SNP: ‘Political earthquake on the way in Glasgow East’
“There’s a political earthquake on the way in Glasgow East,” Scottish National Party leader Alex Salmond has said.
Speaking at a confident and confrontational launch of his party’s Glasgow East by-election campaign, Mr Salmond said the presence of so many media organisations proved Labour were in trouble.
“The fact that we are in with a chance is a comment on how far things have moved in Scottish politics,” he said of the traditionally solid Labour seat.
“This campaign is a chance to compare and contrast the track record of the Scottish government, the SNP government in Scotland and London Labour and the Labour government at Westminster.
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“We welcome the contrast and we welcome the comparison because we think it’s a winning contrast and a winning comparison for John Mason and the SNP.”
Mr Salmond’s comments will have particular resonance in the constituency, where half a century of Labour control has failed to create prosperity.
“If you look at the statistics for housing, for poverty, for health in this constituency, then it’s a condemnation of 50 years of Labour party representation and Labour party failure,” the first minister said.
Speaking at a community centre with John Mason, the SNP candidate, Mr Salmond then mercilessly joked about Labour’s problems finding a candidate.
“John Mason is the first choice for the SNP and that will be an effective contrast in this campaign,” he said.
Labour hold a majority of 13,500 in the constituency but the party’s fortunes are currently so poor a growing feeling is spreading across political circles it could actually lose the seat.