The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Labour on the back foot over ‘ no- go zones’

Tory candidate asked friends

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Once a force that dominated Scottish politics, Kezia Dugdale’s party will not field candidates in 26 of the nation’s mainland wards on May 4.

Overall, Labour will field 40 fewer candidates than at 2012’s council elections when it came second to the SNP in vote share but, crucially, won control or partial control of 19 of Scotland’s 32 town halls – almost double the SNP’s number.

Polls now suggest that Labour could suffer a repeat of their Holyrood result, falling behind the Conservati­ves and losing power to the SNP at several key authoritie­s in their central belt stronghold­s, including Glasgow.

Scottish Conservati­ve local government spokesman Graham Simpson, whose own party’s strategy has been criticised for its lack of diversity, with fewer than one in five female candidates, said the figures underlined Labour’s “weakness” north of the border.

Mr Simpson said: “This shows that in large parts of the country Labour has effectivel­y given up. People are fed up of their weakness on Scotland’s place in the UK, as well as the chaotic leadership of Jeremy Corbyn.

“It seems Labour recognises this and won’t even offer themselves on the ballot paper.

“In contrast, there won’t be any no- go areas for the Scottish Conservati­ves in this election.”

Graham Simpson.

The SNP and the Conservati­ves have confirmed they will field candidates in every mainland ward.

In Aberdeensh­ire, four of the 19 wards will have no Labour candidate, despite the party currently running the local authority in coalition with the SNP and Independen­ts.

Labour holds out no hope of making inroads in Tory- led Moray, where the party will not fight 75% of wards. And party figures are not optimistic of ousting the SNP in Perth and Kinross, where Labour will not fight five out of 12 wards.

In Angus, Labour will not fight one of eight wards; in Argyll and Bute, four out of 11; in Highland, three out of 21; and in Scottish Borders, three of 11.

Labour will also not put forward a single candidate in the Western Isles but said last night there was a “long- held tradition” of their members standing as independen­ts. NO one involved with Scottish Labour believes the local elections on May 4 will mark a revival in the party’s fortunes. Publicly, most party folk concede the polls do not bode well. Privately, they admit they fear the worst.

Losing large chunks of the central belt to the SNP looks all but

inevitable for A TORY council candidate has been forced to apologise after it emerged he invited people to “l ike” a picture posted on Facebook of the Parachute Regiment on Bloody Sunday.

Neill Graham, who is standing for Ruth Davidson’s party in the Paisley North- east and Ralston ward in Renfrewshi­re, shared the image from the “Proud to be a Pr o t e s t a n t banter g r o u p”, according to reports.

A spokesman added that the party would be fielding more candidates overall than the Tories.

He said: “In areas across Scotland it is only Labour that can defeat the SNP.

“A vote for the Tories risks putting the SNP in control of our town halls and giving Nicola Sturgeon yet another excuse to demand a divisive second independen­ce referendum.

“Labour councillor­s will fight for investment in local services.

“Every Tory candidate elected will support more cuts to valued public services and a reckless Brexit gamble.

“Given the fact that fewer than one in five of the Tories’ candidates a re women, it’s a bit rich for them to attack any party.” Kezia Dugdale’s party and the strongly pro-union Tories appeal to those angered by Nicola Sturgeon’s push for a new referendum.

So what next for Labour?

Wipeout of their local government base makes fighting future elections an uphill struggle – they may lose grassroots talent and bodies willing to knock on doors.

His 2014 post contained the phrase: “How many likes for the Paras?”

The 26- year- old retail manager at first tried to defend his behaviour as simply supporting the British Army.

“It was nothing in particular to do with Northern Ireland,” he said.

Bloody Sunday saw soldiers shoot 13 people dead on a civil rights march in Derry in 1972.

Fresh questions will be asked about Dugdale’s leadership.

While she has taken the top job at a difficult time, presiding over Labour’s worst-ever Holyrood performanc­e and symbolic town hall defeats make her position look untenable.

The 2010 Saville inquiry concluded the killings were both “unjustifie­d” and “unjustifia­ble”.

A year earlier, Mr Graham also shared posts from the “Protestant coalition” Facebook group critical of former South African president Nelson Mandela, and joked about attending a conference of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party while on a holiday in Greece.

Mr Graham’s name, former address and current mobile

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