Kezia Dugdale insists 'fight left there' in Labour Party

Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale has insisted there is still fight left in the party for the General Election campaign despite "disappointing" council results.

Scottish Labour Leader Kezia Dugdale during a tv interview in Edinburgh.
Published 8th May 2017

Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale has insisted there is still fight left in the party for the General Election campaign despite "disappointing" council results.

Ms Dugdale made the comments as the party launched its election campaign in Rutherglen, South Lanarkshire.

She remained upbeat despite Labour's showing in the council elections, where they slumped to become the third biggest party in Scotland's town halls.

She said: "I think you need to put the results in a bit of context because if you were looking at papers two weeks ago you were looking at polls which showed Labour on 13%, 14%, 15%.

"The commentariat were predicting we would lose every single one of our councils and we would lose half of our councillors.

"The results show today we are into the 20% territory, we became top of the table in three councils, we shared position in a fourth and came second by one seat in two councils on top of that.

"Of course, it was a disappointing set of results, I'm always going to be disappointed by results which show Labour not winning. But there's fight left there."

She said a vote for Labour would be a vote against another referendum.

She added: "A vote for Labour at this election will send Nicola Sturgeon a message that Scotland doesn't want another divisive independence referendum.

"Only Labour is focused on the day job of delivering an economy that works for working people, creating jobs and protecting high-quality public services.

"For many Scots the shine is coming off the SNP as they realise it only has one answer for everything - a referendum on independence.

"Scotland's moderate majority doesn't have to vote for the Tories and endorse the rape clause and the bedroom tax to stop a second referendum.

"A vote for the Tories won't send Nicola Sturgeon a message - it will just send Theresa May back to Downing Street.

"At this election, people shouldn't take the risk of voting SNP. In 2015, Labour warned that a vote for the SNP would help the Tories back into number ten.

"That's exactly what happened and now we have the chaos of Brexit and the threat of a second independence referendum.

"The only way that people across Scotland can reject this Tory government and reject the threat of a divisive second independence referendum is to vote Labour on June 8."

The event, at which Ms Dugdale was joined by Anas Sarwar, James Kelly and Monica Lennon, was also attended by about 40 activists.