The Scotsman

Scottish Labour leader says anti-english bias may sway some voters

- By CHRIS GREEN newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The leader of the Scottish Labour party has claimed that some people north of the Border will not vote for him because he is English.

Richard Leonard, who was elected as Kezia Dugdale’s replacemen­t in November following her surprise resignatio­n, was born in Yorkshire but has lived in Scotland since the early 1980s.

The MSP, who defeated Anas Sarwar in the race for the leadership, has previously said that when Scotland play England at football or rugby he still supports the country of his birth.

Asked if he thought being English would prevent Scots voting for him, Mr Leonard said in a newspaper interview: “There is a small group of people for whom that will be an issue.”

He added that he had first become aware of anti-english sentiments among a small minority of Scots in the buildup to the 2014 independen­ce referendum.

“I wrote a blog on the case against an independen­t state and somebody put a comment on it which was, ‘In truth you would not be welcome in an independen­t Scotland’.

“I thought that was really chilling – not an overt attack in some senses, but on the other hand really quite a dawnknock-at-the-door. So there are those elements that exist and I am conscious of that.”

However, Mr Leonard said he was confident that any antienglis­h bias among some voters would not prevent him being elected as the next First Minister of Scotland in 2021.

“What people are looking for is someone who will stand up for the interests of working people, predominan­tly,” he said.

“I accept there is an extent to which Scottish politics has become about geography, but I think it should be more about principle. I think we need to break out of this confinemen­t that it’s about where you’re from and ‘You’re not from around here’, which I think is quite a corrosive part of our politics, and get back to ‘These are the ideas’.”

Labour are currently the third largest party at the Scottish Parliament after being leapfrogge­d by the Conservati­ves at 2016’s election and Mr Leonard faces a tough task to regain power from the SNP.

However, he said he would not be leader if he did not believe this was “absolutely possible”, adding: “I don’t think it’s all about me. In the end it will come down to whether the Labour Party is credible. “I think part of our credibilit­y comes from whether or not we believe in ourselves and we’ve got a clear and coherent philosophy. We need to get that back.”

 ??  ?? 0 Labour leader Richard Leonard, who was born in Yorkshire, said that being English will be an issue for a small group of people
0 Labour leader Richard Leonard, who was born in Yorkshire, said that being English will be an issue for a small group of people

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