Douglas Ross: I’m not avoiding Rutherglen by-election campaign
The Scottish Tory leader said he was not avoiding the constituency which will be the site of a by-election before the end of the year.
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Your support makes all the difference.Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross has rejected the assertion he is avoiding the Rutherglen and Hamilton West constituency despite not campaigning for the upcoming by-election in the seat.
A fresh vote will be held before the end of this year to replace Margaret Ferrier – the former MP who was convicted of breaching Covid regulations – with the SNP and Labour expected to be battling it out for the constituency.
While both parties have been pushing hard in the South Lanarkshire seat – with SNP leader Humza Yousaf undertaking campaigning visits numerous times as well as UK Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar.
While Mr Ross was visiting a business at Prestwick Airport in Ayrshire, Mr Sarwar and UK Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner were in Rutherglen and Hamilton West.
However, the Scottish Tory leader said he was “absolutely not” avoiding the seat, saying there had not actually been a by-election called and adding that he would be campaigning with his candidate, Thomas Kerr.
He told the PA news agency: “I’ve confirmed I’ll be there supporting Thomas, as I say, he’s already launched his campaign, he’s already doing activity there with our local campaigners and I’ll be very proud to support Thomas in that by-election.”
Mr Ross was speaking in the wake of a YouGov poll released on Wednesday which saw his party fall in support at both Westminster and Holyrood, with Labour gaining on the SNP’s lead in a future general election.
Responding to the news, he said: “These opinion polls go up and down, I don’t get too excited when the polls go up, I don’t get too de-motivated when they go down.
“I think we’ve got to look at the next election and we’re some way off of that.”
The poll, he said, would see the party retain its six seats north of the border, while he claimed the SNP would “fall very far backwards”.
Asked if he was still the right man to lead the Tories north of the border, Mr Ross said: “Yes, absolutely.”
Last week, one of the party’s key frontbenchers announced he would seek a seat at Westminster and relinquish his Holyrood position if he won.
Dr Sandesh Gulhane, the only working doctor in the current Parliament, will seek the East Renfrewshire seat at the election expected next year.
Former education spokesman Stephen Kerr lost his job on the front bench of the party after his plans to run for Westminster were revealed, but Dr Gulhane has remained in post.
Asked why this was the case, Mr Ross said: “Sandesh is uniquely placed to speak on health matters.
“We have 129 MSPs in the Scottish Parliament and only one of them is a qualified, practising GP.
“I think it would have been wrong to have taken that expertise away from the front bench and the health debate and I was delighted that Sandesh agreed to stay on.”