The Scotsman

Starmer: ‘Independen­ce and Brexit rows hurting Scotland’

●‘Mountain’ to climb for party, leader admits on eve of first visit

- By ALEXANDER BROWN Westminste­r Correspond­ent

The people of Scotland are being left behind by Holyrood and Westminste­r administra­tions distracted by Brexit and independen­ce, Sir Keir Starmer has claimed.

Writing in The Scotsman ahead of his first visit since becoming Labour leader, Sir Keir demanded both government­s work together to tackle the virus and warned they must stop getting distracted by constant rowing over the constituti­on.

Visiting a research facility in Edinburgh today, the QC also admitted Labour has a “mountain” to climb ahead of the Scottish elections on 6 May 2021.

S cottish Labour is currently languishin­g in third in the polls and is facing another disastrous night for its MSPS next year.

Last week par t y reb els tried and failed to force a motion of no confidence in the Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard.

In a landmark interventi­on, just one day after his child tested negative for coronaviru­s, Sir Keir demanded the

four nations pull together and focus on keeping people safe.

He said: “The number one priority for government­s across the United Kingdom must be protecting people’ s lives and livelihood­s.

“Yet in the middle of a global pandemic, the Tories are still banging on about Brexit and the SNP, by their own admission, are still prioritisi­ng independen­ce.

“Rather than acknowledg­ing the deep problems with their response to the virus, like the current testing fiasco or the crisis in our care homes, they are dodging blame and attacking each other.”

Earlier this month Nicola Sturgeon announced in her Programme for Government that she would lay down a draft independen­ce bill before the 2021 elections.

The First Minister has been repeatedly accused of preempting announceme­nts by the UK government, while the SNP has criticised Westminste­r for failing to communicat­e with the devolved nations.

Tensions continued to escalate yesterday in a fiery Prime Minister’s Questions that saw the SNP’S Westminste­r leader Ian Blackford accuse the Prime Minister of breaking the “failing Union” with his Internal Market Bill.

On Tuesday, Scotland’ s constituti­on secretary, Mike Russell, claimed relations between the two administra­tions had utterly collapsed.

Now SirKeir has accused both government­s of looking for excuses and letting the people of Scotland down.

He said: “As we have seen with the recent blame-game over testing in Scotland, if government­s are going to spend their time fighting each other there is only one loser, and that’s the Scottish people.

“So I say to both government­s: get a grip, focus on the job in hand and work together to defeat this virus.

“At this crucial time, we cannot have a situation where the four nations of the UK are pulling in different directions”.

Sir Keir also admitted the pandemic had exposed a series of areas where Scotland had been left behind, and vowed Labour would not allow “business as usual” after the pandemic.

He said: “Coronaviru­s has lifted a curtain on many of the inequaliti­es and fragili - ties which still exist within Scotland. When we emerge – which we will – we need to have learnt the lessons. There can be no going back to the status quo.”

The former head of prosecutio­ns in England also insisted Labour was not a spent force in Scotland, despite a plummeting vote share and embattled leadership.

He said: “I am here with a very clear message: Labour’ s history and values run proudly through Scotland–and always will. Scotland is deeply important tome and to the Labour Party. I am in no doubt that we have a mountain to climb, both at the next UK general election and next year’s Holyrood elections.

“But I am confident of the platform Lab our will enter those elections on.

“The Labour Party I lead, with Scottish Labour, will speak up for the people of Scotland, whether that is in Holyrood or in Westminste­r.”

 ??  ?? 0 Sir Keir Starmer makes his first visit to Scotland as Labour leader today – and hits out at the Wrstminste­r and Holyrood government­s
0 Sir Keir Starmer makes his first visit to Scotland as Labour leader today – and hits out at the Wrstminste­r and Holyrood government­s

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