The Scotsman

Labour seeks gender balance in 2016 candidates to shatter glass ceiling

- SCOTT MACNAB SCOTT MACNAB

THE Labour leadership contest has been plunged into chaos after frontrunne­r Andy Burnham’s campaign warned many “infiltrato­rs” - including Tories are planning to vote.

There are now warnings the result could be open to legal challenge as left-wing candidate Jeremy Corbyn seems increasing­ly likely to pull off a shock victory. Some of his supporters also claim they are being banned from taking part.

The party’s acting leader Harriet Harman launched a staunch defence of the new voting system which allows “supporters” to join up for £3 and vote. Hundreds of ballots have already been cancelled and Ms Harman insisted that any infiltrato­rs will be “weeded out.”

The contest between Mr Corbyn and Mr Burnham, along with Liz Kendall and Yvette Cooper, runs until September 10, but voting has begun.

A letter calling for an urgent meeting to discuss fears that “several thousand” Conservati­ves and others have signed up for a vote has been sent by Mr Burnham’s campaign chief Michael Dugher.

It has been marred by claims of “entryism” by political opponents paying £3 to become registered Labour supporters under new party rules - giving them a vote in the poll.

More than 120,000 people have signed up, along with 189,000-plus members of unions and other affiliates, swelling the electorate to more than 600,000.

The party has begun blocking people it does not believe support the aims of the party.

In a letter to Labour general secretary Iain Mcnichol, Mr Dugher said more can be done by to weed out Tories and other “rogue voters.”

Mr Dugher said the party was “allowing the issue to drift, and potentiall­y leaving insufficie­nt time for the party to act”.

“We are also concerned

that given the party’s limited resources and the effort required to investigat­e applicants, this could result in the integrity of the contest being called into question, and the outcome subject to legal challenge,” he said.

Ms Harman yesterday insisted that the party has a “rigorous” verificati­on process which will withstand any legal challenge, but agreed to a meeting with the candidates on the issue.

She added: “We have acted constantly on legal advice, we have taken legal advice every step of the way and I’m absolutely certain that no court would decide that we had done anything other than apply the rules in a rigorous, robust, fair and even-handed way.”

She added: “People who do support the Labour party will be eligible for a vote and get their vote.

“We have a very rigorous process both to make sure that those people who are entitled to vote under this new system do get a vote, but also that those people who should not be eligible for a vote, because they don’t support the Labour party or they support another party, don’t get a vote. We’re dealing with that at national level, at regional level and at local level.”

Local constituen­cy parties and MPS are even being given the names of people who have applied and asked to identify any who have stood against the Labour or campaigned against the party.

Ms Harman added: “This process is gong to continue right up until September 10.

“And even if somebody has cheated their way into the system, somebody who doesn’t support the Labour party, but has neverthele­ss got a ballot and been able to vote, their vote will be discounted when our verificati­on process comes across evidence that they do not support the Labour party – their vote will be cancelled.”

Labour has also been accused of seeking to “rig” its leadership election by wrongly barring leftwing supporters of Jeremy Corbyn from taking part.

Comedian Jeremy Hardy is among those who have fallen victim to a vetting campaign to weed out voters deemed not to support the party.

Mr Corbyn has said that if significan­t numbers are banned “unfairly” then the decision to reject them “must be looked at again and challenged”.

“It is rigging the election to stop Corbyn,” Mr Hardy said yesterday.

The comedian was a party member in the past but publicly backed the Green Party in May’s general election. AT least half of Scottish Labour’s new candidates for next year’s Holyrood election will be women, the party’s leader has said.

Kezia Dugdale has vowed to seek out new talent to stand in the 2016 vote, pledging that at least 50 per cent will be female.

The move is aimed at bringing a better gender balance to the Scottish Parliament and helping to “shatter the glass ceiling for women in Scotland”.

Ms Dugdale has already announced a gender-balanced front bench team for Scottish Labour, mirroring First Minister Nicola Sturgeon’s equal gender split in the Scottish Cabinet.

The parties are under pressure to address gender

“We have acted constantly on legal advice” Harriet Harman

balance next year after the proportion of female MSPS elected to Holyrood fell to just over a third in the 2011 elections.

Women also made up less than 30 per cent of the candidates at that election.

They remained underrepre­sented during the general election in May, with females making up less than a third of candidates for the Scottish seats at Westminste­r.

Ms Dugdale said: “We have female leaders of the three main political parties in Scotland. That’s something to shout about. But we can never make the mistake of thinking that it’s job done on equality for women in Scotland.

“I want to attract new talent and fresh faces to Scottish Labour for next year’s election. My commitment today is that at least half of Scottish Labour’s new candidates will be women. There is so much to do to shatter the glass ceiling for women in Scotland.”

It came as the new leader handed a key role to Neil Findlay - Jeremy Corbyn’s campaign organiser in Scotland - in her front bench team. Mr Findlay has been appointed as trade union liaison.

Rhoda Grant and Drew Smith also join the team while Iain Gray, the party’s opportunit­y spokesman, will be supported by Mark Griffin and John Pentland.

Elaine Murray joins Graeme Pearson on the justice brief while Jackie Baillie, public services spokeswoma­n, is supported by Richard Simpson, Lewis Macdonald and Siobhan Mcmahon.

 ??  ?? Jeremy Corbyn said that a Labour apology for the Iraq war was long overdue. He also signalled he would
Jeremy Corbyn said that a Labour apology for the Iraq war was long overdue. He also signalled he would
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 ??  ?? Jeremy Hardy has fallen foul of the vetting procedure
Jeremy Hardy has fallen foul of the vetting procedure
 ??  ?? Harriet Harman defended the new voting system
Harriet Harman defended the new voting system

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