- Welfare concessions: Government should pull the bill that still “risks stripping thousands of carers of vital assistance”
- Scot Lib Dems win from 5th place in ultra-competitive Edinburgh bellwether
Welfare concessions: Government should pull the bill that still “risks stripping thousands of carers of vital assistance”
Responding to the Government announcing concessions on the welfare bill, Liberal Democrat Work and Pensions spokesperson Steve Darling MP said:
It should not have taken a major rebellion for the Government to realise that these cuts would cause immense damage to some of the most vulnerable and risk creating a false economy by actually forcing some people out of work.
The Government should still pull this bill before the vote on Tuesday and go back to the drawing board. In the absence of any impact assessment, MPs still do not have the full facts and those who are affected have still not been consulted on these changes.
Liberal Democrats will continue to oppose this bill that risks stripping thousands of carers of vital assistance and leaving some of the most vulnerable without support.
Scot Lib Dems win from 5th place in ultra-competitive Edinburgh bellwether
Scottish Liberal Democrats candidate Kevin McKay has won the highly contested Fountainbridge/Craiglockhart by-election, a ward in which the party finished in fifth place at the 2022 election.
On first preferences, Labour got 20.8%, the Liberal Democrats 20.4% (almost trebling their vote share), Scottish Greens 18.2%, SNP 14.5% (losing more than a third of their vote share), the Conservatives 13.8% (losing almost half their vote share), while Reform UK polled just 7.9%.
However, once second preferences had been redistributed, the Lib Dems secured 2316 votes while Labour got 2219 votes.
Commenting on the result, Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Alex Cole-Hamilton said:
I am delighted for Kevin, he will be a true local champion for people in Fountainbridge/Craiglockhart.
This is a seat where all the major parties will have fancied their chances but in the end Reform underperformed, the SNP slumped and the Conservatives collapsed.
Meanwhile Scottish Liberal Democrats delivered a campaign focused on the issues that mattered most to local people and that has delivered us a fantastic victory from fifth place.
This result shows that we are on the up across the city and across the country ahead of next year’s election. Wherever you live you should vote to elect a Liberal Democrat local champion on your regional ballot next May.
Kevin McKay said:
I am delighted to have been successfully elected in this by-election, in such a diverse ward, that was closely contested by all the major parties as well as a number of independents.
Serving on the Craiglockhart Community Council gave me a unique insight into the issues that really mattered to local people including the state of the roads, parking and our environment.
I am proud to be part of an astonishing victory by the Lib Dems and I look forward to serving the people of Ward 9, Fountainbridge/Craiglockhart.
3 Comments
An interesting result in Edinburgh giving an indication of where the big parties stand in terms of what proportion of their voters are transferred to the other parties when they are eliminated.
Clearly finishing a close second was the vital first step to our ultimate victory, and being only 24 behind Labour, and 136 ahead of the Greens is a testament to the effective hard work the local Lib Dems put in to enable our ultimate triumph, and once the ‘fun’ candidates and minor parties were removed, we were still in second place 14 behind Labour and 146 ahead of the Greens.
Then Reform’s 489 first preferences plus 23 transfers were re-allocated. Of those 40% had no further preference, 38% were Conservative, 8% to us (so we must not allow a narrative that they are all rabid lunatics to become the norm), 6% Labour, 4% SNP, but only 2% Green.
This can be done at every later stage, and all provide useful insights for consideration, but to me the other very important one is the reallocation of the 1,109 Conservative votes. At this stage (with the important caveats there was no longer a Reform candidate to transfer to and the Conservative vote now included nearly 200 Reform first choices), we got 35%, Labour 15%, Greens 4% and 46% were None of the above.
All in all, it seems we are a good second choice for many soft Conservatives.
The question is how prepared are we to go and get them.
@David Evans
Conservatives moving to the Liberal Democrats is to be welcomed, encouraged, and campaigned for. That is not the same as the Liberal Democrats moving towards Conservative Party voters by adopting Tory-light policies or language.
In case anyone’s interested in the details, I’ve put the vote count for this by-election online at
https://www.mollison.org/26jun25/