Tag: vote

  • Politics over mafia don Atiq Ahmed as SP, BSP eye Muslim vote bank for 2024

    Politics over mafia don Atiq Ahmed as SP, BSP eye Muslim vote bank for 2024

    [ad_1]

    Lucknow: Both the Samajwadi Party (SP) and Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) in Uttar Pradesh have been engaged in attracting the votes of the Muslim community, by softening their stand on mafia don Atiq Ahmed.

    SP Secretary General Ram Gopal Yadav has come forward in support of Ahmed’s minor sons.

    Yadav said that the police are unable to find the real accused in the Prayagraj incident and that there was pressure on them to catch and frame anyone. He added that Ahmed’s two sons were caught on the first day of the incident itself.

    Yadav stated that it is suspected that one of them may have been killed. He said that the Constitution of India gives every citizen the fundamental right to life and the police cannot just apprehend someone and kill them, as that is a punishable offence.

    The SP leader added that those who have done fake encounters will be prosecuted for murder.

    He said that the culprits of Umesh Pal murder case should be punished severely but called the policies adopted by the state government destructive.

    A senior SP leader said that the party, which has emerged as the largest opposition in the 2022 Assembly elections, does not want to lose the Muslim vote bank as the community has played a big role in strengthening it.

    In the 2017 elections, 24 Muslim MLAs were elected, out of which 17 won on SP tickets, which increased to a total of 34 MLAs being elected in 2022, of which 31 were from SP.

    BSP Chief Mayawati raised questions on the encounter of two of the four accused involved in the murder of Umesh Pal and said that the actions taken by the police in this matter have raised doubts within the minds of the people about the rule of law in Uttar Pradesh.

    She questioned whether the government would repeat the ‘Vikas Dubey scandal’ to cover up its failures.

    Mayawati added that the state government is under a lot of tension and pressure, especially regarding the law and order situation, over the murder of Umesh Pal in broad daylight.

    She said that the whole country had its eyes on the state government on whether it would follow the rule of law or stop crime by killing criminals on the streets.

    A BSP leader said that the party would perform well with the strong Dalit-Muslim alliance even if it does not team up with SP.

    He added that Mayawati knows that better results cannot be achieved only on the Dalit votebank, therefore, after the setback in the Assembly elections, BSP has been trying to reconnect with the prominent Muslim community.

    Significantly, the BSP was reduced to one seat and 13 per cent vote bank in the Assembly elections. Meanwhile, in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, 10 BSP MPs won when it was in alliance with SP, prior to which the BSP had zero seats in 2014 Lok Sabha elections.

    One of the major reasons behind the BSP’s poor performance in the Assembly polls was believed to be the one-sided vote of the Muslims for the SP. Even after giving 89 tickets to Muslim leaders, none of them had won.

    Political experts believe that SP got the Muslim vote bank in UP in bulk in the 2022 Assembly elections, but could not form the government. The party is now trying to save the votebank, which is why BSP leaders are giving such statements.

    Mayawati has included the Muslim leaders in her party to bring the community’s votes in her fold, by campaigning with leaders like Shah Alam aka Guddu Jamali from eastern UP and Imran Masood.

    New equations are seen getting formed over Muslim politics in the state, in such a situation, opposition parties will have to adopt new strategies to maintain their vote bank.

    BJP state spokesperson Avneesh Tyagi said that SP-BSP has dressed criminals in political garb and have nothing to do with the public.

    Adding that, the opposition parties raise questions when action is taken against the criminals, as they have been the patrons of mafias in the state.

    Senior political analyst Yogesh Mishra said that the SP and BSP built their empire by taking in criminals and there is no big mafia in the state who has not been a part of these parties.

    Mishra added that these parties are enchanted by criminals, which is why Mayawati and Ram Gopal Yadav are speaking in support of Atiq Ahmed.

    He said that Yadav is standing in support of Ahmed despite knowing that SP Chief Akhilesh Yadav does not like him.

    Mishra added that both the leaders are supporting Ahmed due to their personal interest of gaining minority votes.

    [ad_2]
    #Politics #mafia #don #Atiq #Ahmed #BSP #eye #Muslim #vote #bank

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • D.C. Council attempts to pull criminal code revisions before looming Senate vote

    D.C. Council attempts to pull criminal code revisions before looming Senate vote

    [ad_1]

    biden dc laws 40806

    Democratic D.C. Council Chair Phil Mendelson said at a press conference he had withdrawn the passed changes to D.C.’s criminal code. President Joe Biden said last week he would not veto a congressional resolution axing the updates, after the House passed a measure last month that would overturn the changes and the Senate is expected to clear that legislation this week. The measure only requires a simple Senate majority to pass, and a number of Democratic senators have indicated they would vote for it.

    “It’s clear that Congress is intending to override that legislation,” Mendelson told reporters.

    Whether he can do so is up for debate, however. Asked if the city council had withdrawn a bill before, Mendelson said “I have not found precedent” for doing so but argued there was no provision in the law against him pulling it back either.

    “There’s no prohibition on what I’m doing,” he said.

    It was not yet immediately clear if the D.C. Council could call back the legislation, which many in Congress have characterized as a “soft on crime” approach. Democratic D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser had vetoed the bill, saying it would not make the city safer, but the council overrode that veto.

    “The messaging got out of our control, and that the messaging got picked up by Republicans who wanted to make a campaign out of it for next year against Democrats,” Mendelson said.

    The House on Feb. 9 voted 250-173 to overturn the move by D.C.’s government to revise its criminal code, with 31 House Democrats joining Republicans. A Senate vote is expected this week.

    “If the Republicans want to proceed with a vote, it will be a hollow vote because it really isn’t there before them,” Mendelson argued.

    Mendelson said the congressional action would not affect how D.C. approaches city issues.

    “I don’t plan on doing a gut check. Let’s be clear, I don’t plan on installing a hotline to Republican leadership in the House in the Senate and calling them every week and asking for permission to move forward,” Mendelson said.

    [ad_2]
    #D.C #Council #attempts #pull #criminal #code #revisions #looming #Senate #vote
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Ask PM Modi why 60 pc electorate did not vote for BJP: Ex-Tripura CM Manik Sarkar

    Ask PM Modi why 60 pc electorate did not vote for BJP: Ex-Tripura CM Manik Sarkar

    [ad_1]

    Agartala: Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) leader and former Tripura CM Manik Sarkar on Saturday launched a scathing attack on Bharatiya Janata Party and said 60 per cent of the electorate did not vote for the BJP and asked the people to question Prime Minister Narendra Modi on this.

    While talking to ANI, Sarkar said, “One thing is very clear, 60 per cent of the electorate did not vote for the BJP. The anti-BJP vote has been divided. I don’t like to mention any party’s name. I have categorically made my point.”

    “Last time they got 50 plus (vote tally) but now it has gone down to 40 and their seats have also gone down. Why so, ask the Prime Minister. Muscle power, money power, and a large chunk of media were also with them. The central and state government offices were misused. They have just managed the majority numerically. This is not good for them,” Sarkar added.

    Sarkar further stated that the results of the Tripura Assembly polls were “unexpected” and alleged that the polls were converted to a “farce”.

    The former Tripura CM said, “It is unexpected as the government’s performance was zero, democracy was attacked and the electorate’s right to exercise franchise freely was snatched away. The polls were converted to a farce, and the Constitution didn’t work.”

    “The secular fabric of a state was destroyed. Because of all of this minorities were put under severe mental pressure. The crimes against mothers and sisters are rising like anything. On the other hand, the economic situation is very very bad. It is turning worse. There is no work, no income, and rampant starvation. In tribal areas in some pockets, parents are forced to sell their offspring,” he added.

    On the Congress-Left alliance failing in Tripura, he said, “It was not an alliance but a seat adjustment. The Congress and Left arrangement will get many more seats.”

    Attacking Mamata Banerjee led-Trinamool Congress, he said, “I want to ask what is Mamata Banerjee doing in West Bengal? TMC is destroying democracy there. Corruption is rising. Who does not know the things done by TMC leaders? BJP would not have won in two to three seats if TMC’s vote was not there. TMC came to help the BJP.”

    The former Tripura CM also targeted the post-poll violence in the state and said, “Post-poll violence started in the counting hall. That has spread throughout the state. Police are not doing any work. There must be instructions from the top. I will not blame the police. It is inhuman and barbaric. This is a dismal performance for the BJP.”

    Notably, in the recently held Tripura Assembly election, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) returned to power by winning an absolute majority.

    According to the Election Commission of India, BJP won 32 seats with a vote share of around 39 per cent.

    Tipra Motha Party came second, winning 13 seats. Communist Party of India (Marxist) got 11 seats while Congress bagged three seats. The Indigenous People’s Front of Tripura (IPFT) managed to open its account by winning one seat.

    The CPI(M) and the Congress, arch rivals in Kerala, came together in the Northeast this time in a bid to oust the BJP from power. The combined vote share of CPI(M) and Congress remained around 33 per cent.

    The BJP, which had never won a single seat in Tripura before 2018, stormed to power in the last election in alliance with IPFT and ousted the Left Front which had been in power in the border state for 35 years since 1978.

    The BJP contested on 55 seats and its ally, IPFT, on six seats. But both allies had fielded candidates in the Ampinagar constituency in the Gomati district.

    The Left contested on 47 and Congress on 13 seats, respectively. Of the total 47 seats, the CPM contested 43 seats while the Forward Bloc, Communist Party of India (CPI) and Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP) contested one seat each.

    The CPI(M)-led Left Front ruled the state for nearly four decades, with a gap between 1988 and 1993, when the Congress was in power but this time both parties joined hands with the intention to oust BJP from power.

    [ad_2]
    #Modi #electorate #vote #BJP #ExTripura #Manik #Sarkar

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Welcome to the Democratic majority: Bernie Sanders will hold a vote to subpoena Starbucks’ Howard Schultz next week.

    Welcome to the Democratic majority: Bernie Sanders will hold a vote to subpoena Starbucks’ Howard Schultz next week.

    [ad_1]

    20230123 senate francis 8
    It’s Democrats’ first use of their new subpoena power now that they have a real majority in the chamber

    [ad_2]
    #Democratic #majority #Bernie #Sanders #hold #vote #subpoena #StarbucksHoward #Schultz #week
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Vote for Awami League to continue development efforts: Sheikh Hasina

    Vote for Awami League to continue development efforts: Sheikh Hasina

    [ad_1]

    Dhaka: Bangladesh Prime Minister and Awami League (AL) President Sheikh Hasina reiterated her appeal to the countrymen to vote for her party’s election symbol “Boat” to continue the current government’s endeavours to ensure the country’s overall development.

    Announcing the date of the next national election during a grand rally at Helipad Ground in Kishoreganj, she said: “The next national election will be held in December next or January, 2024. I urge you to again vote for the ‘Boat’ and bring Awami League to power and thus give another scope to serve you.”

    “Bangladesh has turned around in the last 14 years and has achieved dignity by transforming into a developing nation… Bangladesh has appeared as the role model for the development,” she added.

    Mentioning that the BNP was formed illegally by Ziaur Rahman, a military dictator who grabbed power violating the county’s constitution, Hasina said, “They (BNP) can give nothing to the people rather can torture and loot them.”

    “Whenever had the BNP-Jamaat clique assumed power, they brought untold sufferings for the countrymen and on the contrary, whenever Awami League was voted to power, the fate of the people changed,” the AL chief asserted.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Vote #Awami #League #continue #development #efforts #Sheikh #Hasina

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The 5 oddest moments as Chicagoans vote for mayor

    The 5 oddest moments as Chicagoans vote for mayor

    [ad_1]

    Before this contest fizzles into a two-person runoff in April, here are the big, weird, lowbrow moments as voters cast their Election Day ballots:

    Conservative Democrat — or Republican spy!

    Former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas is running to the right of Mayor Lori Lightfoot, politically squishy on abortion rights, pushing to flood the streets with more cops and getting the backing of the conservative Fraternal Order of Police. Although he told Block Club Chicago in mid-February that he is a “lifelong Democrat,” his rivals say everything adds up to being a Republican.

    “What I feel like I am listening to is a version of Extreme Makeover: Paul Vallas Edition,” Lightfoot said during a January debate.

    The speculation mainly stems from a 2009 interview, where Vallas said he was “more of a Republican than a Democrat now” and that he does not support abortion rights for religious reasons. He also said he was a fan of Rudy Giuliani during his presidential run at the time. Lightfoot ran with those sound bites, using the interview clips in an ad that closed with: “Paul Vallas is a Republican. Just ask him.”

    Vallas accepted the Fraternal Order of Police’s endorsement by saying it represents support from the union’s rank-and-file officers, rather than its controversial leadership that has commended fatal police shootings, resisted vaccine mandates and posted inflammatory and racist things on social media.

    ‘Hunt them down like …’

    Ever since his son was killed in a 1995 drug-related shooting, Willie Wilson, a perennial candidate who has run for president, Senate and another three times for mayor, has taken a strong anti-crime, police-friendly stance. But during a January debate, arguing that Lightfoot wasn’t doing enough to curb Chicago’s violence, he said she needs to “take the handcuffs off the police” and allow officers to “chase [somebody] down and hunt them down like a rabbit.”

    The line instantly attracted jeers and is perhaps his most attention-getting moment of the race (even at his rallies).

    Lightfoot said Wilson was unfairly targeting Black and brown men. Community activist Ja’Mal Green said it was “disgusting” to have an older man “who was a sharecropper from down South who would get on TV and constantly double down on hunting people down like rabbits.”

    “I don’t respond to kids,” Wilson responded.

    Wilson has a policing plan that includes bolstering police presence on city transit and installing more cameras throughout Chicago, but his main philosophy goes beyond that. “I don’t care what color you are. … I’m gon‘ lock ‘em up. And they get out again, we’ll lock ‘em back up. Because crime has no color,” Wilson told The TRiiBE in January.

    Tricky Twitter fingers

    The weekend before the election, the Chicago Tribune reported that Vallas’ official Twitter account had liked several inflammatory posts that bashed Lightfoot or had racist connotations. Some referred to the city’s first openly gay mayor as “Larry” rather than “Lori” and others made fun of her appearance and height, while another called her “beyond human.”

    Still other tweets promoted “stop-and-frisk” policies as potential policing solutions — things that did not help dispel the idea that Vallas might be a Republican.

    First, Vallas said he had nothing to do with those likes, as he doesn’t personally manage the account, and that his team was trying to identify who was responsible. Some of the liked tweets predate his campaign announcement, the Tribune reported.

    The candidate told CBS News on Saturday that his account had been hacked altogether: “Even though we shut down our system; changed our password, they’re still trying to hack us.”

    But he denied the tweets in question were “the R word” — or racist.

    Civil service campaign fodder

    The top four candidates in the race — Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García, Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson, Vallas and Lightfoot — dominated the airwaves during the election, with more than $7 million spent across 40 ads. But it was García, who ran for mayor before in 2015, who mishandled a TV spot, which included a clip of two uniformed CPD officers walking down a street with the candidate under the caption “fully fund community policing.”

    The Chicago Board of Ethics said they were never consulted by his campaign on using images of uniformed officers ahead of the release. CPD’s policies state officers cannot participate in partisan or political activity, though their image can be used in campaigns as part of documenting a specific event. García later released a reedited version of his ad with generic images of a police car and law enforcement uniforms.

    Lightfoot had her own public service dustup.

    A letter from Lightfoot’s campaign team to CPS and City Colleges of Chicago employees in January sought to recruit student volunteers to “help Mayor Lightfoot win this spring.”

    The emails were a “common practice to provide young people with the opportunity to engage with our campaign [and] done using publicly available contact information,” the campaign said in an initial statement. But Johnson and García panned the move as “desperate.”

    Lightfoot later apologized, attributing the “mistake” to a “young staffer,” and that seemed to be it, only for the public to discover it wasn’t an innocent — if inappropriate — one-off. It was one of thousands.

    Chicago news outlets found that Lightfoot’s campaign had been sending similar notes to city school employees for months. The requests included fundraising, invitations to town halls and requests for help gathering petitions — totalling almost 10,000 emails since April. Lightfoot’s team repeated that it was a mistake and that they had “long since halted any such recruitment efforts,” despite dozens of employees continuing to receive emails after the campaign said they had stopped.

    The Board of Ethics is still investigating the matter and has not made additional comments.

    Property wars

    Few things are worse to a Chicagoan than someone mouthing off about the city only to find out they’re from the suburbs. WTTW reported in February that Vallas listed his permanent residence as an address in south suburban Palos Heights — a 20-minute drive from the edge of Chicago’s southern neighborhood of Beverly.

    The county assessor’s office did look into Vallas’ residency but closed their investigation since a mayoral candidate only has to live in the city for a year before announcing their candidacy. Vallas says he lives full-time in the South Side neighborhood of Bridgeport, a 12-minute drive from downtown, while his wife is the primary resident at their Palos Heights home. Other candidates also own property outside the city limits, which made the episode feel like a waste of time.

    That didn’t stop Lightfoot from getting in a jab while she voted early last week: “I’m glad my wife lives in the city of Chicago and can vote for me, unlike some.”



    [ad_2]
    #oddest #moments #Chicagoans #vote #mayor
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Bangladesh ‘constrained’ to abstain from vote on UNGA resolution on Ukraine

    Bangladesh ‘constrained’ to abstain from vote on UNGA resolution on Ukraine

    [ad_1]

    Dhaka: Bangladesh was “constrained” to abstain from the UNGA vote on Ukraine as it believes that the resolution lacked “intensive” diplomatic engagement and “dialogue” between the parties involved in the conflict, a government official said on Sunday.

    “Bangladesh continues to remain concerned over the loss of civilian lives, the deteriorating humanitarian situation in conflict zone, and consequential socio-economic fallout around the globe and calls for cessation of hostilities,” the Dhaka Tribune quoted Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Seheli Sabrin as saying.

    Bangladesh pursues a peace-centric foreign policy based on the principles of respect for all states, peaceful settlement of international disputes, and in line with principles of the United Nations charter, Sabrin said.

    The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution on Thursday that demanded Russia leave Ukraine. The resolution got 141 votes in favor, seven against while 32 countries abstained.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Bangladesh #constrained #abstain #vote #UNGA #resolution #Ukraine

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Talking to Indian leaders before UN vote on Ukraine: French diplomatic sources

    Talking to Indian leaders before UN vote on Ukraine: French diplomatic sources

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: Ahead of the voting on the UN’s draft resolution on Ukraine, the French diplomatic sources on Tuesday said they were in contact with political leaders in New Delhi but were not very hopeful that India will not abstain.

    The UN General Assembly will vote this week on the draft resolution underscoring the urgency to find lasting peace in Ukraine, a year after Moscow invaded its neighbour.

    On a question, if India would again abstain from voting in UNGA on the Ukraine-Russia conflict, they said India is not very likely to join one side or another but they are “working on it”.

    “It’s always a question of balance…We do have contact with the political leaders of India. At this stage, we still don’t know what will be the position of the government. Most likely it will be abstention but we are still working on it. We have a very candid discussion with them. There is no secret agenda or whatever. So then it’s their decision,” a French diplomatic source said.

    India has mostly abstained on resolutions related to the Russia-Ukraine war in the UN, including in the Security Council, General Assembly and the Human Rights Council.

    India has repeatedly called on Russia and Ukraine to return to the path of diplomacy and dialogue and end their ongoing conflict.

    Calling India a major player in the Ukraine-Russia issue, they said France and India have a “very fruitful” partnership and a history of intense political dialogue, allowing a “very fruitful” partnership and history of intense political dialogue which allows them to discuss all issues, even the complex ones.

    Noting that France and the EU and India were not on the “exact same position” on the Ukraine issue, the source said,”but you may also have noticed that there were some slight changes in the public statement made by Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi about the world saying this is not the era of war.”

    “It was a very important statement by the Prime Minister…We are aligned that we all want to reduce the risk of escalation and we all want to try to find the way towards peace and on that, India is also very clear,” the diplomatic source added.

    The source said the ties between India and Russia can be used as a channel to work toward peace.

    “And as you know, there is an important link between the Indian and Russian governments, and we ask the Indian government to use these links with the Russian counterparts to help us in a way towards peace. It’s a long way. It’s a long process,” the source said.

    “But yes, we do have this kind of discussion on a very frequent basis with India,” the source said.

    The source said it is also important to remember that for the EU, this war on Ukraine is not a way to lose focus on the Indo-Pacific issues.

    “We still have an important Indo-Pacific agenda,” the source said.

    On the Ukraine-Russia conflict, the French diplomatic sources said France has made it very clear that Russia “cannot and must not win this war”.

    “So we are ready to face an extended conflict in Ukraine and we are prepared to support in the long run and as long as needed Ukraine in defending its own territory,” the source said.

    “This being said, we have always been very attentive to keep the channels open with Moscow,” the source said.

    “We have a peace plan on the table by President Zelensky. But that hasn’t received a positive answer from Moscow. So we are at this moment supporting Ukraine in its defence of its own territory, but we also keep channels open for the moment for negotiation,” the source said.

    [ad_2]
    #Talking #Indian #leaders #vote #Ukraine #French #diplomatic #sources

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Mass protests in Israel as lawmakers prepare 1st vote on judicial overhaul

    Mass protests in Israel as lawmakers prepare 1st vote on judicial overhaul

    [ad_1]

    Jersalem: Israeli protesters gathered outside the Parliament building in Jerusalem as Israel’s far-right government is pressing ahead with a controversial overhaul of the judicial system and ready to hold the first vote on two bills.

    A spokesperson with the Jerusalem district’s police told Xinhua news agency that “tens of thousands” of people attended several massive rallies in the city on Monday.

    Inside Parliament, lawmakers were preparing to hold the first vote on two bills aimed at curbing the Supreme Court’s oversight over legislation and increasing politicians’ influence over the court.

    The vote is the first stage of three rounds of votes, after which the bills will become law, kick-starting the government’s planned overhaul.

    One bill aims to alter the composition of the nine-member committee that appoints judges in a way that would limit the influence of legal professionals and grant the government an outright majority.

    If approved, the law would enable the government to choose judges.

    The other bill calls to eliminate the Supreme Court’s authority to invalidate basic laws passed by the Knesset, or the Parliament, even if they are unconstitutional.

    The bills are the first two in a series of bills pushed forward by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ultra-religious and ultranationalist coalition government, which according to critics will undermine the democratic foundations of Israel.

    Netanyahu and his coalition partners argue that the plan aims to address the excessive influence of courts and legal advisers in lawmaking and decision-making.

    Many protesters arrived in Jerusalem in convoys from across the country, blocking major routes on their way.

    The protest started at dawn, with dozens of off-duty reserve soldiers rallying outside the home of Simcha Rothman, one of the leading lawmakers of the reform, in the settlement of Pnei Kedem.

    Similar demonstrations were held outside the homes of other members of the coalition across the country.

    A major concern of the protesters is that the reform will concentrate power in Netanyahu’s hands.

    Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving leader, is facing trial over corruption charges and Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara has warned his involvement in proposed reform puts him in a conflict of interest.

    Earlier in the day, Netanyahu accused the protesters of “trampling democracy” and “not accepting the results of the election” during his speech at the Knesset.

    He said his coalition is open to a dialogue with critics of the reform but will press ahead with the planned votes in the Knesset.

    [ad_2]
    #Mass #protests #Israel #lawmakers #prepare #1st #vote #judicial #overhaul

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Sturgeon exit may delay new Scotland independence vote by five years

    Sturgeon exit may delay new Scotland independence vote by five years

    [ad_1]

    Senior figures in the Scottish National party believe Nicola Sturgeon’s shock resignation could delay their effort to stage another independence referendum by at least five years.

    The party’s national executive committee confirmed on Thursday evening that Sturgeon’s plan – to stage a special conference on her proposals to use the next election as a single-issue “de facto referendum” on independence – had been scrapped.

    The committee, which met online, also said that nominations for the leadership contest, which it revealed had opened at midnight on Wednesday, would close at noon on 24 February.

    The vote among the SNP’s 100,000-plus membership will open at noon on Monday 13 March and close at noon 14 days later, on 27 March.

    The committee said the special conference had been “postponed” but it remains far from clear whether the next SNP leader and first minister will adopt Sturgeon’s risky argument that a general or Holyrood election could serve as a proxy referendum.

    Angus Robertson, the party’s former Westminster leader and current bookmakers’ favourite, is widely expected to be among the first to declare his candidacy on Friday, with Humza Yousaf, the health secretary, Kate Forbes, the finance secretary – currently on maternity leave – and Ash Regan, a former minister, all tipped to join the race.

    John Swinney, Sturgeon’s experienced and widely respected deputy, who was SNP leader 20 years ago, confirmed on Thursday night that he will not contest the election.

    The party’s executive meeting was hurriedly convened after Sturgeon stunned the political world and many voters by unexpectedly revealing on Wednesday morning she had decided to quit as party leader – a step many had expected in 2025 or 2026 at the earliest.

    Nicola Sturgeon: the moments that marked her leadership – video

    In a long reflective statement at her official residence in Edinburgh, Sturgeon said the relentless pressures of being first minister had taken an emotional and psychological toll. Aged 52, and after 25 years in frontline politics, she wanted a different career and privacy.

    “The nature and form of modern political discourse means there is a much greater intensity – dare I say it, brutality – to life as a politician than in years gone by,” she said. “All in all, it takes its toll on you and on those around you.”

    MPs and MSPs from across the party, including potential leadership candidates, said on Thursday the conference should be dropped or postponed to allow the next leader to decide their own independence strategy.

    While many SNP members support Sturgeon’s proposal – introduced as her plan B after the UK supreme court ruled out allowing Holyrood to stage a referendum without Westminster’s approval – it is widely disliked by non-SNP voters and by SNP MPs.

    With support for independence hovering at about 45% and rarely rising above 50%, SNP parliamentarians fear a single-issue election campaign will alienate voters much more worried about the cost of living or the NHS, and could cost SNP MPs their seats.

    Speaking privately, senior sources acknowledged that with the next general election due in 2024 and a Holyrood election in 2026, it would be unrealistic to propose staging a second referendum until after those elections were fought or without a substantial, consistent majority in favour of independence.

    One source said delaying a fresh referendum would leave the next leader with the challenge of how they could offer independence to voters without promising a referendum. But the first task was to focus on securing and improving the SNP’s shaky domestic policy record, they said.

    Another said: “The special conference has to be paused until a new leader is elected, and the focus needs to move away from the process around a referendum to sustaining popular support for independence.”

    skip past newsletter promotion

    One cautioned, however, that SNP members could rebel against suggestions of a long delay to a second referendum, and could force leadership candidates to embrace a quicker timetable.

    A supporter of Sturgeon’s call for a single-issue election campaign rejected suggestions the referendum could be delayed until later in the decade. He said Westminster’s repeated refusal to allow a referendum meant the SNP had to force the issue at an election.

    “If you face a democratic roadblock you have to overcome it,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Talking about process for five years will be utterly pointless. We want a leader who will communicate their vision for independence and excite people.”

    Stewart McDonald, until recently the SNP’s defence spokesperson at Westminster, said postponing the de facto referendum debate was essential.

    The key challenge for the next leader, McDonald said, was “how do we get ourselves into a position where we get sustained majority support for independence and get ourselves to the promised land of a referendum we can win”.

    Earlier on Thursday, Stephen Flynn, the SNP’s Westminster leader, said the special conference should be pushed back to give the new leader time to set out their intentions. “It’s sensible that we do hit the pause button on that conference and allow the new leader the opportunity to set out their vision,” he told Sky News.

    That proposal was supported by Michael Russell, the party’s president, who told BBC Scotland on Thursday morning: “There is a question to be asked as to whether that should be postponed whilst the leader comes into place.”

    Russell, one of the SNP’s most senior figures, said Sturgeon had touched on that prospect in her speech on Wednesday. Although he supported Sturgeon’s stance on how to fight the next general election, he said: “I think it’s a matter that needs to be discussed.”

    Richard Thomson, an MP from the north-east of Scotland, once the SNP’s heartland, said he had no fears about using an election as a proxy referendum but said that was much less satisfactory than a legally constituted referendum.

    “I think a referendum is still the best way, the democratic way, the way that people in Scotland have expressed a preference to go,” he said.

    “Whatever route you take, you want to be in a position where you’re not just going to squeak it, but you’re actually going to win it and win it convincingly, such that everybody can accept the result.”

    [ad_2]
    #Sturgeon #exit #delay #Scotland #independence #vote #years
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )