The Scotsman

Susan Dalgety

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History happened last week, and almost noone noticed. As the Tories celebrated their glorious victory, despite their leader’s shambolic campaign, and Labour erupted, predictabl­y, into internecin­e warfare, something wonderful emerged from the chaos of the 2019 general election.

Her Majesty’s Most Loyal Opposition, is now, for the first time ever, predominan­tly female.

More than half, 104 out of 202, of Labour MPS are women. The People’s Party – and I don’t mean Boris’s pale blue imitation – finally reflects the population it purports to serve. The British population is 51 per cent female, and so too is the official opposition.

It is a significan­t breakthrou­gh in the campaign to win gender balance in our politics, and is a testament to not only Labour, but to organisati­ons such as 50:50 Parliament and its Scottish sister, 50:50 Women, who campaign for equality in our parliament­s and councils.

While the women of Labour did well last week, we still have a long way to go before we match Finland. In 1907, its parliament became the first in the world to adopt full gender equality when all women were given the right to vote and stand for office.

And this small country of five million people and 22 billion trees made history again recently. Their new Prime Minister is a 34-yearold woman, Sanna Marin, and she is joined in coalition government by four other parties, each led by a woman.

Ms Marin faces a stormy tenure. Like many other countries in Europe, populist nationalis­m is on the march in Finland, with the True Finns party now standing at 25 per cent and rising in the polls, but the new PM is made of strong stuff.

She was the first in her family to finish high school, then go to university. She was leader of Tampere City Council when she was only 27 years old, and elected to parliament in 2015.

Since then she has given birth to a daughter, held down a senior post as transport minister and helped her party, the social democratic SDP, win the 2017 election. And now she is the world’s youngest prime minister, and Finland’s third woman in the post.

In the UK, Labour – the party built on equality – has never had a woman leader, save for a few weeks when Margaret Beckett and Harriet Harman were temporaril­y in charge. But this should be about to change.

The party is in the early stages of a leadership election to replace the hapless Jeremy Corbyn. It is probably the worst job in European politics, as the new leader will have to contend, not only with a triumphant Boris Johnson and his 80-seat majority, but with rebuilding a shattered party. It is a task of heroic proportion­s.

Her biggest challenge is not Prime Minister’s Question Time, but wresting back control of the party from ultra-lefties such as union boss Len Mccluskey and Jon Lansman, leader of the Momentum cult, sorry, I mean grassroots movement.

Note I wrote ‘her’, because the new leader has to be a woman. Not even the Labour Party, in its current confused state, could contemplat­e electing a man to lead an official opposition that is predominan­tly female.

Not that there are many men to choose from at the moment. Labour’s Brexit spokespers­on, Keir Starmer, looks as if he spends at least an hour every morning styling his quiff, but, nice hairdo apart, he doesn’t have what it takes to restore the party as an electoral force.

Apparently former BBC man Clive Lewis has thrown his hat into the ring, saying that the reason Labour lost so badly in its heartlands, such as Scotland and the north of England, is because it had not distanced itself enough from the glory days of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. The reason he is standing is for a chance “to tell the truth”, he said, somewhat confusingl­y as Blair won three elections in a row.

So, who should it be? Not Emily Thornberry, the Islington lawyer, who, in a desperate attempt to prove her working-class roots, once revealed her family had to put down their cats as they couldn’t afford to feed them.

Nor Rebecca Long-bailey, another lawyer. She has been anointed as Corbyn’s successor by Jeremy himself, but she represents the faction that has just led the Labour Party to its worst defeat since 1935. So that should rule her out.

Which leaves Yvette Cooper and Lisa Nandy. In normal times, Ms Cooper, who is diligent, thoughtful and has had senior government experience, would be in with a shout. But these are not normal times.

Lisa Nandy is also diligent and thoughtful. But she doesn’t have the force of personalit­y required to wrest Labour back from the clutches of the hard left, while at the same time showing the chutzpah to face down Boris Johnson in Westminste­r.

Jess Phillips does. The Birmingham MP has her weaknesses. She has never held a senior frontbench position, either in government or opposition.

She sometimes gets carried away with the strength of her own personalit­y, revelling, perhaps too much, in her celebrity MP status. But leading a political party, especially one in a critical condition, is not for the shy or retiring.

And her directness often gets her into trouble. At least with the militant wing of the Labour Party, whose Twitter rants against her are as odious as they are predictabl­e.

Like Finland’s new Prime Minister, Jess Phillips would be a risky choice. But now is the time for taking risks.

Politics has changed, perhaps forever. Big personalit­ies matter as much as good policies. The electorate want a leader they can connect with over pint or a coffee. Not some

 ??  ?? 0 Jess Phillips, MP for Birmingham Yardley, outside Parliament in September as
0 Jess Phillips, MP for Birmingham Yardley, outside Parliament in September as

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