The Herald on Sunday

Scottish Tories ‘aim to double’ tally of MPs at Westminste­r

- By David Bol

THE Scottish Conservati­ves are hoping to double their Westminste­r seats at next year’s General Election – as the party pushes a message that the SNP government has left communitie­s behind.

Douglas Ross’s party go into the crunch election, set to take place before the end of the next year, lagging in the polls behind the SNP and Labour, who are neck and neck.

But with the seats the Conservati­ves are hoping to be competitiv­e in north of the Border pitting them against the SNP, the party is once again playing the constituti­on card to woo voters.

The chairman of the Scottish Conservati­ves, Craig Hoy, told The Herald on Sunday that the party is “cautiously optimistic” about its changes at the ballot box next year, ahead of this week’s UK party conference in Manchester.

Mr Hoy suggested that his party is hoping to double the tally of six Westminste­r seats with potential targets including Angus, Ayr and Ayrshire, and in Perthshire. He said that “it is quite clear we’ve got an opportunit­y next year”, adding “that’s giving us some optimism even at a point in time when the party UK-wide has obviously got some challenges”.

He said: “Obviously there’s six seats that we hold, they are fought on new boundaries that brings in potentiall­y another couple of seats, that notionally are very much in play.

“We wouldn’t pick a number, in terms of a measure of success, but there are in or around a dozen seats in Scotland where we are, I think, very much in contention. We’ve selected the candidates for those seats and campaigns have begun. It’s not just in rural areas, it’s in areas like Ayr and Ayrshire, for example, where people have been left behind and have been forgotten.”

Despite the SNP’s plans for independen­ce seemingly hitting a road block, Mr Hoy has insisted that the Union is still under attack.

Mr Hoy added: “I wouldn’t say that the SNP’s strategy is dead in the water, it’s just more extreme than Alex Salmond or Nicola Sturgeon would have pursued.

“I think you can argue that that’s because the First Minister is delusional. I don’t think it is. I think it’s because he’s pursuing a dangerous course of action at the next election, which is to turn it into a proxy independen­ce referendum.

“All other avenues are closed because the public didn’t want another independen­ce referendum.

“They care only about independen­ce and the constituti­on because that’s their only priority. For once, they’ve actually been really honest about what the election is going to be about.

“The next election is a proxy independen­ce referendum and as a result of that, we will be pointing that out in seats up and down the country.”

The Tory chief also insisted that the party’s MSPs are completely behind Mr Ross’s leadership, while he suggested that no action will be taken against Conservati­ve MSP Maurice Golden who voted against the party at Holyrood last week over climate action.

‘Frustratio­n’

MR Hoy told The Herald on Sunday that when Liz Truss’s Conservati­ve premiershi­p was falling to bits, “there was a lot of frustratio­n” within the party, “including in Scotland about what was happening with the leadership down south”.

But he insisted: “Under Douglas, there’s a clear sense of what we need to focus on as people’s real priorities.”

Asked whether Mr Golden will face punishment for breaking the Tory whip by voting against the party in a debate about climate action and the Prime Minister’s reversal over net zero, Mr Hoy suggested he will escape punishment.

Mr Hoy said: “There’s a debate to be had in all political parties about how far and how fast we go towards net zero.

“What is crystal clear and where Maurice is absolutely on the same page as the rest of us, is there used to be a consensus in Scottish politics, that oil and gas is part of our journey towards net zero. And we’re the only party now that still accepts that and we are on the side, I think of, of reality.”

Mr Hoy stressed that “one of our distinct offerings coming up at the next election” will be to set out a net-zero strategy “in a way that takes the country with us”.

Pressed again whether Mr Golden will face punishment for breaking the whip, Mr Hoy said: “I think Maurice really is quite clear in relation to environmen­tal considerat­ions.

“I compare and contrast that with Fergus Ewing who is at odds with his party on almost every fundamenta­l issue, be it dualling of roads, be it on the oil and gas sector, be it on the deposit return scheme.”

It is understood that nobody from the party has spoken to Mr Golden after he voted against a Conservati­ve motion, but he has pulled out of a series of environmen­tal events at this week’s party conference in Manchester in an apparent bid to keep a low profile.

Mr Hoy said the economy and the priorities the party set out in an economic paper over the summer will form key pledges going into the election.

He said: “I think what you’ll see as the election approaches, and Douglas will probably preview some of this at the weekend, we set out recently the Grasping the Thistle paper on the Scottish economy.”

Although the Scottish Conservati­ves are the official opposition at Holyrood with the second-largest number of MSPs, a perception persists that Labour, which is flying high in the polls, is matching up better to Mr Yousaf’s government.

But Mr Hoy has stressed that Anas Sarwar’s party are frequently supportive of SNP policies. He said Labour as the most effective opposition is a “bubble issue”, rather than being the view of the public.

Mr Hoy added: “When you talk about Labour being in opposition to the SNP, when you look at the voting record view in the Scottish Parliament, rather than standing up to the SNP they are standing with the SNP.”

 ?? Image: PA ?? Scottish Conservati­ve chairman Craig Hoy is feeling confident regarding his party’s prospects
Image: PA Scottish Conservati­ve chairman Craig Hoy is feeling confident regarding his party’s prospects

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