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Labour must change to win voters' trust, admits Wendy

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Published Date: 24 March 2008
WENDY ALEXANDER has insisted Labour can win back the trust of the Scottish people but warned the party of the need for change.
The Scottish Labour leader claimed her party's defeat at last year's Scottish Parliament elections did not mean voters had deserted Labour's values, but questioned the party's ability to deliver.

And in a pamphlet to be published at the Scottish L
abour conference in Aviemore at the end of this week, she said there would need to be "a lot of hard work" before the next Holyrood elections.

Ms Alexander's comments came as the Scottish Government prepared to launch the second phase of its National Conversation on Scotland's future.

First Minister Alex Salmond, his deputy Nicola Sturgeon, and Minister for Parliamentary Business Bruce Crawford are due to attend an event at Edinburgh University on Wednesday to set out their plans to engage with "the great institutions of Scottish society" – business organisations, trades unions, universities and colleges, churches, the voluntary sector and professional organisations – on the constitution.

The National Conversation website has had some 314,000 hits since it was launched last year.

In her pamphlet, Ms Alexander said Labour would have to work as hard, if not harder, than it did in the General Election landslide victory of 1997 to win the 2011 Scottish Parliament election.

She said: "We have no divine right to be elected, no automatic call on the people's support, no guarantees of the people's allegiance."

But she said the party's values were what they had always been – "the progressive values of justice, equality, and community".

And she went on: "I do not believe that people have lost faith in Scottish Labour's values. But they have questioned our ability to deliver the practical policies that match those values, and to make the changes that turn those values into reality.

"If we are humble enough to listen, wise enough to engage in debate, and brave enough to renew, we can win back belief in our ability to deliver."

She insisted there was no support for independence and said her proposed cross-party Scottish Constitutional Commission was the best way to explore whether the present powers of the Scottish Parliament were "right for our times".

But Ms Alexander said the priorities of the voters remained the same as others in countries the world over – jobs, health, education, law-and-order, housing.

"While we engage in constitutional reform discussions, we must also develop our proposals to meet these," she said.

"It means a lot of hard work before the next Scottish election, now only three years away.

"It means changes in strategies, changes in thinking, changes in policies. That is nothing new for Scottish Labour. Change is what we do."





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  • Last Updated: 24 March 2008 10:34 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Scottish Labour Party
 
1

First Minister,

The Raj Restaurant 24/03/2008 12:22:48
Aye right!
2

John Knox furr First Meenister,

High St, Embra 24/03/2008 13:10:52
#2 50 years in power? Did I miss that? Let me think ..50 years ago... 1958... There was Wilson (twice) and Blair from '97. Wilson held a referendum at least. And Blair enacted the Scotland act in his first term. So what are you on about?
Opportunities and chances? Well, the SNP now have theirs. Don't let us hold you back...
3

eric,

Lothian 24/03/2008 13:38:01
NO kidding!
4

Carlung,

Haddington 24/03/2008 14:29:03

And Wendy went on: "I do not believe that people have lost faith in Scottish Labour's values. But they have questioned our ability to deliver the practical policies that match those values, and to make the changes that turn those values into reality".

The only way forward for the Labour party in Scotland is to declare independence from London. Only by doing this will people believe that it is acting on behalf of Scotland.

The SNP are demonstrably working for Scotland only and take no orders from London, as a result they are riding higher and higher in the polls as the people know that they have only the people of Scotland to account to.

Go on, be brave, break free!
5

Mykel Mzoritz,

Edwinsboro 24/03/2008 15:40:00
Bendy Wendy gets it wrong again...
http://www.edinburghsucks.com/categories/member-of-scottish-parliament/wendy-alexander/
6

Foresight,

By the Water of Leith 24/03/2008 15:46:23
Being a unionist does not necessitate Scottish political parties being tied to their bigger brothers and sistera in London. If Wendy wants to prove she can change Labour in Scotland let her first declare the Scottish party's independence from her puppet masters in Westminster. Likewise the Tories and Lib Dems should follow the same path. None of them have the authority to properly represent the aspirations of Scots until they have shown they are capable of standing on their own two feet, or to put it more crudely shown two fingers to the powers that be in London.
7

SPG,

edinburgh 24/03/2008 16:22:18
Nu labour old kak.
8

Edward,

24/03/2008 16:49:21
yeah, change its name to the Scottish National Party and start believing in Scotland
9

pehman,

sussex 24/03/2008 17:35:13
Did anyone notice the address given in wendy's vision leaflet, somewhere in Newcastle.

I know Berwick wants to rejoin Scotland, but I must have missed the bit about Newcastle
10

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 24/03/2008 18:03:02
A nice wee change would be for Wendy to apologise in advance on behalf of Gordie losing the next general election and issuing another grovelling one for her own conduct which will see her position as Scottish Labour "Leader" being history. Change is what we the electorate are all about. And raring to go!
11

Miss Jean Brodie,

24/03/2008 19:52:41
It’s Easter Wendy - slip the bad news oot today

Naw! - I think Wendy is doing a sterling job - she has the face for politics - the ability to assist the people of Scotland make the correct political decision for their future of their country and is a walking, talking advert for Labours er, erm, eh? policy?
12

It's me!,

24/03/2008 19:55:08
It's corruption, sleeze, fiddling expenses, it's neopotism, its stealing other peoples jobs for Glasgow. That's labour values. Power corrupts and Labour in Scotland is a particularly fine example of it. We said we would get you back at the election and we have. Tories needn't get excited. We have long memories of their noses in the trough and the way they rode roughshod over Scotland. I remember Rifkind and co turning Scottish question time into a farce with public school boy antics with that idiot MP for Dover. Now Rifkind is safely ensconced in Kensington/Chelsea he won't care too much about Scottish votes.

Doing public service? No, they see the public purse as easy money.
13

Gopher,

edinburgh 24/03/2008 20:10:44
Labour to change. Get rid of Wendy fast.
14

portonian,

falkirk 25/03/2008 14:14:14


if we are humble enough to listen, wise enough to engage in debate, and brave enough to renew, we can win back belief in our ability to deliver."

Three qualities lacking in the lab party and in their leadership let us hope the voters never forget and vote them out in both coming elections
15

Matt there,

somewhere 27/03/2008 00:19:52
Labour could win back the trust of the people. But it will not.

I mean, what can be served by having poor, silly Wendy asking questions at FMQ if she only asks supplementary questions based on what she HOPED the First Minister MIGHT have said in his answers, and not what he DID say?

And rather than realising that it is her own bizarre technique that is at fault, she becomes cross with Salmond and her voice rises and she becomes strident and unattractively fishwife in her delivery!

Her perorations would have more purpose, more effect if one were not able to imagine her bawling: "Fish! Fish! Who'll buy ma lovely fish?" At the top of her lungs in the chamber.


 

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