The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Poll shows Tory slump as Labour move ahead

- DEREK HEALEY

The Scottish Tories could slip into third place behind Labour for the first time in six years at next week’s Scottish local elections, according to the latest poll.

Partygate and a succession of scandals at Westminste­r appear to be sticking in voters’ minds as they prepare to head to the ballot box on Thursday.

The latest tracker survey from polling company Panelbase found the SNP are on course for a comfortabl­e victory on May 5.

But there could be further troubles ahead for Scottish Conservati­ve leader Douglas Ross if Labour surge ahead as predicted and leapfrog his party into second place.

Council elections can be tricky for parties in government but the Panelbase poll puts the SNP on 42% when undecided voters are excluded.

That figure would be a significan­t jump from the 32% the party recorded at the last local elections in 2017.

But it also represents a six-point drop for the SNP since the company polled last November.

Meanwhile, Anas Sarwar’s Scottish Labour are predicted to finish on 24% this time around, with the Conservati­ves languishin­g at 21%.

The Lib Dems were fourth on 7% and others are predicted to attract 5% of the votes.

The survey of 1,009 voters in Scotland was conducted last week before the SNP government’s 15th anniversar­y in power.

John Curtice, professor of politics at Strathclyd­e University and TV psephology pundit, said the polls confirm the impression that the Tories will struggle to defend the high water mark they achieved last time around.

He told the Sunday Times: “Such an outcome would only exacerbate the political fragmentat­ion and division on the pro-Union side of Scotland’s constituti­onal debate.”

However, he added it is “far from certain that the SNP will be able to improve significan­tly on what proved to be no more than a modest performanc­e in 2017, and thereby add further impetus to its attempt to hold another independen­ce referendum”.

Douglas Ross will hope to focus minds on bins, potholes and council tax as the Conservati­ves enter the final days before the local elections with a new scandal adding to partygate.

Conservati­ve MP Neil Parish announced his resignatio­n on Saturday as he admitted twice watching pornograph­y in the House of Commons.

The fresh embarrassm­ent comes as activists canvas for votes for a Tory party led by a prime minister who was fined by police for breaching his own laws to prevent Covid spreading.

Boris Johnson will be hoping voters prioritise his perceived successes, such as the vaccine rollout and Brexit, rather than the lockdown breaches, tax hikes, runaway inflation, rising mortgage costs and the energy bills crisis.

In a statement the prime minister said: “The elections next Thursday matter.

“People are voting for councillor­s and councils who decide how often bins are collected, how many potholes are repaired and how much council tax is paid.

“And I have to tell you that it’s hardworkin­g Conservati­ve councillor­s and councils across the country who deliver better local services while managing taxpayers’ money wisely.”

It is far from certain the SNP can improve much on a modest performanc­e in 2017

 ?? ?? LOSS LEADERS: Scottish Conservati­ve leader Douglas Ross, left, could find the antics of his English colleagues push the Scottish Tories into third.
LOSS LEADERS: Scottish Conservati­ve leader Douglas Ross, left, could find the antics of his English colleagues push the Scottish Tories into third.

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