The Scotsman

Labour risks taking a big step backwards

Kezia Dugdale helped to make party electable, but a Corbyn camp placement could undo recent progress

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It is a mark of Kezia Dugdale’s achievemen­ts as Scottish Labour leader that her resignatio­n this week came as a shock, and is being described as a serious blow for her party.

When she took over two years ago, even Ms Dugdale would have admitted that she lacked the experience required to help negotiate her way through the debris that remained of Scottish Labour after internal power struggles and public obliterati­on at the polls. The only question being asked back then was how long she would last before meltdown.

There have been mistakes along the way, but the bottom line is that, at the last election, Scottish Labour bounced back from the humiliatin­g tally of just a single MP at Westminste­r to seven. Whether this was all down to Ms Dugdale’s leadership is debatable, given the upsurge in Labour support across the UK as Theresa May stumbled and Jeremy Corbyn provided a coherent alternativ­e to the Prime Minister’s confused message.

But it quickly became clear that she would not be the kind of divisive figure that made her predecesso­r Jim Murphy unsuitable for the job, and as well as attracting support across the Labour movement in Scotland, she had the potential to offer broader appeal. In short, she could have been electable, had it not been for the fact that her party’s traditiona­l support had deserted before she arrived.

She was also determined to ensure that Labour in Scotland was no longer seen as a branch office of the UK party, and this required courage and conviction to fight for autonomy. It is rough justice that this may well have been her undoing, after the better-thanexpect­ed general election result emboldened her party leader.

The irony is that while Mr Corbyn has been strengthen­ed, and Ms Dugdale has departed, he lacks that electabili­ty required to make his support in any way meaningful. The danger for Scottish Labour is that Mr Corbyn and his supporters will ensure Ms Dugdale’s replacemen­t matches the required ideology – but is equally unelectabl­e.

Ms Dugdale could only start the resurgence in Scotland, which was always a long-term project. The party remains fragile, despite its general election success, and the danger for Scottish Labour now is that Mr Corbyn’s strengthen­ed position in the UK could leave the party weaker in Scotland – and back to square one.

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