitter lesson to digest – do not take the voters for granted. By assuming their own invincibil­ity, both have incurred calamitous outcomes which raise questions about their own futures.

Not unreasonab­ly, May believed that Labour’s weakness would guarantee a much larger majority. All the Tories had to do was turn up. We now know that this seriously misjudged the public mood, the fateful impact of the Tory manifesto and also the resilience of Labour.

Sturgeon’s huge error was set in stone before the election was called. She had no reason other than sheer arrogance to trigger demands for a second independen­ce referendum. Evidently the Sturgeon household had become

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