Proportion of people getting in-person test results in 24 hours has halved, latest figures show
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Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, has accused the Scottish and UK governments of failing to collaborate effectively on the coronavirus and fighting endless constitutional wars over Brexit and independence, in an op ed for the Scotsman.
Starmer is visiting Scotland for the first time as leader today with the Scottish party in crisis: five days ago the Scottish party leader, Richard Leonard, very narrowly survived a no confidence motion after a rebellion by centrist Labour MSPs and peers over his leadership.
With Labour polling at between 14% and 18% before next May’s Holyrood elections, Starmer acknowledged the Scottish party “had a mountain to climb”. His article did not mention Leonard.
In an effort to carve out safer territory for Labour and reassert its claims to have delivered devolution, Starmer said both the Tories in London and the Scottish National party in Edinburgh were “banging on” about Europe and independence while they should be focusing on jointly combating the pandemic. He said:
Rather than acknowledging the deep problems with their response to the virus, like the current testing fiasco or the crisis in our care homes, they are dodging blame and attacking each other.
Labour in government created devolution so that decisions could be made closer to people. But, for that, we need governments to work in partnership. [So] I say to both governments: get a grip, focus on the job in hand and work together to defeat this virus. I continue to believe that a four-nations approach is the best response to the health and economic crises we face.
There was a misstep in the piece: Starmer accused the Scottish Tories of refusing to stand up to Boris Johnson over his move to ignore the EU withdrawal agreement. On Wednesday, Lord Keen, the Scottish advocate general in the UK government and former Scottish Tory party chair, quit in protest over precisely that.
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