Reform's Scottish leader defends Labour deal claim

4 weeks ago 13
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PA Media A man in a blue suit and teal tie speaks at a lectern, gesturing with his hand, against a purple-lit brick backdrop.PA Media

Malcolm Offord said Anas Sarwar approached him at an event in Paisley Town Hall

Reform UK's Scottish leader says he is standing by his claim that Scottish Labour's leader told him he wanted to work together against the SNP.

Malcolm Offord made the allegation during a leaders debate on Channel 4 after Anas Sarwar accused Reform of racism and criticised comments made by one of the party's candidates.

Offord said Sarwar's remarks did not square with him "bouncing up to me" at a previous event and "saying we need to work together, Reform and Labour, to remove the SNP".

Sarwar said the claim was "nonsense" and later described it as "a desperate lie from a desperate man" - but Offord told BBC Scotland that he stood by what he had said.

Reform's Scottish leader had been criticised during the debate over his party's billboard adverts which showed a small boat with asylum seekers under the slogan "Scotland is at breaking point".

PA Media Three men in suits stand at lecterns during a debate; the central speaker in a red tie raises a finger while speaking, flanked by two others, against a purple-lit brick backdrop.PA Media

Anas Sarwar (centre) said during the debate that Malcolm Offord's claim was "nonsense"

SNP leader John Swinney said the poster had "incited tension and division", but it was defended by Offord

"The idea of that billboard was to say illegal asylum seekers, they come into England, but they come to Scotland, they come to Glasgow," he said.

"What Reform is doing is honestly reflecting the views of local Scottish people, especially in our working class communities who feel they are being pushed to the back of the queue."

Sarwar said Reform had previously spent thousands of pounds on adverts questioning his loyalty to his country.

Accusing the party of racism, he said one of Reform's candidates wanted to deport his children and repeatedly asked: "Where do you want them to go, Malcolm?"

Offord replied that Sarwar's remarks did "not square with you coming up to me at the start of this campaign, bouncing up to me in Paisley Town Hall and saying we need to work together, Reform and Labour, to remove the SNP".

The BBC's leaders debate took place on Paisley on Sunday night.

Sarwar described this as "nonsense" during the debate, and afterwards said: "Let me be unequivocal: no stitch-ups, no deals, no backroom chats, no back-channel contact with Reform.

"I only want one deal, and that is with the people of Scotland."

The SNP said a "grubby deal" had been exposed and claimed Sarwar would "happily work with Reform if it gave him a whiff of power".

Earlier in the debate Offord sided with US President Donald Trump after he again urged the UK to "drill, baby, drill" and extract more oil and gas from the North Sea.

Referring to UK Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, the Scottish Reform leader said: "I would agree with Donald Trump on this – drill, Mili, drill is what I would say."

He added: "In terms of energy, we account for less than 1% of global emissions, right now it is more of a priority we have safe and affordable energy."

PA Media Six people stand at lecterns during a televised debate in a studio with purple and blue lighting against exposed brick walls; one speaker gestures toward another while the others look on.PA Media

The leaders took part in a Channel 4 debate on Tuesday evening

Swinney said he did not agree with Trump's comments, adding: "I think we have got enormous challenges about energy, but Scotland is an energy-rich country which is developing formidable renewable energy resources."

Scottish Conservative leader Russell Findlay attacked the SNP's switch in stance, adding it was "absolutely critical the United Kingdom harnesses the oil and gas at its disposal".

Findlay said there should be a "sensible energy mix" which "starts with drilling for the oil and gas we have in abundance in the North Sea".

But he also backed the use of nuclear power – something the SNP is strongly opposed to.

Sarwar also supports the use of nuclear power, and backed two oil and gas projects opposed by environmentalists that the UK Labour government is considering.

A previous Conservative government at Westminster approved the Jackdaw gas field in the North Sea and the Rosebank oil development in the North Atlantic.

"A commitment was made to respect the licences granted by the last government, we should stick to that commitment, for example for Rosebank and Jackdaw," said Sarwar.

However, Scottish Green co-leader Gillian Mackay said no more drilling should take place.

"It is very clear that any new oil and gas exploration in the North Sea is not compatible with the climate crisis and actually won't bring anyone's bills down," she said.

"What actually we need to see is a move to renewables."

Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Alex Cole Hamilton branded the US president a "gangster" and said: "We need leadership that will stand up to him in the same way the Liberal prime minister in Canada, Mark Carney, did."

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