Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The National (Scotland)
The National (Scotland)
National
Craig Meighan

Alex Cole-Hamilton told off by Ballot Box Scotland after indyref2 claim

Alex Cole-Hamilton was criticised for using a local by-election as a national 'barometer' on independence

THE Scottish LibDem leader has come under fire from polling experts after suggesting a recent council by-election was proof there is no desire for a second Scottish independence referendum.

Alex Cole-Hamilton took to Twitter to share the results of the recent Comhairle nan Eilean Siar by-election.

The Western Isles vacancy emerged when only one candidate came forward for the seat in the May elections.

The Sgìr’ Ùige agus Carlabhagh ward saw independent candidate Norman Macdonald secure a win with 35.4% of first preference votes, with the LibDems coming in second at 20.4%.

Another independent took 3rd place with 18% of the first preference vote while the SNP received 15.3% and the Greens 9.1%.

Sharing a Ballot Box Scotland's tweet announcing the results, the Edinburgh Western MSP tweeted: “Still smiling about this. The people in Eilean Siar are ready for change.

“Clear that the latest push for independence is going well when the SNP barely scrape 15% in a key ward in a held parliamentary seat.”

But the polling aggregate account hit back at Cole-Hamilton, urging politicians not to use council by-elections as a national barometer on independence.

Replying to the party leader’s post, Ballot Box Scotland said: “Please don't make the first person I have to wag my psephological finger at and go 'you can't use individual council by-elections as a national barometer, never mind an Islands council by-election' in this council term a party leader, Alex!”

Pollster Mark McGeoghegan agreed, telling Cole-Hamilton he wouldn’t consider the council by-election a sign of national change.

He said: “The SNP won 19.2% of first prefs in Eilean Siar in 2017. They then won the 2019 GE there with 45.1% of the vote, and the 2021 Scottish elections with 51.4%. Voting for independents in local elections, and SNP nationally is the norm. I wouldn't consider this a sign of change.”

The politician replied to McGeoghegan: “I’m sure you find that comforting.”

McGeoghegan responded: “Given I don't have an interest either way, Alex, I don't feel much about it - your analysis just wasn't based on empirical fact.”

McGeoghegan later reacted to the reply from the LibDem leader, saying: “Seriously?

“Twitter randoms and activists implying, or outright accusing, commentators/pollsters/analysts of compromised/biased analysis is par for the course. It's unbecoming of a supposedly serious leader of a political party.”

Scottish Women’s Health Minister Maree Todd said: “We could all take a lesson in losing confidently from the Lib Dems. Grateful they’re not winning - we’re all still paying the tragic price for their decisions when they were in government with the Tories.”

The Scottish MSP then linked to a BMJ report showing “worrying changes” in life expectancy in the age of austerity in a reference to the 2010 Tory/LibDem UK Government coalition.

A Scottish Greens spokesperson said: "Nobody can make clear the absurdity of the unionist position quite like Alex Cole-Hamilton.

"The people of Scotland have repeatedly returned pro-independence majorities to both the Scottish and UK Parliaments. Their democratic will must be fulfilled."

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.