Daily Mail

Scottish Labour leader refuses to rule out deal with Nationalis­ts

- By Tamara Cohen Political Correspond­ent

LABOUR’S leader in Scotland refused six times to rule out a post- election deal with the SNP in a bruising TV interview yesterday.

The BBC’s Andrew Neil asked Jim Murphy repeatedly whether he would renounce a so- called ‘confidence and supply’ arrangemen­t with the nationalis­ts.

Both sides have made clear that there will not be a formal coalition with the SNP holding ministeria­l posts – but neither have ruled out a looser agreement, with the nationalis­ts supporting Labour in certain votes.

Mr Murphy insisted he would ‘not get into further detail of a post-match analysis of a contest that hasn’t yet taken place’.

He said: ‘We are in this contest to win, not for a near draw.’ Asked again if he would rule out a deal with the nationalis­ts, he said: ‘If we are the biggest party we will put our positions on the minimum wage, the living wage and much else besides, if the SNP vote for it, that’s nice.

‘If they vote against it that is their mistake because if we cannot get a majority in the House of Commons ... the SNP would be responsibl­e for bringing down a Labour government.’

He went on: ‘We are trying to win an election, we are trying to win the majority, we cannot do that when the whole debate is about what happens after the election.

‘ Let’s talk about public spending, how we make the UK stronger at home, how we eradicate poverty. Let’s have those big discussion­s, then let’s debate after the election what happens after the election.’

Mr Murphy, the MP for East Renfrewshi­re, has been leader of the Labour Party in Scotland for just four months. He took over in the shadow of the independen­ce referendum in which Labour’s performanc­e took a battering and its former Scottish leader, Johann Lamont, was forced to resign.

Mr Murphy is highly regarded in the party and has tried to run a unity campaign based on tackling poverty and inequality.

But he is grappling with polls suggesting Labour – which won 41 out of Scotland’s 59 seats in 2010 – could lose almost all of its MPs north of the border in May.

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