Date decided for Scottish Labour to announce new leader

The party's new leader will be announced on November 18

Published 9th Sep 2017

Scottish Labour's new leader will be announced on November 18, the party's executive committee has announced.

Committee members met in Stirling to decide the next step in appointing a successor to Kezia Dugdale, who resigned last week.

Following the meeting, the party announced the deadline to sign up to take part in the vote will be October 9.

Party members, affiliated supporters and registered supporters who join before that date will be eligible to vote, with membership fees ranging from £3 to £48 a year.

Two MSPs are currently in the running for the job - former trade union organiser Richard Leonard who was elected to Holyrood in 2016, and the party's health spokesman and former deputy leader Anas Sarwar.

Nominations will close on September 17 and the contest will then run for two months, with the vote on November 17.

Eight regional hustings will be held, as well as a Women's and a Young Persons' hustings.

Interim Scottish Labour leader Alex Rowley, who has ruled himself out of the race, said: ā€œToday the executive of the Scottish Labour party has agreed a process for a leadership election.

ā€œLabour is on the up in Scotland. This week we won two by-elections in parts of Scotland the SNP thought were safe for years.ā€

He said the party has ā€œbegun to regain the trust of the Scottish peopleā€, adding: ā€œOur next leader will have a great platform to build on, taking us towards the 2021 election where we have a real chance of forming a government.ā€

Ms Dugdale is the third Scottish Labour leader to have resigned since the 2014 independence referendum, with predecessors Johann Lamont and Jim Murphy both having stood down.

She led the party for two years, taking over in the wake of the near Labour wipeout at the 2015 general election when the party lost all but one of its MPs.

Mr Leonard is seen as the left-wing candidate to replace her in contrast to his more centrist rival.

Both leadership hopefuls have praised the UK party leader Jeremy Corbyn, despite Mr Sarwar backing his challenger in the last UK leadership election.

Mr Sarwar said he will ā€œuniteā€ the party in Scotland, while Mr Leonard said he offers ā€œreal changeā€.

Mr Sarwar secured the backing of almost half of Scottish Labour's parliamentarians within a day of him announcing he would stand, who said his campaign would be ā€œconducted in a comradely spiritā€.

Meanwhile the Campaign for Socialism, the left-leaning group in Scottish Labour, has announced it is backing Mr Leonard's leadership campaign, citing a crucial element as his ā€œvocal supportā€ of Mr Corbyn for UK party leader.

In a statement, CfS said it viewed Mr Leonard as ā€œnot just the most credible leader of Scottish Labour, but Labour's most credible candidate to become First Minsterā€.

The statement continued: ā€œWe need a Scottish Labour leader who is not tied to the mistakes of the past, but is able to take us forward and build on the successes that Corbyn and the UK party has seen over recent months. Richard Leonard will be that candidate."