2011 Scottish Labour leadership election

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2011 Scottish Labour Party leadership election

← 2008 29 October 2011 – 17 December 2011 2014 →
 
Candidate Johann Lamont Ken Macintosh Tom Harris
Overall Result 51.8% 40.3% 8.0%
Affiliated Unions 65.4% 26.4% 8.2%
Party members 36.5% 53.1% 10.3%
MPs, MSPs & MEPs 53.3% 41.3% 5.3%

Leader before election

Iain Gray

Elected Leader

Johann Lamont

The 2011 Scottish Labour Party leadership election was an internal party election to choose a new leader of the Scottish Labour Party. The election followed the announcement by Iain Gray that he would stand down as leader in the autumn of 2011 following the party's heavy defeat to the Scottish National Party in May's Scottish Parliament general election.[1] Gray won the previous contest in September 2008.

It was the third Scottish Labour leadership election in four years, the first being caused by the resignation of

second by Wendy Alexander's resignation.[3]

Running concurrently was a deputy leadership election, triggered by Johann Lamont's decision to run in the leadership election.

The leader of the Keep Scotland in Britain campaign was to be decided once the outcome of the Scottish Labour leadership election was known.[4]

Johann Lamont was elected as leader, and Anas Sarwar as deputy leader.

Timetable

  • 6 May: Iain Gray announces his postponed resignation as Scottish Labour leader following the party's defeat in the previous day's elections.[1]
  • 11 May: Ed Miliband orders a review into the full workings of Scottish Labour, led by Jim Murphy and Sarah Boyack.[5]
  • 10 September: The Murphy/Boyack review is published, proposing major changes to Scottish Labour's structures, including the creation of a full Scottish Labour leader to replace the previous post of 'Leader of the Labour Party in the Scottish Parliament'.[6]
  • 29 October: A special party conference is held at the Strathclyde Suite in the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall where the changes proposed by the Murphy/Boyack review are officially adopted by the party.[7] The conference also marks the official start of the leadership election.
  • 4 November: Nominations from parliamentarians closed.[8]
  • 17 December: The result of the elections are due to be announced.[7]

Candidates and nominations

Any Scottish Labour

MP (Member of Parliament), MSP (Member of the Scottish Parliament) or MEP (Member of the European Parliament) may stand for election as either leader or deputy leader. Successful nomination requires the support of 12.5% of the total number of Scottish Labour's parliamentarians in the Scottish Parliament, the House of Commons, and the European Parliament, with any candidate needing at least one nomination from two of these three institutions.[6] At the opening of formal nominations at the Scottish Labour conference on 29 October,[9]
the party had a total of 80 such parliamentarians, meaning a total of 10 nominations was required.

Once the nomination process by parliamentarians is complete, supporting nominations made be made for each candidate by Scottish Constituency Labour Parties (CLPs), trade unions that are affiliated to the Labour Party, affiliated socialist societies, Scottish Young Labour, and individual local councillors.[6]

This will be the first leadership elections that use this nomination procedure, which was devised by the Review of the Labour Party in Scotland, conducted by Jim Murphy MP and Sarah Boyack MSP following the party's heavy defeat to the Scottish National Party in the Scottish Parliament election held in May 2011.

Leadership - nominated candidates

At the close of nominations, three candidates had secured the required level of parliamentary nominations to secure a position on the ballot paper.

Tom Harris
MP

Profile - MP for the Glasgow South constituency since 2001 (Glasgow Cathcart from 2001–2005). Former minister at the Department for Transport.

Candidacy announced - 10 September[10]

Policies - Opposes the Scottish Government's policy on alcohol pricing.[11]

Parliamentary nominations

.

Johann Lamont MSP

Profile - MSP for the Glasgow Pollok constituency since 1999, Scottish Labour deputy leader since 2008.

Candidacy announced - 3 September[12]

Policies - Opposes the Scottish Government's policy on alcohol pricing.[11]

Parliamentary nominations[8] - MSPs: Jackie Baillie, Richard Baker, Claudia Beamish, Sarah Boyack, Malcolm Chisholm, Helen Eadie, Patricia Ferguson, Neil Findlay, James Kelly, Johann Lamont, Hanzala Malik, Paul Martin, Siobhan McMahon, Duncan McNeil, Anne McTaggart, Elaine Murray, John Pentland, Drew Smith, Elaine Smith, David Stewart. MPs: Katy Clark, Michael Connarty, Cathy Jamieson, Jim McGovern, Sandra Osborne, Fiona O'Donnell, Jim Sheridan.

Ken Macintosh MSP

Profile - MSP for the Eastwood constituency since 1999.

Candidacy announced - 12 September[13]

Policies - Opposes the Scottish Government's policy on alcohol pricing,[11] return First ScotRail and the Scottish bus network back into public ownership.[14][15]

Parliamentary nominations

.

Deputy leadership - nominated candidates

At the close of nominations, three candidates had secured the required parliamentary nominations to achieve a place on the ballot paper.

Ian Davidson MP

Profile - MP for the Glasgow South West constituency since 1992, (Glasgow Govan 1992-1997, Glasgow Pollok 1997-2005). Chairman of the Scottish Affairs Select Committee since 2010.

Parliamentary nominations

John Robertson, Jim Sheridan. MEPs: David Martin
.

Lewis Macdonald MSP

Profile - MSP for the Aberdeen Central constituency, 1999-2011. MSP for the North East Scotland region since 2011.

Parliamentary nominations

Tom Harris
.

Anas Sarwar MP

Profile - MP for the Glasgow Central constituency since 2010.

Parliamentary nominations

.

Deputy leadership - unsuccessful candidates

Dumfriesshire MSP Elaine Murray sought nomination for the deputy leadership, and had acquired 4 nominations before withdrawing from the contest on 3 November. Following her withdrawal, Murray nominated Lewis Macdonald.

Hustings

In the run up to the opening of the ballot, Scottish Labour will host a series of hustings events across Scotland.[16]

Date Title Location Information/Highlights
Friday 18 November, 19:00 Ethnic Minority Hustings Glasgow
Saturday 19 November, 11:00 Youth & Student Hustings Glasgow
Sunday 20 November, 14:30 Aberdeen Hustings Aberdeen
Tuesday 22 November, 19:00 Edinburgh Hustings Edinburgh
Friday 25 November, 19:00 Inverness Hustings Inverness
Sunday 27 November, 19:00 Dunfermline Hustings Dunfermline
Monday 28 November, 19:00 Glasgow Hustings Glasgow
Thursday 1 December, 19:00 Dundee Hustings Dundee
Sunday 4 December, 14:30 Stirling Hustings Stirling
Tuesday 6 December, 14:30 Ayr Hustings Ayr
Thursday 8 December, 19:00 Women's Hustings Motherwell

Result

The election was conducted through a postal ballot, and counted using the alternative vote method in an electoral college, with a third of the votes allocated to Labour's MSPs, Scottish MPs and Scottish MEPs, a third to individual members of the Scottish Labour Party, and a third to individual members of affiliated organisations, mainly trade unions and socialist societies. Under the alternative vote, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated at each round until one candidate has a majority of votes (i.e., one more than half).

Leadership

Candidate
Affiliated
members
(33.3%)
Individual
members
(33.3%)
Elected
members
(33.3%)
Total
Johann Lamont MSP 65.4% 36.5% 53.3% 51.8%
Ken Macintosh MSP 26.4% 53.1% 41.3% 40.3%
Tom Harris
MP
8.2% 10.3% 5.3% 8.0%

Deputy Leadership

Candidate
Affiliated
members
(33.3%)
Individual
members
(33.3%)
Elected
members
(33.3%)
Total
Anas Sarwar MP 25.6% 61.0% 66.7% 51.1%
Ian Davidson MP 61.1% 25.4% 13.3% 33.3%
Lewis MacDonald
MSP
13.3% 13.6% 20.0% 15.6%

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Scottish election: Labour leader Iain Gray to quit". BBC News. 6 May 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  2. ^ "McConnell quits Labour leadership". BBC News. 15 August 2007.
  3. ^ "Alexander quits as Labour leader". BBC News. 28 June 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  4. ^ Davidson, Lorraine (6 December 2011). "Parties unite to fight SNP over independence plans". The Times Scotland. London: Times Newspapers Limited. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  5. ^ Wintour, Patrick (11 May 2011). "Ed Miliband orders review of Scottish Labour party". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  6. ^ a b c "New Position of The Leader of the Scottish Labour Party". The Scottish Labour Party. 10 September 2011. Archived from the original on 11 January 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  7. ^ a b "Scottish Labour leader candidates warned of 'ugly' SNP". BBC News. 29 October 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g "Leadership". The Scottish Labour Party. Archived from the original on 2 November 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  9. ^ Mulholland, Hélène (26 September 2011). "Labour to devolve Scottish party leadership". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 October 2011.
  10. ^ "Harris ready to expose Salmond's bluster". TomHarris.org.uk. 10 September 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  11. ^ a b c Currie, Brian (31 October 2011). "Labour contenders vow to oppose alcohol pricing plan". The Herland. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
  12. ^ "Johann Lamont to run for Scottish Labour leadership". BBC News. 3 September 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  13. ^ "Ken Macintosh joins Scottish Labour leadership race". BBC News. 12 September 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  14. ^ Henderson, Damien (27 October 2011). "Put ScotRail under public ownership, urges Labour MSP". The Herald. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  15. ^ Peterkin, Tom (29 October 2011). "Tom Harris warns Scottish Labour could become an 'irrelevance'". Scotland on Sunday. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
  16. ^ "Hustings". The Scottish Labour Party. Archived from the original on 4 December 2011. Retrieved 4 November 2011.

External links