SPECULATION over the departure of Kezia Dugdale, the leader of the Scottish Labour Party is rife throughout the British media. Some are suggesting that she jumped before she was pushed, having previously criticised Jeremy Corbyn. Others suggest it is for personal reasons, which is what she says in her long letter of resignation.
Meanwhile,Harriet Harman has already called on Jeremy Corbyn to appoint a female
replacement for Kezia Dugdale amid claims the Labour leader has a
problem with women.
There are other difficulties and constitutionally the Scottish Labour party is
registered with the Electoral Commission as an Accounting Unit (AU) of
the UK Labour party, and is therefore not a registered political party
under the terms of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act
2000.
Consequently when Johann Lamont resigned as the Scottish Labour Party leader after the referendum in 2014, she angrily suggested that London persisted in treating Scotland 'like a branch office'.
'Scottish Labour membership has increased in the Corbyn period, but not
by the phenomenal degree it has elsewhere in the UK. The scope for a
Momentum-style surge in Scotland is limited. The left is a crowded
marketplace in Scotland, with competition from the SNP but also the
wider yes movement, including the Radical Independence Campaign, to say nothing of a Scottish Green party that can claim more MSPs than the Lib Dems.'
Only last weekend the Sunday Herald newspaper in Scotland devoted two pages last weekend to speculating that Momentum were keen to get rid of Dugdale,
along with Brian Roy, the Scottish party secretary, and, indeed, Iain
McNicol, the UK general secretary – to make way for Corbyn’s true
believers. The Herald quoted extensively from the upcoming edition of
the Scottish Left Review, which backs the UK leader and seems to think elements of Scottish Labour are holding back the red Corbyn tide.
In a recent issue of the Scottish Left Review (issue 100) Carolyn Leckie in an article titled 'INDEPENDENCE IS STILL A GAME CHANGER' has written:
'In 2017, radical and progressive ideas are more popular in Scotland
than for many decades. Yet the left is more diffuse and fragmented than
ever before. There are radical leftists in the Scottish Green Party,
RISE, the SSP, the Labour Party, the Communist Party and in groups like
Common Weal and Women for Independence. And, there are more socialists
in and around the SNP than in all of these organisations combined.'
While there is voter fatigue in Scotland it seems the independence debate informs almost every aspect of
Scottish political elections.
Wednesday, 30 August 2017
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