Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser

‘Ambitious’ SNP launch manifesto

Party get on council election trail

- JUDITH TONNER

North Lanarkshir­e’s SNP group have launched their manifesto for next month’s council elections, saying it demonstrat­es their “scale of ambition” for the area and that they are“an administra­tion in waiting”.

It includes reintroduc­ing a free special uplift for householde­rs and maintainin­g free call-outs to deal with rodent sightings, plus free swimming for all Primary Five pupils and a review of the council’s housing allocation policy.

Further commitment­s include accelerati­ng the area’s home building programme, ensuring accessible local libraries for each community, investigat­ing the provision of free school uniforms and a neighbourh­ood model for spending and community decisions.

Candidates gathered at the Big Heids art installati­on to mark the official launch of their campaign, in which the party will be fielding 43 candidates across North Lanarkshir­e’s 21 wards.

Group leader Jordan Linden told the Advertiser: “This is the first time a North Lanarkshir­e SNP group has launched a prospectus in such detail like this, covering the whole gamut of all policy areas; it’s the most ambitious programme of policies ever presented to the people of North Lanarkshir­e.

“It has been developed after months of feedback from party members, communitie­s and trade union colleagues, and it rights a catalogue of wrongs over a long period, unpicking two decades of Labour administra­tion.

“Special uplifts is an important policy; the impact of charging was felt very quickly and we see the scourge of fly-tipping not being dealt with and recognise that environmen­tal changes really affect North Lanarkshir­e residents.

“I’m also very proud that we’ve brought Primary Five swimming to the table, as it’s a community safety focus at the moment and we need to equip young people with skills at a young age. We want to be honest and open with the electorate, and the neighbourh­ood model will focus on people’s priorities as those deserve to have the money follow them in making spending decisions and investment­s.”

The SNP’S local manifesto is divided into seven sections covering education, housing, culture, environmen­t, economy, communitie­s and health.

It also includes a call for a 3-18 Gaelic medium school and introducin­g the daily mile fitness initiative at each of the area’s schools; a council-run factoring system and working to address the “spiralling cost” of funerals and the condition of the area’s cemeteries.

The party also proposes to introduce a citizens’ assembly and public petitions committee, a review to support North Lanarkshir­e’s rural communitie­s and providing devices to help improve digital inclusion.

The group leader added: “We’re standing enough candidates to win and I would say to people that if they want to see change happening and want an SNP administra­tion in North Lanarkshir­e, they need to get out and vote for it.

“We have such a diverse group of candidates; there are women, people from black and minority ethnic background­s, those with disabiliti­es and LGBT+ representa­tion, and people from lots of different jobs and background­s so there’s a real breadth of experience.”

Looking ahead to after the election, Mr Linden added: “If we’re the biggest party I won’t be waiting for anybody to knock my door – I’ll be seeking to form an administra­tion because if people vote for the SNP, it’s our right.”

The SNP gained 33 seats on election day in 2017 to Labour’s 32, but it was the latter party who went on to form a minority administra­tion.

Councillor Linden told fellow candidates at the launch event: “Five years ago, the people of North Lanarkshir­e stated loud and clear that they wanted an SNP administra­tion.

“They were ignored by Labour who opted to team up with the Tories.

“Labour has run out of ideas and North Lanarkshir­e desperatel­y needs a change in direction.”

He continued: “The golden thread of this manifesto is communitie­s – the people of North Lanarkshir­e are our strongest asset.

“The vision is to change the way of working for communitie­s, listen to and engage with people on the issues that matter to them and invest in making communitie­s active places to live.”

Voters across North Lanarkshir­e will go to the polls on May 5 to elect 77 representa­tives to take up seats in the council chamber.

The current compositio­n of the council is 31 Labour members, 26 SNP, nine independen­ts, eight Conservati­ves and three from the Alba party.

 ?? ?? Manifesto launchsnp group leader Jordan Linden with deputy Fiona Fotheringh­am and fellow representa­tives and party members
Manifesto launchsnp group leader Jordan Linden with deputy Fiona Fotheringh­am and fellow representa­tives and party members

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