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Britain votes: Maverick - Canavan gets revenge against the `wee cabal'

Mary Braid
Thursday 06 May 1999 23:02 BST
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IT ONLY goes to show that sometimes even the control freaks at Millbank get it wrong. Labour's Westminster strategists thought that the veteran left-winger, Dennis Canavan, would quietly go away after he was expelled from the party.

Nothing could have been further from the truth and, standing as an independent, he has run the official Labour campaign ragged in Falkirk West, the constituency he has represented at Westminster for the past 24 years.

His campaign success rested largely on strong grassroots loyalty - Labour people did not like the idea of Ross Martin being parachuted into the constituency as the official Labour candidate.

It made for some tense moments during the hustings when the two men's paths crossed, like in Falkirk's main shopping centre. "New Labour all wear black suits. It means they look like crows or Jesuit priests," Mr Canavan said in a sarcastic dismissal of the Labour disciples, before bawling his old party's shortcomings all over the town centre.

He stood ramrod straight - and, of course, casually attired - while Mr Martin, 36, stood a few feet away pressing the flesh. He wore a brown sports jacket, but a hovering black-suited assistant bore out the Jesuit theory. Mr Martin was spinning in the finest tradition of New Labour. Spitting in the face of common sense, he insisted replacing Mr Canavan had been an easy business.

The unspun truth is that the local party has been ripped apart by New Labour's judgement that the outspoken left-winger was, despite a quarter of a century in Westminster, "not good enough" to run for the Scottish Parliament. Mr Canavan was expelled from the party last month after he put himself forward for election as an independent.

The once-united rank and file now glower at each other across the shopping precinct. Local party members campaigned for Mr Canavan knowing they risked expulsion. Even Labour's old-timers say it is a chance they feel compelled to take. "I've been in the Labour Party all my life," says one elderly woman. "I'm just shattered by what they did to Dennis."

A branch chairman admitted the local party is in tatters but said it has been betrayed by Mr Canavan. "He promised us he would not resign and force us to choose between the party and the man," he said.

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