Tory councillors stay quiet over leadership fight

Most of Argyll and Bute’s Conservative councillors are keeping their cards close to their chests over who should become their party’s new leader.

The LDR service emailed all nine councillors who were elected as Conservatives at the last local government election in Argyll and Bute in 2017 asking who they were backing in the fight to replace Theresa May.

Only two expressed a preference, while a third said he had ‘no view’ – and the remaining six had not replied by lunchtime on Friday, June 7.

Yvonne McNeilly, who switched from the Labour Party to the Tories in 2014 and represents Cowal, is backing Rory Stewart, while Alastair Redman (Kintyre and the Islands) said he supported Boris Johnson.

Mrs May formally stood down as leader of the party on Friday June 7. It is anticipated that a new leader, and thereby Prime Minister, will be in place by the end of July.

Cllr McNeilly said: “My journey to Ruth Davidson’s Conservatives was five years ago. I had been a Labour member of 35 years and a former senior councillor.

“I knew where the party was going, but never in a million years did I expect Jeremy Corbyn. I am a full-on centre ground person.

“If he manages to stay in, I support Rory Stewart.

“He is bang centre ground, engages with people and their concerns, has a massive backstory and has come right up and said we need to heal and also said bring love into the story.

“I have never in all my 30 years of public life experienced such division, lack of reasoned debate, any search for common ground, purpose, and real lack of confidence in our democracy.

“The rest of the hard line no deal Brexiteers are disasters. If any of them are elected then the Scottish Party needs to look long and hard at the position they find themselves in.

“All the genies are out of all the bottles – once they are out, they can’t go back in. [It] will give a lot of ‘Remain’ centre ground people a lot of thinking to do.”

Meanwhile, Cllr Redman has a different view on who is best placed to become the next person to lead the country.

Alastair Redman backs Boris Johnson

He said: “The choice for our next Prime Minister for myself is a very easy one. I, like so many other Conservative and Unionist party members, will be backing Boris Johnson to lead our party and our country.

“Boris is committed to delivering the democratic will of the people to take the UK out of the restrictive and outdated EU.

“Boris also has a proven track record of winning over many voters who have not traditionally voted Conservative and his social media campaigning is among the best in the country.

“He has particularity good relations with the current US leadership and the leaders of the Commonwealth nations.

“These good relationships will be immensely important as we are free to secure overseas trade deals when we leave the shackles of the EU.

“It’s clear that voters from across every corner of our United Kingdom want a leader who is willing to speak their mind honestly and openly in a world weighed down by so much PC nonsense.

“Boris will always put our union first making sure that we keep not only Scotland in our United Kingdom but also will also keep our Ulster province in the UK.

“For all these reasons and many more I’m proudly backing Boris.”

David Kinniburgh (Helensburgh and Lomond South) said he had ‘no view’.

Five more – Bobby Good, Gary Mulvaney, Donald Kelly, Andrew Vennard and Barbara Morgan – had not responded to enquiries sent by email to their council addresses, while Sir Jamie McGrigor’s inbox sent back an automated ‘out of office’ reply.

1 Comment

  1. Politics is a rough old game. The Tories aim to pick another leader but regardless of the outcome we will be no further forward. If Boris is selected look out for a successful Scottish independence referendum; the man might be intellectually bright but an an idiot just the same. Will we see those with sense try to run two candidates other than Boris to put to the members?

    We will probably get a “leaver” but there are too many throughout Westminster that cannot stomach the various versions of economic suicide that are on offer to allow it to happen and another “leader” will bite the dust.

    According to the newspapers Labour is just as undecided. Scottish Leader Leonard says we need another Brexit vote to put it to the people while UK leader Corbyn says that we must not have another vote. Labour is all over the place and nobody had any idea of what they stand for.

    We, in Scotland, voted overwhelmingly to remain and I suspect that if the vote was run again it would be a landslide. Pick the bones out of these conflicting scenarios.

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