The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Scots Labour: More talks on more devolution

- MANDY RHODES

The Scottish Labour leader’s plan for a special conference to discuss the party’s confused position on a second independen­ce referendum has been blocked.

Richard Leonard had hoped to secure the support of the Scottish Executive Committee for a conference in May but at a meeting in Glasgow yesterday the ruling body opted to hold another meeting in March.

Before it meets, a consultati­on will be held on the party’s constituti­onal position as part of a wider review of its failings.

A number of senior Labour figures have said First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has a mandate to hold a second referendum after the SNP claimed 47 of Scotland’s 59 seats at last month’s General Election.

MSPs Monica Lennon and Neil Findlay, and English MPs Clive Lewis and Ben Bradshaw have indicated their support for another vote. However, Scotland’s only remaining Labour MP, Ian Murray, is opposed.

Mr Leonard would like his party to consider a multi-option referendum, which would give voters the chance to back federalism, or devo max.

Mr Leonard said the consultati­on will help develop the policy on federalism “to ensure it resonates with people across Scotland”.

Scottish Labour is possibly, maybe, perhaps, about to try and play catch up with Scotland.

Seventeen years on from when it last won power in the Scottish Parliament – albeit in a coalition with the Lib Dems – the party is only now seriously thinking about its approach to independen­ce.

In something of a U-turn, the leadership of the party – many supporters got there some time ago – is thinking about supporting a second independen­ce referendum, albeit with a second question on federalism, devo max or something like it.

A meeting of the Scots executive yesterday did not offer any clarificat­ion, only a date in the diary for more talks on a possible blueprint for more devolution and then a discussion of another vote. Possibly.

Too little, too late? Maybe, but in the face of a catastroph­ic defeat at the General Election, what is left for it to do? It only has one MP at Westminste­r and trails behind the Tories in Scotland, for goodness sake. Who would ever have thought?

Well, quite a lot of us really, but consumed by its visceral hatred of the SNP, Scottish Labour has failed to see beyond its own anger and while it contemplat­ed its own navel with inconseque­ntial reviews, supporters left in droves.

In the 20 years that Scotland has had its own parliament – a parliament Labour campaigned for and made real – Scottish Labour has been led by nine different people and taken the electorate and the parliament for granted.

The problem for Labour now isn’t that it needs to change its leader or its internal structures to win back power, Scotland needs to change, and that just isn’t going to happen without good reason.

Scotland has been on slow trajectory towards independen­ce for many years and Labour has failed to see how the momentum might be stalled.

I remember a fringe event at party conference in Perth in 2014 chaired by former First Minister Henry McLeish. With two failed Scottish parliament­ary elections behind them and the SNP riding high, with a first independen­ce referendum date in the offing, I remember watching in disbelief as Margaret Curran, then Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland, tore into one of her own members because he was openly campaignin­g for Yes.

Allan Grogan was leader of a splinter group called Labour for Independen­ce (LFI) and Curran branded him a traitor. McLeish, who at the time had been in secret talks with then First Minister Alex Salmond over a second question on the ballot paper in support of devo max – déjà vu, anyone? – was aghast.

“I know nothing about LFI, but we need to be a party that is tolerant of dissident voices,” said McLeish. “We don’t want to be known as a party that cannot brook discussion, however much it makes us uncomforta­ble or makes us think about things that we don’t want to think about.”

Curran responded by taking a sarcastic swipe at her former leader by saying she was “delighted” to hear he would be voting no. As if it was ever in any doubt.

As Scottish Labour ponders its next move, a first step might be to stop blaming the SNP and start a conversati­on about the future of Scotland which could mean saying yes – if only to a second referendum.

 ??  ?? Richard Leonard arrives yesterday
Richard Leonard arrives yesterday
 ??  ?? Former First Minister Henry McLeish
Former First Minister Henry McLeish
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom