Tag: Johann Lamont

  • Johann Lamont – 2013 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Johann Lamont, the Leader of the Scottish Labour Party, to the 2013 Labour Party conference.

    Conference, I am delighted to be here and honoured to address you as Scottish Labour Leader in these challenging times for people in Scotland and across the UK.

    I am a proud Scot. And it because I am a proud Scot, not despite it, that I want us to stay strong in the United Kingdom.

    That is why I am determined to campaign with every bit of energy I can muster to ensure that on 18 September 2014, the people of Scotland will not just reject separation, but reaffirm their commitment to the United Kingdom.

    Scotland is known for its proud industries – shipbuilding, oil and gas, whisky. But in the last few months you could be forgiven for thinking we have a new boom industry – the creation of historic days.

    It seems the Scottish Government just need to call a press conference for the day to become historic.

    Well I look forward to coming back to conference after the historic day next year when Scotland renews its embrace of the United Kingdom – and makes the politics of narrow nationalism a thing of history.

    There are those who in the next year will want to perpetuate some myths about Scotland and the rest of the UK.

    We are told that somehow Scotland is another place, with different values and concerns. But we know the reality. That across the UK families are worrying about the future.

    About their children’s education, about the care of their elderly loved ones, about whether they will keep their jobs and how to make the world a safer place.

    The nationalists claim that we as Scots are denied our rights, refused our potential, held back by the rest of the UK.

    But the truth is that we Scots were part of shaping the United Kingdom through time. And it is the Labour movement united across the country which shaped it for the better – and will again.

    That is why not only do we play our part in Better Together, the cross party campaign, but with the energy and talent of my deputy Anas Sarwar, we have established United With Labour, making Labour’s own case for staying in the UK and recasting the values that shaped labour’s legacy – that we are stronger together.

    The nationalists’ central deceit is that inequality in Scotland was created in 1707 and can be eradicated by the re-establishment of an independent Scotland.

    They believe that Scotland is, by its nature, more progressive. They create the impression that this debate is somehow Scotland versus the Tories. It is not.

    Scotland does not agree with Alex Salmond – and if we work hard over the next year it will become increasingly clear this is Scotland versus Salmond and Scotland is going to win.

    The struggle in Scotland is between truth and deceit, between a Scottish Government content to sloganize rather the address the real problems in our communities.

    For above all we are fired by the determination that politics is about the real world, that identifies the challenges and creates the solutions that make a difference to people’s lives – and insists that the real world experience of the trade unionist, the agricultural worker, the mum, the carer should shape our politics, our policy and ultimately our lives.

    And that is the test that others fail.

    The Tories tell us things are getting better, in denial about the lives most people live, without security, but with increasing uncertainty, and increasing bills and stress.

    And the Lib Dems, with empty policy offer to demonstrate they care, yet collude with and embrace the argument that this economic crisis is because Labour’s investment in schools, hospitals and our children.

    And as a consequence of that betrayal, they are content to see the most vulnerable bear the brunt of the reckless decisions of a banking system that nearly brought the country to its knees.

    And the nationalists? When they see the policies driven by the coalition – of austerity, of the bedroom tax, what do they say? Do they see the affront to families across the UK? No, they see they see a political opportunity.

    For the Nationalists the misery of the people isn’t a wrong to be corrected – it is a chance to be exploited. For them grievance is not to be addressed it is to be nurtured.

    And that cynicism, that calculation which leaves families suffering now is a price worth paying if it translates into votes next September.

    It is a cynicism which corrodes our politics. It should create in us a revulsion that demands a Labour campaign of truth, passion and hope in the months ahead.

    A cynical SNP that in private questions the affordability of the state pension and in public says what it thinks it needs to say to get over the line.

    And when confronted with the real world:

    With the health refugee to England seeking the cancer drugs not available in Scotland.

    With the person with a free bus pass but no bus.

    With the care worker distressed by their care for an elderly person reduced to less than 15 minutes and with an instruction to ‘task and go’.

    With the student denied a place a college to learn the skills to access the unfulfilled jobs in oil and gas, what do they say?

    They hunt the alibi – Westminster, local government, anyone except themselves.

    Opposition is frustrating and in these tough times unity and focus to secure power will never be at a greater premium.

    But how much more frustrating is it in Scotland when the Government behaves like a reckless opposition, refusing to take responsibility, happy to take the credit and energetic in blaming others. And above all, this truth – content to ensure that all those who could be protected are not helped.

    For that would be to show devolution working. Devolution protecting. And if they allowed devolution to do what it was meant to do, how then they would achieve their own and only real ambition – for Scotland to be separate from the rest of the UK.

    The SNP are fond of saying that Scotland should complete its home rule journey. Pity they didn’t join us on the first two legs of that journey. They stood outside the Constitutional Convention which shaped the Parliament. They wouldn’t be part of the Calman Commission which delivered real change to devolution. Yet they shamelessly rewrite Scotland’s history.

    They deceive because it was the Labour Party which delivered the Scottish Parliament, it was we who started the journey to enhanced powers. And it is the Labour Party who will do so again – the party which delivered home rule for Scotland – who will enhance home rule and defend it. A strong Scotland within a strong United Kingdom.

    So the prize next year is a huge one – to defeat the politics of nationalism.

    Because the politics of identity is not the politics of justice. It wasn’t Scots, or the English or the Welsh or the Irish who fought for women’s votes, it was women and men who believed in justice.

    We didn’t join the fight against Apartheid because we were South African, we joined that battle because it was our duty, whatever our identity, race or gender to fight against injustice.

    And I believe that Scotland is too big a country to hide behind Hadrian’s Wall and not play our part in fighting injustice in all its forms throughout these islands, and through partnership with our friends and neighbours across the world.

    And we will deliver hope and change at home. To the elderly person who needs help, and who wonders what it means when their government trumpets free personal care, but who only sees a carer for a few minutes a day, who gets tucked up in bed by six o’clock because that is all a pressured carer can do, I tell them Labour will deliver hope and Labour will deliver change.

    To the men and women, denied the opportunity to better themselves by this Scottish government, to learn the skills which could lead to a career not just a job, I say Labour will deliver hope and deliver change.

    And to those people in Scotland who do not believe that politics can change lives because they have been fed on a diet of smart slogans not real policies to change lives, I promise to restore integrity to our politics.

    Reality. The truth about how real people live real lives will be at the heart of our politics. We will be honest about what we can do and we cannot do in an era of scarcity.

    But there will be no limit to our vision and our thirst for justice. The limits of today should not limit our vision of a better tomorrow.

    We know in this movement, in all its forms, that when we stand together there is nothing we cannot achieve.

    Division is the greatest bar to our progress.

    But we will stand together. Labour in all its forms, in every corner of the country, to fight the case that the nations on these islands will stand together. That is how we achieve justice at home and abroad.

    Yes, conference. The next year is about defeating the politics of nationalism, a virus that has affected so many nations and done so much harm. An ideology that never achieved anything.

    But it is about more than that. It is about Scotland and all our nations embracing the ideal of the United Kingdom.

    It is about being a beacon to the world about how people can preserve their identity, share their values and live together and bind together to form a stronger community.

    It is about embracing a new United Kingdom. One of justice. One of fairness. One of opportunity.

    And conference, I promise you, I will be back next year to tell you how Scotland will play its part in building a new United Kingdom.

  • Johann Lamont – 2012 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Johann Lamont, the Leader of the Scottish Labour Party, to the Labour Party conference on 2nd October 2012.

    Conference, I have the privilege of addressing you as the first ever Leader of the Scottish Labour Party.

    After what happened in the Scottish parliamentary elections in May of last year we knew we, as the Scottish Labour Party, had to change.

    And I want to thank Ed Miliband and everyone in the Party at Scottish and UK levels for helping turn the desire for change into reality.

    We know we still have a long way to go. But the work has started. And the revival has started as we showed in this May’s elections where the Scottish Labour Party made gains throughout Scotland, and none was more stunning that Gordon Matheson’s victory in Glasgow where we won again, an overall majority in a proportional system and where all but one of our candidates was elected.

    Conference, we need to rebuild Scotland and rebuild Britain.

    And we need to rebuild a Scotland which has a Government which isn’t seeking to protect us from Tory cuts, but an SNP Government which is making them worse.

    When George Osborne cut the budget, Alex Salmond cut it deeper for Scotland’s local authorities. Even when the Scottish budget went up, he cut funding for vital council services, while heaping more responsibility onto local authorities.

    Don’t be fooled by the slogans. Salmond trying to claim more things are free in Scotland as a way of building up resentment with our partners elsewhere in the UK.

    The people of Scotland know that nothing is free. And every day we see more clearly that the costs of Salmond’s slogans are being borne by hard working families struggling to make ends meet, borne by the elderly and vulnerable seeing their care slashed, borne by the student who can’t get a place in further education.

    Now last week, when I pointed out that Scotland’s families are paying for Salmond’s unsustainable tax break for the rich, I was accused of being a Tory.

    I’m not sure if the cap fits with someone who campaigned against Thatcher’s cuts to Scotland in the eighties.

    Not sure the cap fits with someone who campaigned for a Scottish Parliament to protect Scotland from future Tory Governments.

    And I am not sure the cap fits with someone who sees in surgeries, in meetings and in everyday life the consequences of a Tory Government cutting too far and too fast while we have an SNP Government content to amplify the cuts rather than protect people from them.

    It was Alex Salmond who said that Scotland didn’t mind Thatcher’s economic policies. It was Alex Salmond who relied on the Tories to put through four budgets while in Government. It was Alex Salmond who cheered David Cameron into Number 10 because it suited his political argument, in full knowledge of the consequences.

    This SNP Government claims to be a progressive beacon but took George Osborne’s cuts, doubled them and handed them to Scottish councils, impacting on our elderly care, our schools and our chances of growing local economies.

    This SNP Government is making the poor pay for the election bribes that benefit the better off, but won’t tell us this side of the referendum where he will go to find another £3.3 billion of cuts.

    Anyone still want to argue the SNP’s left wing credentials? Let me read you this:

    “It is likely that the Barnett formula, far from starving Scotland to death as is often asserted, is actually fattening us to the point of dangerous obesity. Bizarre as the thought may be, could the UK actually be killing us with kindness?”

    Not the words of Norman Tebbit. Not the words of George Osborne. But Mike Russell, the man Alex Salmond has put in charge of our schools.

    Let me give you another insight into the world of Mike Russell:

    “Put bluntly universality now drags down both the quality of service to those most in need, and the ability of government to provide such services. However, our political parties do not have the courage to address the issue for fear of losing votes.”

    Conference, Scottish Labour is not afraid to be honest with the people of Scotland, and not afraid to expose Alex Salmond and his Tartan Tories who try to wear our clothing while punishing the people they should be protecting.

    The SNP might not have the courage to be straight with the Scottish people but we do.

    What Alex Salmond is doing with Scotland’s finances is the equivalent of putting the gas bill in the drawer. We’ve all done it. Not opened the bill because we feared the consequences. So we stuff it away. And the reminder. And the final notice.

    But we all know, Conference, that never ends well.

    Salmond hopes we won’t ask the tough questions about independence. And he is desperate we don’t ask the tough questions of the here and now. He knows that every Scottish family is bearing the cost of his slogans. We all know that his budget will go bust.

    But he hopes that somehow he can keep the truth from the Scottish people until after the referendum.

    I won’t wait until after the referendum to be honest with the people of Scotland. We need an honest debate now about how we protect the most vulnerable from the cuts.

    Not everyone is going to like the solutions – that is unavoidable. But I will be straight with people now about what is to come, and I will be true to Labour values – that we will not allow those who most need our support to pay the price for populist slogans.

    If we are to ensure that the elderly get the help and support it is our duty to give, then we are going to have to ensure that those who have, give to the have-nots.

    If we are to make sure that the potential of not one of our children is lost, that means that those who have plenty must share for the common good.

    If Scotland stands for anything it is community. And we in Scottish Labour will pull that community together, to stand as one, and reject Alex Salmond’s attempts to divide our society.

    Conference, the Labour Party fights for the poor and the vulnerable. The Labour Party fights for the strong. And together, the Labour Party in every part of the UK will fight to rebuild our nations and rebuild our communities.