Scottish Labour
Scottish Labour (Scottish Gaelic: Pàrtaidh Làbarach na h-Alba; officially the Scottish Labour Party) is a social democratic political party in Scotland. It is an autonomous section of the national Labour Party. Labour currently hold 23[4] of 129 seats in the Scottish Parliament and one[7] of 59 Scottish seats in the UK House of Commons.
Scottish Labour Pàrtaidh Làbarach na h-Alba | |
---|---|
Acting Leader | Jackie Baillie |
Deputy Leader | Jackie Baillie |
General Secretary | Drew Smith |
Founded | 1994[1] |
Headquarters | 290 Bath Street Glasgow G2 4RE |
Student wing | Scottish Labour Students |
Youth wing | Scottish Young Labour |
Membership | 16,467[2] |
Ideology | Social democracy[3] Democratic socialism British Unionism Pro-Europeanism |
Political position | Centre-left |
National affiliation | Labour Party (UK) |
European affiliation | Party of European Socialists |
International affiliation | Progressive Alliance, Socialist International (Observer) |
Colours | Red |
House of Commons (Scottish seats) | 1 / 59 |
Scottish Parliament[4] | 23 / 129 |
Local government in Scotland[5][6] | 241 / 1,227 |
Website | |
www | |
From the middle of the 20th century to the early 21st, Labour dominated politics in Scotland; winning the largest share of the vote in Scotland at every UK general election from 1964 to 2010, every European Parliament general election from 1979 to 2004 and in the first two general elections to the Scottish Parliament in 1999 and 2003. After these, Scottish Labour formed a coalition with the Scottish Liberal Democrats, forming a majority Scottish Executive. More recently, especially since the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, the party has suffered significant decline losing ground predominantly to the Scottish National Party (SNP).
In one of its worst defeats ever, at the 2015 general election, Scottish Labour won only one Westminster seat, Edinburgh South, and lost 40 of its 41 seats to the SNP. This was the first time the party had not dominated in Scotland since 1959.[8] In the 2016 Scottish Parliament election, the party lost 13 of its 37 seats, becoming the third-largest party after being surpassed by the Scottish Conservatives. At the 2017 general election, Scottish Labour gained six seats from the SNP, bringing its total seat tally to seven and winning 27% of votes. This was the first time since the 1918 general election, 99 years previously, that Labour had finished in third place at any general election in Scotland. At the 2019 general election, Labour again only held Edinburgh South.
Organisation
Scottish Labour is registered with the UK 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.
Scottish Executive Committee
Scottish Labour is administered by the Glasgow-based Scottish Executive Committee (SEC), which is responsible to the Labour Party's London-based National Executive Committee (NEC).
The Scottish Executive Committee is made up of representatives of party members, elected members and party affiliates, for example, trade unions and socialist societies.
Party Officers:[9]
- Chair: Cathy Peattie
- Vice Chair: Cara Hilton
- Treasurer: Ian Miller
Leader of the Scottish Labour Party
Until the Murphy and Boyack review in 2011, the position listed below was Leader of the Labour Party in the Scottish Parliament.
No. | Image | Name | Term start | Term end |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Donald Dewar | 7 May 1999 | 11 October 2000 | |
2 | Henry McLeish | 27 October 2000[10] | 8 November 2001 | |
Acting | Cathy Jamieson | 8 November 2001 | 22 November 2001 | |
3 | Jack McConnell | 22 November 2001 | 15 August 2007 | |
Acting | Cathy Jamieson | 15 August 2007 | 14 September 2007 | |
4 | Wendy Alexander | 14 September 2007 | 28 June 2008 | |
Acting | Cathy Jamieson | 28 June 2008 | 13 September 2008 | |
5 | Iain Gray | 13 September 2008 | 17 December 2011 | |
6 | Johann Lamont | 17 December 2011 | 24 October 2014 | |
Acting | Anas Sarwar | 24 October 2014 | 13 December 2014 | |
7 | Jim Murphy (as Leader of the Scottish Labour Party) |
13 December 2014 | 13 June 2015 | |
Kezia Dugdale (as Leader of the Labour Party in the Scottish Parliament) | ||||
Acting | Iain Gray | 13 June 2015 | 15 August 2015 | |
8 | Kezia Dugdale | 15 August 2015 | 29 August 2017 | |
Acting | Alex Rowley | 29 August 2017 | 15 November 2017 | |
Jackie Baillie | 15 November 2017 | 18 November 2017 | ||
9 | Richard Leonard | 18 November 2017 | 14 January 2021 | |
Acting | Jackie Baillie | 14 January 2021 | Incumbent | |
Deputy Leader of the Scottish Labour Party
No. | Image | Name | Term start | Term end |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Cathy Jamieson | 21 October 2000 | 28 June 2008 | |
2 | Johann Lamont | 13 September 2008 | 17 December 2011 | |
3 | Anas Sarwar | 17 December 2011 | 13 December 2014 | |
4 | Kezia Dugdale | 13 December 2014 | 13 June 2015 | |
5 | Alex Rowley | 15 August 2015 | 16 December 2017 | |
6 | Lesley Laird | 16 December 2017 | 16 December 2019 | |
7 | Jackie Baillie | 3 April 2020 | Incumbent | |
General Secretary of the Scottish Labour Party
As with Welsh Labour, Scottish Labour has its own general secretary which is the administrative head of the party, responsible for the day-to-day running of the organisation, and reports to the UK General Secretary of the Labour Party.
Headquarters
The Scottish Labour headquarters is currently at Bath Street, Glasgow. It was formerly co-located with the offices of Unite the Union at John Smith House, 145 West Regent Street.
Conference
The party holds an annual conference during February/March each year.
Membership
In 2008, Scottish Labour membership was reported as 17,000, down from a peak of approximately 30,000 in the run-up to the 1997 general election.[11] The figures included in the Annual Report presented to the Scottish Party Conference in 2008, also recorded that more than half of all Constituency Labour Parties (CLPs) had less than 300 members, with 14 having less than 200 members.[12]
In September 2010, the party issued 13,135 ballot papers to party members during the Labour Party (UK) leadership election. These did not necessarily equate to 13,135 individual members – due to the party's electoral structure, members can qualify for multiple votes.[13] The party has declined to reveal its membership figures since 2008, and did not publish the number of votes cast in the leadership elections of 2011 or 2014, only percentages.[14]
In November 2014 the party's membership was claimed by an unnamed source reported in the Sunday Herald to be 13,500.[15] Other recent reports in the media have quoted figures of "as low as 8,000" (the Evening Times)[16] and "less than 10,000" (New Statesman).[17] In December 2014 the newly elected leader Jim Murphy claimed that the figure was "about 20,000" on the TV programme Scotland Tonight.[18]
In late September 2015, following a membership boost resulting from the 2015 Labour leadership election, a total of 29,899 people were associated with the party; 18,824 members, 7,790 people affiliated through trade unions and other groups, and 3,285 registered supporters.[19]
In September 2017, it was reported that the Party had 21,500 members and 9,500 affiliated through trade unions and other groups, making a total of 31,000 people associated with the Party.[20]
In January 2018, the total Scottish membership stood at 25,836, however within 12 months it was leaked in January 2019 that this value had fallen by 4,674 to 21,162.[21]
In February 2021, the membership figure was down to 16,467.[2]
History
From the formation of the Labour Representation Committee in 1900, it had members in Scotland, but unlike in England and Wales, it made no pact with the Liberal Party and so initially struggled to make an impact.[22] In 1899, the Scottish Trades Union Congress organised the Scottish Workers' Representation Committee, which merged into the Labour Party in 1909, greatly increasing its presence in Scotland. By this time, the party's structure in the nation was complex, with constituency parties, and branches of affiliated parties, but no co-ordination at the national level. To provide this, a Scottish Advisory Council was founded in 1915, its first conference chaired by Keir Hardie.[23] This was later renamed as the Scottish Council of the Labour Party, then in 1994 as the "Scottish Labour Party".[22]
In the early years, the Scottish Council had little power, and its conference could only consider motions on Scottish matters until 1972. However, this allowed it to devote significant time to the question of Scottish devolution.[22] The Labour Party campaigned for the creation of a devolved Scottish Parliament as part of its wider policy of a devolved United Kingdom. In the late 1980s and 1990s it and its representatives participated in the Scottish Constitutional Convention with the Scottish Liberal Democrats, Scottish Green Party, trades unions and churches, and also campaigned for a "Yes-Yes" vote in the 1997 referendum.
1999–2007 coalition with Liberal Democrats
Donald Dewar led Labour's campaign for the first elections to the Scottish Parliament on 6 May 1999. Labour won the most votes and seats, with 56 seats out of 129, a clear distance ahead of the second-placed Scottish National Party (SNP). Labour also won 53 of the 73 constituency seats. Labour entered government by forming a coalition with the Scottish Liberal Democrats, with Dewar agreeing to their demand for the abolition of up-front tuition fees for university students as the price for a coalition deal. Dewar became the inaugural First Minister of Scotland.
Dewar died only a year later on 11 October 2000. A new first minister was elected in a ballot by Scottish Labour's MSPs and national executive members, because there was insufficient time to hold a full leadership election.[24] On 27 October, Henry McLeish was elected to succeed Dewar, defeating rival Jack McConnell. Labour's dominance of Scotland's Westminster seats continued in the 2001 general election, with a small loss of votes but no losses of seats.
McLeish resigned later that year amid a scandal involving allegations that he sub-let part of his tax-subsidised Westminster constituency office without it having been registered in the register of interests kept in the Parliamentary office. The press called the affair Officegate. Though McLeish could not have personally benefited financially from the oversight, he undertook to repay the £36,000 rental income, and resigned to allow the Scottish Labour Party a clean break to prepare for the 2003 Parliamentary elections. After McLeish's resignation, Jack McConnell quickly emerged as the only candidate, and was elected First Minister by the Parliament on 22 November 2001.
The coalition between Labour and the Liberal Democrats was narrowly re-elected at the 2003 Scottish Parliament election, with Labour losing 7 seats and the Liberal Democrats gaining 1. The SNP also lost seats, though other pro-independence parties made gains. Labour once again won the majority of seats in Scotland at the 2005 general election. The boundaries in Scotland were redrawn to reduce the number of Westminster constituencies in Scotland from 72 to 59. Labour had a notional loss of 5 seats and an actual loss of 15.
2007–2010: Opposition at Holyrood
At the start of the campaign for the 2007 Scottish Parliament election, Labour were behind the Scottish National Party (SNP) in most of the opinion polls. On 10 April, McConnell unveiled Scottish Labour's election manifesto, which included plans to scrap (?) bills for pensioners and reform Council Tax. The manifesto also proposed a large increase in public spending on education, which would allow for the school leaving age to be increased to 18 and reduce average class sizes to 19 pupils.
Labour lost 4 seats and fell narrowly behind the SNP, who won 47 seats to Labour's 46 seats. Labour still won the most constituencies, but the SNP made inroads. Both parties were well short of a majority in the parliament. SNP leader Alex Salmond was elected first minister with support from the Scottish Greens, defeating McConnell 49-46 while the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats abstained. Labour did take the most votes in the local elections on the same day but lost seats due to the introduction of proportional representation for local council elections. On 15 August 2007, McConnell announced his intention to resign as Scottish Labour leader. Wendy Alexander emerged as the only candidate to succeed him, and was installed as leader of the Labour group in the Scottish Parliament on 14 September 2007.
During a TV interview on 4 May 2008, Wendy Alexander performed a major U-turn on previous Scottish Labour Party's policy by seeming to endorse a referendum on Scottish independence, despite previously refusing to support any referendum on the grounds that she did not support independence. During a further TV interview on 6 May 2008 she reiterated this commitment to a referendum and claimed that she had the full backing of current British Prime Minister Gordon Brown. The following day, Gordon Brown denied this was Labour policy and that Wendy Alexander had been misrepresented during Prime Minister's Questions in Westminster. Despite this lack of backing, Wendy Alexander once again reiterated her commitment to a referendum during First Minister's Questions in the Scottish Parliament.
On 28 June 2008, Wendy Alexander announced her resignation as Leader of the Scottish Labour Party as a result of the pressure on her following the donation scandal. Cathy Jamieson subsequently became interim leader of the Scottish Labour Party. A month after, Labour lost a safe Westminster seat to the SNP in the Glasgow East by-election.
The 2008 Labour group leadership election was the first time Labour had elected its Scottish leader with the participation of its members, using a system similar to that used at the time by the UK-wide Labour Party (the system had been adopted in 2007, but no ballot had taken place as Alexander had been unopposed). The contenders were Iain Gray, MSP for East Lothian, a former Enterprise Minister in the previous Labour Executive, Andy Kerr, MSP for East Kilbride and former Health Secretary in the previous administration, and Cathy Jamieson MSP, the acting party leader who had been deputy leader under Jack McConnell. On 13 September 2008, Iain Gray was elected leader and promised a "fresh start" for Labour in Scotland.
A few months later, Labour won the Glenrothes by-election in Fife. The result was considered a surprise, as there was speculation that the SNP could have won an upset similar to Glasgow East.[25] Labour fell behind the SNP in the 2009 European Parliament election. However, it easily won the Glasgow North East by-election later that year.
2010–12: Fluctuating fortunes
In the 2010 United Kingdom general election on 6 May 2010, contrary to polls preceding the election, Labour consolidated their vote in Scotland, losing no seats (despite losing 91 seats across the rest of Britain) and regained Glasgow East from the SNP. This resulted in incumbent Scottish secretary Jim Murphy stating that the result provided an impetus for Scottish Labour to attempt to become "the biggest party in Holyrood" in the 2011 Scottish Parliament elections.[26]
Labour led the SNP in the polls for the 2011 Scottish Parliament election until the campaign began in March, at which point support for the SNP rallied. The SNP went on to win an unprecedented majority in the Scottish Parliament, a result that had been considered impossible under the proportional voting system. Labour had a net loss of 7 seats to the SNP. It also lost most of their constituency seats, although its share of the constituency vote declined by less than 1%. Labour's defeat was attributed to their campaign being directed mostly against the government in Westminster instead of the SNP.[27] Party leader Iain Gray, who held on to his own seat by only 151 votes, announced that he would be resigning with effect from later in the year. Eight weeks later, Labour easily retained a Westminster seat at the Inverclyde by-election. This suggests that Scottish Labour's disappointing performance in the 2011 Scottish Parliament election would not necessarily translate into support for its political opponents in other elections.
Following the 2011 Scottish election, Ed Miliband commissioned the Review of the Labour Party in Scotland of the future structure and operation of the Labour Party in Scotland, co-chaired by Jim Murphy MP and Sarah Boyack MSP. The review included a recommendation for a new post of Leader of the Scottish Labour Party to be created (previous Scottish Labour leaders had only been the leader of the Labour group in the Scottish Parliament). Others included more autonomy for the Scottish party and the reorganisation of members into branches based on Holyrood constituencies rather than Westminster constituencies. On 17 December 2011, Johann Lamont MSP was elected as leader and Anas Sarwar MP was elected as her deputy.
In the 2012 Scottish local elections, Labour were outpolled by the SNP. However, it gained votes and council seats and held its majorities on the councils of Glasgow and North Lanarkshire and regained control of Renfrewshire and West Dunbartonshire.
2014 independence referendum and aftermath
For the 2014 referendum on Scottish independence, Scottish Labour joined with the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats to form the pro-union Better Together campaign against Scottish independence. It was led by Alistair Darling, a former Labour minister. In addition, Scottish Labour ran its own pro-UK campaign United with Labour alongside, with the support of former Prime Minister Gordon Brown.[28] Anas Sarwar MP also led an unofficial organisation called the "2014 Truth Team", described by the party as "dedicated to cutting through the noise and delivering [...] facts on independence".[29]
In July 2012, a member of Scottish Labour started Labour for Independence, a rebel group of Labour supporters who back Yes Scotland in the campaign for Scottish independence.[30] The group was dismissed by the Scottish Labour leadership as lacking "real support" from within the party.[31]
The referendum was held on 18 September 2014 and resulted in a 55.3%–44.7% victory for the No side. However, many of Labour's traditional strongholds favoured the Yes side, notably including Glasgow.[32] The SNP had a surge in membership[33] and gained a wide lead over Labour in the opinion polls.[34][35]
On 24 October 2014, Johann Lamont announced her resignation as leader. She accused Labour's UK-wide leadership of undermining her attempts to reform the Scottish Labour Party and treating it "like a branch office of London."[36] The party's 2014 leadership election was won by Jim Murphy, an MP who had previously served as Secretary of State for Scotland and had been a prominent campaigner for the pro-Union side in the referendum.[37] In his victory speech, Murphy said that his election marked a "fresh start" for Scottish Labour: "Scotland is changing and so too is Scottish Labour. I'm ambitious for our party because I'm ambitious for our country".[37][38] He also said that he planned to defeat the SNP in 2016, and that he would use the increased powers being devolved to Holyrood to end poverty and inequality. In her speech, Dugdale said that the party's "focus has to be on the future – a Scottish Labour party that's fighting fit and fighting for our future".[37]
2015 – June 2017
Labour's poll ratings in Scotland did not reverse, and the party suffered a landslide defeat in the general election in May 2015, losing 40 of their 41 seats to the SNP. Many senior party figures were unseated, including Murphy himself (East Renfrewshire), Shadow Foreign Secretary Douglas Alexander (Paisley and Renfrewshire South) and Shadow Scotland Secretary Margaret Curran (Glasgow East). Ian Murray (Edinburgh South) was the only MP re-elected. It was the first time since 1959 that the party hadn't won the most seats in Scotland at a general election.
On 16 May 2015, Jim Murphy resigned as leader effective 13 June 2015. Under normal circumstances, Deputy Leader Kezia Dugdale would become acting leader, but former Leader Iain Gray was appointed Acting Leader whilst a leadership and a deputy leadership election are being simultaneously held on account of Dugdale resigning as Deputy Leader to stand for Leader. Dugdale won the 2015 leadership election on 15 August 2015.
On 1 November 2015, Scottish Labour Party delegates backed a vote to scrap the UK's Trident nuclear missile system. The motion was supported by an overwhelming majority, in which both party members and unions voted 70% in favor of the motion.[39]
In the 2016 Scottish Parliament election, Labour lost a third of its seats, dropping from 37 to 24. Labour got its lowest percentage of the vote in Scotland in 98 years with 23% and fell into 3rd place, a position it last occupied in Scotland in 1910, behind the Conservatives. The party also only won 3 constituency seats: holding onto the Dumbarton and East Lothian constituencies and gaining the Edinburgh Southern constituency from the SNP, losing eleven of its 2011 constituencies to the SNP and two to the Conservatives.
In the 2017 local elections, Labour's share of first preference votes fell from 31.4% to 20.2%, while it lost over 130 seats. This result meant the Party fell to third place in terms of both vote share and number of councillors. Labour also lost control of Glasgow and three other councils where it had a majority.[40]
At the beginning of the 2017 General Election campaign, Labour's poll ratings fell to a historic low 13%, and were more than 15% behind the Conservatives in Scotland in some polls. However, towards the end of the campaign Labour's polling increased to levels around the 24% the party received in 2015. On election day itself, the party managed to improve on its 2015 result and received 27% of the Scottish vote in a surprisingly good night for the party nationwide, and picked up 6 seats from the SNP in traditionally Labour areas such as Coatbridge, Glasgow, Kirkcaldy, and Rutherglen, bringing its Scottish number of seats to 7. Despite the positive result for the party, Labour remained in third place in Scotland, behind the Conservatives on 29%, and the SNP on 37%.
August – November 2017: Kezia Dugdale's resignation and a new leadership election
On 29 August 2017, Kezia Dugdale resigned as leader of the Scottish Labour Party.[41] Her deputy, Alex Rowley, took over as acting leader until 15 November, when he was suspended from Scottish Labour's parliamentary party while a probe into his conduct took place.[42] Jackie Baillie took over as acting leader until the conclusion of the leadership election. The election for a new leader of the Scottish Labour party took place between 11 September 2017 (when nominations opened) and 18 November 2017, when the new leader was announced.[43][44] Nominations for leadership candidates closed on 17 September. Anyone that wished to vote in the leadership election must have either been a member of the Scottish Labour Party, an 'affiliated supporter' (through being signed up as a Scottish Labour Party supporter through an affiliated organisation or union), or a 'registered supporter' (which requires signing up online and paying a one-off fee of £12) by 9 October. Voting opened on 27 October and closed at midday on 17 November.[45][46]
Richard Leonard won the leadership election with 56.7% of the vote and was elected as the leader of the Scottish Labour Party on 18 November.[47][48][49]
Leonard resigned on 14 January 2021, triggering the 2021 Scottish Labour leadership election.
Elected representatives (current)
House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom
Ian Murray - MP for Edinburgh South since 2010. Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland 2015-2016 and 2020-
Holyrood spokespeople
- Jackie Baillie – Acting Leader of the Scottish Labour Party and Deputy Leader and Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Finance
- Elaine Smith – Business Manager
- Rhoda Grant – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Eradication of Poverty and Social Inequality
- Alex Rowley – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Brexit and the Constitution
- Iain Gray – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Education, Skills and Science
- Monica Lennon – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport
- Claudia Beamish – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform
- Pauline McNeill – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Communities and Equalities
- James Kelly – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Justice
- Claire Baker – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Culture, Sport and External Affairs
- Sarah Boyack – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Local Government
- Colin Smyth – Shadow Cabinet Secretary for the Rural Economy, Transport and Connectivity
- Joe Cullinane – Leader of North Ayrshire Council and Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Campaigns and Party Engagement
Members of the Scottish Parliament
Member of the Scottish Parliament | Constituency or Region | First elected | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Jackie Baillie | Dumbarton | 1999 | Deputy Leader of the Scottish Labour Party 2020 –, Acting Leader of Scottish Labour 2014, 2017, 2021, Minister for Social Justice 2000-2001 |
Claire Baker | Mid Scotland and Fife | 2007 | |
Claudia Beamish | South Scotland | 2011 | |
Neil Bibby | West Scotland | 2011 | Chief Whip of the Scottish Labour Party 2014-2016 |
Sarah Boyack | Lothian | 1999 | Member for Edinburgh Central 1999–2011, Lothian 2011–2016, 2019–, Minister for Transport and Planning from 1999 to 2001 |
Mary Fee | West Scotland | 2011 | |
Neil Findlay | Lothian | 2011 | |
Rhoda Grant | Highlands and Islands | 1999 | Member for Highlands and Islands 1999–2003, 2007– |
Iain Gray | East Lothian | 1999 | Member for Edinburgh Pentlands 1999–2003, East Lothian 2007–, Scottish Labour Leader 2008–2011, Acting Scottish Labour Leader 2015, Minister for Social Justice 2001–2002, Minister for Enterprise, Transport and Lifelong Learning 2002-2003 |
Mark Griffin | Central Scotland | 2011 | |
Daniel Johnson | Edinburgh Southern | 2016 | |
James Kelly | Glasgow | 2007 | Member for Glasgow Rutherglen 2007–11, Rutherglen 2011–2016, Glasgow 2016–, Chief Whip of the Scottish Labour Party 2011-2013 |
Johann Lamont | Glasgow | 1999 | Member for Glasgow Pollok 1999–2016, Glasgow 2016–, Leader of Scottish Labour from 2011 to 2014, Deputy Leader of Scottish Labour 2008–2011 |
Monica Lennon | Central Scotland | 2016 | |
Richard Leonard | Central Scotland | 2016 | Leader of the Scottish Labour Party, 2017–2021 |
Lewis Macdonald | North East Scotland | 1999 | Member for Aberdeen Central 1999–2011, North East Scotland 2011–, Chief Whip of the Scottish Labour Party 2013–2014 |
Jenny Marra | North East Scotland | 2011 | |
Pauline McNeill | Glasgow | 1999 | Member for Glasgow Kelvin 1999–2011, Glasgow 2016– |
Alex Rowley | Mid Scotland and Fife | 2014 | Member for Cowdenbeath 2014–2016, Acting Leader of Scottish Labour 2017, Deputy Leader of the Scottish Labour Party 2015–2017 |
Anas Sarwar | Glasgow | 2016 | MP for Glasgow Central 2010–2015, Acting Leader of Scottish Labour 2014, Deputy Leader of the Scottish Labour Party 2011-2014 |
Colin Smyth | South Scotland | 2016 | |
Elaine Smith | Central Scotland | 1999 | Member for Coatbridge and Chryston 1999–2016, Central Scotland 2016– |
David Stewart | Highlands and Islands | 2007 | MP for Inverness East, Nairn and Lochaber 1997–2005 |
Electoral performance
European Parliament elections
Year | Share of votes | Seats |
---|---|---|
1979 | 33.0% | 2 / 8 |
1984 | 40.7% | 5 / 8 |
1989 | 41.9% | 7 / 8 |
1994 | 42.5% | 6 / 8 |
1999 | 28.7% | 3 / 8 |
2004 | 26.4% | 2 / 7 |
2009 | 20.8% | 2 / 6 |
2014 | 25.9% | 2 / 6 |
2019 | 9.3%[50] | 0 / 6 |
UK general elections
Year | Share of votes | Seats | Seats change | Position | Position change |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1910 (January) | 5.1% | 2 / 70 |
3rd | ||
1910 (December) | 3.6% | 3 / 70 |
1 | 3rd | |
1918 | 22.9% | 6 / 71 |
3 | 4th | 1 |
1922 | 32.2% | 29 / 71 |
23 | 1st | 3 |
1923 | 35.9% | 34 / 71 |
5 | 1st | |
1924 | 41.1% | 26 / 71 |
8 | 2nd | 1 |
1929 | 42.3% | 36 / 71 |
10 | 1st | 1 |
1931 | 32.6% | 7 / 71 |
29 | 3rd | 2 |
1935 | 36.8% | 20 / 71 |
13 | 2nd | 1 |
1945 | 47.9% | 37 / 71 |
17 | 1st | 1 |
1950 | 46.2% | 37 / 71 |
1st | ||
1951 | 47.9% | 35 / 71 |
2 | 2nd | 1 |
1955 | 46.7% | 34 / 71 |
1 | 2nd | |
1959 | 46.7% | 38 / 71 |
4 | 1st | 1 |
1964 | 48.7% | 43 / 71 |
5 | 1st | |
1966 | 49.8% | 46 / 71 |
3 | 1st | |
1970 | 44.5% | 44 / 71 |
2 | 1st | |
1974 (Feb) | 36.6% | 40 / 71 |
4 | 1st | |
1974 (Oct) | 36.3% | 41 / 71 |
1 | 1st | |
1979 | 41.6% | 44 / 71 |
3 | 1st | |
1983 | 35.1% | 41 / 72 |
3 | 1st | |
1987 | 42.4% | 50 / 72 |
9 | 1st | |
1992 | 39.0% | 49 / 72 |
1 | 1st | |
1997 | 45.6% | 56 / 72 |
7 | 1st | |
2001 | 43.3% | 56 / 72 |
1st | ||
2005 | 39.5% | 41 / 59 |
15 | 1st | |
2010 | 42.0% | 41 / 59 |
1st | ||
2015 | 24.3% | 1 / 59 |
40 | 2nd | 1 |
2017 | 27.1% | 7 / 59 |
6 | 3rd | 1 |
2019 | 18.6% | 1 / 59 |
6 | 4th | 1 |
Scottish Parliament elections
Year | Constituencies | Additional member | Total seats | Change | Position | Government | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
% | Seats | % | Seats | |||||
1999 | 38.8% | 53 / 73 |
33.6% | 3 / 56 |
56 / 129 |
1st | Coalition Labour–Liberal Democrats | |
2003 | 34.6% | 46 / 73 |
29.3% | 4 / 56 |
50 / 129 |
6 | 1st | Coalition Labour–Liberal Democrats |
2007 | 32.2% | 37 / 73 |
29.2% | 9 / 56 |
46 / 129 |
4 | 2nd | Minority Scottish National Party |
2011 | 31.7% | 15 / 73 |
26.3% | 22 / 56 |
37 / 129 |
9 | 2nd | Scottish National Party |
2016 | 22.6% | 3 / 73 |
19.1% | 21 / 56 |
24 / 129 |
13 | 3rd | Minority Scottish National Party |
See also
References
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- Lambert, Harry (21 October 2014). "Could the SNP win 25 Labour seats in 2015?". New Statesman. Retrieved 12 November 2016.
- "Scotland update: Is the SNP surge real?". Number Cruncher Politics. 16 October 2014. Retrieved 12 November 2016.
- Cochrane, Alan (24 October 2014). "Johann Lamont to resign as Scottish Labour leader". The Daily Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
- "MP Jim Murphy named Scottish Labour leader". BBC News. BBC. 13 December 2014. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- Johnston, Chris; Brooks, Libby (13 December 2014). "Jim Murphy is announced as leader of Scottish Labour party". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- Scottish Labour votes to scrap Trident. BBC NEWS. 1 November 2015. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
- "Full Scottish council election results published". BBC News Website. 8 May 2017. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
- Kezia Dugdale quits as Scottish Labour leader.
BBC NEWS. Published 29 August 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2017. - Labour suspends deputy leader Alex Rowley during conduct probe.
BBC NEWS. Published 15 November 2017. Retrieved 15 November 2017. - Scottish Labour leadership: Date set for leader announcement. BBC NEWS. Published 9 September 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
- Sarwar and Leonard confirm bids for Scottish Labour leadership. The Guardian. Author – Severin Carrell (Scotland editor). Published 4 September 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
- Information about Leadership election 2017 Archived 14 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine. Scottish Labour Party (official website). Retrieved 14 September 2017.
- Timetable announced for Scottish Labour leadership race. The Scotsman. Author – Angus Howarth. Published 9 September 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
- Scottish Leadership Result 2017.
Scottish Labour party (official website). Published 18 November 2017. Retrieved 18 November 2017. - Richard Leonard to lead Scottish Labour.
BBC NEWS. Published 18 November 2017. Retrieved 18 November 2017. - Richard Leonard voted Scottish Labour leader.
The Guardian. Author – Severin Carrell. Published 18 November 2017. Retrieved 18 November 2017. - "EU Elections 2019: SNP secures three seats as Labour vote collapses". 27 May 2019 – via www.bbc.co.uk.
Further reading
- Ailsa Henderson, Rob Johns, Jac Larner and Chris Carman. 2020. "Scottish Labour as a case study in party failure: Evidence from the 2019 UK General Election in Scotland." Scottish Affairs.
- Scottish Labour Leaders 1918–1939: A Biographical Dictionary, William Know, Mainstream Publishing, 1984.
- Dictionary of Labour Biography, Greg Rosen, 2001, Politicos Publishing, ISBN 1-902301-18-8
- The Scottish Labour Party, Gerry Hassan, 2003, Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 0-7486-1784-1
- Donald Dewar, Scotland's First Minister, Wendy Alexander, Mainstream Publishing, 2005.
- Old Labour to New, Greg Rosen, 2005, Politicos Publishing.
- John Smith – A Life, Mark Stuart, Politicos Publishing, 2005.
- The Strange Death of Labour Scotland, Gerry Hassan, Eric Shaw, Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 0748640029, 2012.
External links
- Scottish Labour Party – official website
- Labour Youth and Students