The Sunday Post (Inverness)

‘insulting’ pro-Indy Scots

To tackle SNP on child poverty

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which An excerptfro­mthe LondonMayo­r’sspeech sparked the furyof NicNicola Sturgeon.g The First Ministerus­ed her personal

Twitter account to condemn Mr Khan’sviews. decades. Conference, it’s time Nicola Sturgeon changed her tune.”

Meanwhile, UK Labour’s deputy leader Tom Watson called any future coalition with the SNP at Westminste­r an “electoral dead end”.

He told delegates at Perth Concert Hall a “progressiv­e alliance” with other parties was a “road to nowhere”. WITH delicious irony, the microphone is broken as a debate about why people are not listening to the Scottish Labour party gets under way.

Sadly for Kezia Dugdale, Sadiq Khan’s microphone was working just fine.

The Perth hotel meeting room is short on optimism and half empty (or, for the optimists, half full).

But what is in plentiful supply is brutal honesty.

Labour invented political selfflagel­lation and as their fortunes have dwindled, the “woe is us” whip has lengthened.

So has the party’s ability to shoot itself in the foot.

The London Mayor’s explosive interventi­on into Scottish Labour’s conference was no blunder.

Senior party figures had sight of Mr Khan’s speech 24 hours in advance and we’re happy enough to give the most incendiary comments to some of yesterday’s papers.

As Scotland’s third political force, Labour have to work a lot harder to get noticed and there are some in the party who have fallen behind the old maxim that there is no such thing as bad publicity.

But this page that you’re reading has a big picture of Nicola Sturgeon – Kezia Dugdale’s flagship speech has secondary billing.

There are plenty of Scots who will agree with Khan’s assessment of nationalis­m but the problem for Labour is they are already in the pro-Union bag.

How many former Labour voters who back independen­ce will read Khan’s comments and think: “You know, I am a racist and I better stop this, back to Labour I go…”?

Back to the drawing board for Labour strategist­s. Again.

Citing how the 2015 General Election campaign was dominated by claims Ed Miliband’s Labour would be propped up by the SNP, he said: “The mere suggestion of a progressiv­e alliance is an absolute gift to the right.”

He also defended Jeremy Corbyn in the wake of the party’s disastrous Copeland by-election result.

The party handed the Tories the first by-election gain for a sitting government in 35 years.

He said “all of us with leadership roles in the Labour Party need to have a long, hard look at ourselves” and added: “Seven years into a Tory government, we shouldn’t be facing questions about whether we can retain the seats we already hold.”

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