Analysis

Summary


AFTER the famine, the feast. Having spent the past few months saying little about his plans for government, Iain Gray threw armfuls of policy-rich meat to his party yesterday. He announced one new policy every five minutes in his speech to activists in Oban and - having done so - decided he could risk taking on Alex Salmond over the issue of his own personal image problem. "He called me the invisible man. But Scotland sees right through you Alex Salmond," he declared.

Prior to Gray's speech, Labour delegates were fretting about whether their man would flunk his chance in the spotlight. He buried that allegation yesterday, unveiling a radical overhaul of Scottish public sector landscape which, if enacted, would bring about huge change to the way the country is run. But, in doing so, has he given his enemies something to aim at?

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Extract


Analysis

The SNP will be sure to point out the price tag attached to Labour's shiny new policies. The Labour leader did not lay out how he plans to trim ...

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