The Herald on Sunday

Four candidates now declared in race to be SNP deputy leader

SCOTTISH POLITICAL EDITOR

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BY TOM GORDON

THE number of candidates vying to be Nicola Sturgeon’s SNP deputy has risen to four, with MEP Alyn Smith and Edinburgh East MP Tommy Sheppard the latest to throw their hats into the ring. Sheppard is standing on a platform of campaignin­g for a second referendum and internal reform, while Smith, who received a standing ovation in Brussels last month for a passionate defence of Scotland’s place in Europe, is to focus on building relationsh­ips overseas.

News of Smith’s intentions leaked mid-week, but last night he confirmed he would launch his campaign in Edinburgh on Thursday.

He will unveil a website, alyn4deput­e.eu, and a crowdsourc­ing drive to secure the 100 signatures needed from 20 SNP branches to qualify.

Inverclyde councillor Chris McEleny and SNP Westminste­r leader Angus Robertson have already announced bids to replace MP Stewart Hosie as SNP depute leader in October.

Robertson has also made Brexit and Europe a key focus, while McEleny has highlighte­d the importance of local government.

Hosie quit in May after it emerged he was having an affair with freelance journalist Serena Cowdy, who was previously in a relationsh­ip with SNP MP Angus MacNeil.

Smith, 42, said his pitch to the SNP’s 116,000 voters would focus on strengthen­ing Scotland’s ties with Europe in the wake of the Brexit vote.

A member of Sturgeon’s Standing Council on Europe, Smith told the Sunday Herald: “We need to do Europe in Europe.

“We need to reach out to Brussels and the main state capitals and prepare.

“We also need to cohere a new Yes movement around the SNP.”

Writing on his blog this weekend, Sheppard, 57, said the SNP had to shake up the way it ran its internal affairs if it was to win the next independen­ce referendum.

He said recent electoral success had been “made easy” by weak opponents, and future challenges “including indyref2 when it comes” would be a “far tougher test”.

To achieve independen­ce “our party needs to be even better at everything it does”, he wrote.

He said he wanted “much more political discussion” within the party, and a rethink on policy-making to involve “as many members as possible”.

The SNP’s policy-making is notoriousl­y closed and centralise­d, with the leadership writing the manifesto with negligible input from grass roots.

Sheppard, a former Labour councillor and official who only joined the SNP in 2014, tried to make a virtue of his shallow roots in the party by saying he was “fairly typical” of many of its new members and could bring “a new perspectiv­e to our leadership team”.

In a fresh developmen­t last night, Sheppard tried to head off accusation­s of a party split by insisting he was not trying to topple Robertson as SNP Westminste­r leader.

In a leaked letter to his fellow SNP MPs, he said his candidacy was “in no way a challenge to his leadership of our group here at Westminste­r which has been exemplary”.

Sheppard, founder of the Stand comedy clubs, went on: “Our group leader is part of the leadership team and he has my full support.”

His letter also said he wanted to get the SNP “ready to lead the Yes campaign and win independen­ce for our country”.

At the last deputy leadership contest, in 2014, Hosie saw off challenges from MSPs Keith Brown and Angela Constance.

The all-male line-up this time is awkward for Sturgeon, who has a gender-balanced Cabinet.

However, Ochil and South Perthshire MP Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh may yet enter the contest.

Nomination­s are due to close on Friday, August 5 and the winner will be announced at the SNP conference in October.

 ??  ?? Alyn Smith MEP confirmed he will launch his campaign for the SNP deputy leadership on Thursday
Alyn Smith MEP confirmed he will launch his campaign for the SNP deputy leadership on Thursday

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