Anderson@Aberdeen
  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Briefly...
  • Random Thoughts

Ramblings & Ruminations

thinking out loud

Wake up, Kezia. Neither Corbyn nor Smith can save Scottish Labour.

22/8/2016

2 Comments

 
So, Owen “I’m just like Jezza, only I’m not” Smith is chuffed that Kezia Dugdale is backing his bid for the Labour Party leadership. And so he should be. Kezia after all, is Labour’s most senior female politician, a leader who has led her branch office to dizzying heights of political desolation. Ms Dugdale so inspired Scottish voters with her vast array of five stock answers (regardless of the question), that they abandoned Scottish Labour in their droves. Ms Dugdale’s stewardship has seen Scottish Labour cede their position as the second largest party at Holyrood to the Ruth Davidson Appreciation Society, losing 13 MSP’s along the way.

Apparently, Ms Dugdale doesn’t think that Jeremy Corbyn can unite the party, that may be so, but if he wins again, it will be for the mutineers to fall into line, lest the party implode altogether. Nor it seems, does Ms Dugdale believe that Mr Corbyn can lead Labour into government. She may be right, but having been elected by such an overwhelming majority of party members last year, surely he deserved the chance to try at the next general election. After all, Ms Dugdale failed (all the sign were that she would fail, and then some) to lead Scottish Labour into government in this year’s Scottish election, yet she remains in position.


It is utterly bizarre that Ms Dugdale, who has thus far proven inept, ineffectual and insubstantial as Labour’s standard bearer in Scotland, feels she is in a position to call Mr Corbyn’s leadership into question. Surely she would do better to focus her efforts in putting her own house in order. Perhaps she blames Mr Corbyn for Scottish Labour’s diminished status at Holyrood, just as her production line politician colleagues at Westminster hold him solely responsible for Brexit. Of course, Farage, Gove and Johnson- The Three Brexiteers, had nothing to do with it. 


Kezia Dugdale has said that "We can’t pin our hopes on a leadership who speak only to the converted, rather than speaking to the country as a whole”, and she is right, but under her leadership, Scottish Labour isn’t even speaking to the converted, far less Scotland as a whole. Ms Dugdale also said that “Owen understands that to have a chance of implementing Labour values, we need to win over some of those who didn’t vote for us at the last election.", as if that weren’t glaringly obvious.

If Kezia Dugdale seriously hopes to be First Minister after the next Scottish election, she will  have to win back all of those who abandoned Scottish Labour at the last election, as well as winning over all of those who deserted them in previous years.

It may well be, that whatever is needed for Labour to have any hope of a resurrection in Scotland, is quite different from that which is needed for the party to make progress in England. United Kingdom or not, Labour, like the Tories, can arguably be seen as an English party, incapable of accepting, never mind adapting to the ever evolving Scottish political landscape. Which brings us back to the possibility of Scottish Labour breaking away from ‘London Labour’. There would be nothing to hinder entirely independent Scottish and English Labour parties from forming a coalition at Westminster (other than the same sort of arrogant, narrow minded stupidity which has seen Jeremy Corbyn rule out cooperating with the SNP), should the Tories fall short when the time comes.


Sadly, there doesn’t appear to be the imagination, or radical spirit required to bring about an upturn in the fortunes of the Labour Party in Scotland. Ms Dugdale needs to realise that hoping for the mother-ship to provide a savior won’t be enough. Even if it were, Owen Smith almost certainly isn’t it.








2 Comments
George Gilchrist
22/8/2016 11:18:05 pm

Good article. I'm wondering, do Scottish Labour have enough members to support it financially to allow it to split from London labour?

Reply
Anonymous
26/8/2016 05:05:33 pm

Can they afford not to, might be the real question?

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Archives

    February 2018
    November 2017
    August 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Briefly...
  • Random Thoughts