Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Record
Daily Record
Politics
Paul Hutcheon

Labour MSP Paul Sweeney accused of wanting to 'abandon' Holyrood after just one year

A top Labour MSP has been accused of wanting to “abandon” Holyrood after a year in the Scottish Parliament

Paul Sweeney has pleaded with party bosses to rethink a blanket ban on Holyrood politicians standing for Westminster.

SNP MSP Rona Mackay said: "Shameless Paul Sweeney demonstrates his utter contempt for the Scottish Parliament with his ambition to scuttle off back to Westminster and abandon the people he was elected to represent just last year.

"Standing for Holyrood clearly was no more than a convenient stop-gap to pay his bills after he was kicked out of Westminster in 2019. So much for Scottish Labour being the so-called ‘party of devolution’?”

Scottish Labour is proposing a double jobbing clampdown that would prevent sitting MSPs from switching to Westminster.

Supporters of the plan believe it looks bad for recently elected MSPs to try to leave the Parliament so quickly.

Sweeney was elected as a regional List MSP in May last year after losing his Glasgow North East seat at Westminster in 2019.

Under the proposal, he would have to give up his place at Holyrood before trying to get selected for a Westminster seat.

In an email to his party’s governing body, obtained by the Record, Sweeney flagged up the “key role” of regional MSPs in “driving forward the party’s electoral progress in Scotland”.

He also highlighted his work in building capacity in the Glasgow North East seat at Westminster, adding:

“Ultimately the expectation is for regional members to shadow and then contest constituencies as the basis for the party to make progress at elections, and I would argue that this principle should be applied to both Holyrood and Westminster constituencies alike.”

He continued: “I have only ever contested the Glasgow North East constituency as a candidate and would advise my local CLP [constituency party] that I would only be interested in seeking selection in that seat, due to the established relationship I have with it.”

He called for “discretion” in cases where a regional MSP has a “significant relationship” to a UK parliamentary constituency, such as “having served as the previous MP”.

The Glasgow MSP also said it should be a requirement for regional MSPs who are elected to Westminster to immediately resign their Holyrood seat to avoid double jobbing accusations.

He added: “I also understand the risk that selecting candidates who already hold elected positions potentially invites an argument from our opponents that they are not fully committed to their current position.”

A source close to Sweeney said: “Local party members have approached Paul about standing again as a candidate for his former constituency at the next General Election as they believe he is the best prospect for Labour to re-gain the seat, so it has been something he has been giving consideration to.

“For the past year, Paul has been a dedicated MSP, relentlessly standing up for and improving the lives of his constituents in Glasgow. That remains his focus, and he will support whoever is selected to stand at a future General Election.”

A Scottish Labour spokesperson said: “The final selection procedures are a matter for the Scottish Executive Committee. Scottish Labour are committed to having excellent Parliamentarians in Holyrood focused on standing up for their constituents, and a range of talented and diverse candidates for the next General Election.”

Scottish Conservative party chairman Craig Hoy said: “This proposal from Scottish Labour already appears to be unravelling within their own party.

“It was designed to show they were belatedly trying to show they were a serious party at Holyrood, but that memo doesn’t seem to have met with the approval of one of their own MSPs.

“Given one of his MSPs also sits in the House of Lords, Anas Sarwar needs to get his own house in order before he begins to talk up this plan.”

Sweeney declined to comment.

To sign up to the Daily Record Politics newsletter, click here.

READ NEXT:

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.