Anas Sarwar named fresh leader of Scottish Labour Party

28 February, 2021
Anas Sarwar named fresh leader of Scottish Labour Party
Scottish Labour named Anas Sarwar as its innovative leader in Saturday, before an election for the country's devolved parliament on May.

Mr Sarwar, a good Glasgow person in the Scottish parliament (MSP), was selected after beating fellow MSP Monica Lennon by 57.6 per cent of the vote to 42.4 %.

He is the primary Muslim and first person in an ethnic minority group to lead a major political party found in the UK.

He replaces Richard Leonard, who quit simply because leader in January. Mr Leonard explained it was in the very best interests of the get together for him to stand down prior to the election.

Opposition Labour's fortunes have flagged found in Scotland, with the Scottish National Get together (SNP) the dominant force. Labour has 23 out of 129 seats in parliament.

"I want to say right to the persons of Scotland - I know Labour includes a lot of function to do to regain your trust because if we're brutally honest you haven't had the Scottish Labour get together you deserve," said Mr Sarwar, who was simply born in Glasgow in 1983 to Pakistani parents.

Mr Sarwar’s father, Mohammed, was the initial Muslim MP, elected to Glasgow Central in 1997, before becoming governor of the Punjab region found in Pakistan.

Mr Sarwar said his primary memory of politics was threat built against his mother.

He recalled opening a good hand-delivered envelope at his childhood home in 1997 to visit a mocked-up picture of his mother with a good gun to her brain and a message having said that: “Bang, bang, that’s all it takes.”

Despite racist threats and abuse, Mr Sarwar left his job as a dentist this year 2010 to enter the world of politics, winning the same Westminster seat as his father in an election where Labour lost power following 13 years to a coalition of the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats.

In 2015, he lost his seat to the SNP’s Alison Thewliss as the party swept Scotland, winning all but among the country's constituencies.

SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon wants a solid showing from her get together in the election in May 6 to hand her a mandate to carry a second referendum about independence - something UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he would not approve.

Opinion polls indicate almost all of folks in Scotland back a second referendum.

But the SNP is in the midst of a bitter row between Ms Sturgeon and her predecessor Alex Salmond that could eventually place pressure on her behalf to resign and threatens to damage the independence motion.
Source: www.thenationalnews.com
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