Scottish Labour to reclaim hope, says leader
SCOTTISH LABOUR is starting to reclaim the politics of “hope and optimism” from the independence movement, the party’s new leader north of the border has insisted.
Yorkshire-born MSP Richard Leonard has become the fourth person to lead the Scottish Labour Party since the independence referendum in 2014.
UK leader Jeremy Corbyn previously blamed Labour’s slump in Scotland to the party’s decision to team up with the Conservatives in the Better Together campaign.
Mr Leonard said those who had fought to keep Scotland in the UK had been seen as being “negative” and were “seen to be on the side of fear”, with the pro-Union campaign being dubbed “project fear”. But he argued the “exciting” policies put forward by Mr Corbyn, and his “principled and authentic leadership” after taking over the role in 2015, were turning things around for Labour.
Mr Leonard, who became Scottish Labour leader less than two weeks ago, spoke out as he campaigned alongside Mr Corbyn in Glasgow.
“My reading of what happened in 2014 is that those of us who campaigned for a No vote were seen to be on the side of negativity, were seen to be on the side of fear, and those who campaigned for a Yes vote were seen – fairly or not – to be on the side of hope and optimism,” he said.
“I think we are now in a position where the Scottish Labour Party is starting once again to be on the side of hope and optimism.”
Standing alongside his UK leader, he added: “This is the answer. Jeremy Corbyn’s principled and authentic leadership, campaigning on a manifesto which stood for something clear, stood for something distinctively Labour, stood for something confidently Labour, a manifesto which talked about extending public ownership, which talked clearly about ending austerity and lifting the public-sector pay cap.”