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Swinney: Scotland must be alive to the threat of Farage after English elections

Swinney: Scotland must be alive to the threat of Farage after English elections

John Swinney accused Labour and the Conservatives of making a 'fundamental mistake' by 'cosying up' to the right-wing party.
Reform UK won its first mayor during the local elections south of the border, and came second to Labour in another two, while it also overturned a large Labour majority at a Westminster by-election.
Results are still pouring in from England's council elections but Mr Farage's party already returned more than 100 councillors by Friday afternoon.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage celebrates the party's results in England's local elections (Jacob King/PA)
Speaking to the PA news agency in Glasgow during a climate conference, Mr Swinney accused the former Ukip leader of giving voters 'false hope'.
'The results coming in from England demonstrate that Farage is a real political threat,' he said, 'and the Labour and Conservative parties have made fundamental mistakes in dealing with Farage because they have cosied up to them, rather than confronting them.
'The Scottish National Party has every intention of confronting the politics of Farage because they are politics that are populist, they are deceptive, they give people false hope, and they blame others, and the SNP will confront those politics.'
Asked if Reform UK's victories could be replicated at next year's Holyrood elections, the SNP leader said: 'We've got to be alive to the political threat from Farage and the answer to Farage is to confront him – it's not to cosy up to him.
'The Labour Party and the Conservatives have cosied up to Farage, and look where it's got them in England.
'Well, I have absolutely no intention of cosying up to Farage.
'I'll give the political leadership to the SNP and to Scotland that will confront the politics of Farage, because his politics are divisive, they provide people with false hopes, and they are fundamentally damaging to our society and our democratic values, and they have to be confronted.'
Polling suggests Reform UK could return a number of MSPs to Holyrood next year (Andrew Cowan/Scottish Parliament/PA)
Mr Swinney was speaking after appearing at The Better Society Academy, a climate conference at The Social Hub in Glasgow on Friday.
Recent polling has suggested Reform UK – which does not currently have a Scottish leader – could return more than 10 MSPs to the Scottish Parliament next year.
A Survation poll on Friday put support for Reform UK on 14% for the constituency vote at Holyrood and 12% for the regional list. The Tories stood at 13% and 16% respectively.
The survey, carried out on behalf of Diffley Partnership, found 36% of people are planning to vote for Mr Swinney's party on the constituency section of the ballot, with 28% saying they will support the SNP on the regional list section of the vote.
Support for Anas Sarwar's Scottish Labour was at 22% on both the constituency and the regional list ballot, according to the poll.
Last week, Mr Swinney chaired a summit to battle the rise of the far-right, which he said included Reform UK.
In response, Reform UK – which was not invited – described the SNP leader as a 'democracy denier' and accused him of being scared of the party's popularity.
Labour, the Conservatives and Reform UK have been approached for comment.
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Scottish Enterprise panned for lack of checks on Israeli-linked arms firms
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The National

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Scottish Enterprise panned for lack of checks on Israeli-linked arms firms

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The unexpected party that could topple Labour dominance in Cardiff by-election

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Scottish MSP calls for Donald Trump to pay to cover costs of his recent visit
Scottish MSP calls for Donald Trump to pay to cover costs of his recent visit

Edinburgh Live

timean hour ago

  • Edinburgh Live

Scottish MSP calls for Donald Trump to pay to cover costs of his recent visit

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