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John Morrison, Chief Political Correspondent
"Mr Dewar inspires loyalty but there is a feeling he needs a new style of management"
 real 28k

Monday, 31 January, 2000, 11:32 GMT
Dewar leadership under fire

Donald Dewar Mr Dewar suffered the loss of another adviser


Scottish First Minister Donald Dewar is reported to be facing increasing criticism of his leadership.

Senior Labour sources said they feared Scottish Executive successes were going unnoticed because of the continuing row over special advisers.

They want to see Mr Dewar change his style of leadership after a "disastrous" week for the administration.


Student deal Student deal "overshadowed"
He has been urged to focus more on policy and better presentation and be more ruthless with anyone who steps out of line.

Officials said the successful deal on student finance was eclipsed by the furore surrounding the departure of adviser Philip Chalmers, who was forced to go after drink-related motoring offences came to light.

Mr Dewar faced additional embarrassment when chief media adviser David Whitton accused another ousted adviser, John Rafferty, of leaking details of the Chalmers affair to the media.

Mr Whitton was forced to issue an unreserved apology as Mr Rafferty threatened legal action.

One executive source said Mr Dewar must review the whole system of appointing special advisers, which smacked of "cronyism" and must be changed.

Wasted resource

Another source described the policy unit as a wasted resource because many ministers did not use it.

There was also increasing concern about the relationship between Labour backbenchers and the executive, with MSPs accusing the leadership of becoming increasingly detached.

And Mr Dewar faced the prospect of a rift with Labour councillors over the system of proportional representation in council elections.


David Whitton David Whitton: Forced to apologise
Many Labour councillors have voiced opposition to the system, which they believe would mean the loss of seats to their rivals.

Assessing the difficulties faced by Mr Dewar, BBC Scotland Chief Political Correspondent John Morrison said: "There is a feeling among backbenchers and members of the executive that the good work they are doing is being completely overshadowed by the problems which seem to keep coming."

Mr Dewar sustained severe criticism from Labour MP George Galloway at the weekend.

Mr Galloway, MP for Glasgow Kelvin, said he feared Westminster MPs could suffer electoral damage from the "dog's breakfast" in Scotland presided over by Mr Dewar.

He predicted Mr Dewar could even be replaced before the year is out.

'Dragging us down'

Mr Galloway said he and his fellow MPs had an interest to declare in events which saw the resignation of one special adviser and a public apology from another.

He said: "We are the next Labour representatives to face the voters and frankly every last one of us thinks Dewar is dragging us down.

"It is high time his parliamentary party got a grip of things before, embarrassingly, Tony Blair has to do it for us."

On Friday, Mr Dewar appealed to party members to judge his administration on its achievements rather than "personal tragedies".

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See also:
30 Jan 00 |  Scotland
Labour MP attacks Dewar
28 Jan 00 |  Scotland
Dewar goes on the offensive
27 Jan 00 |  Scotland
Dewar dismay over fresh adviser row
26 Jan 00 |  Scotland
Dewar's woe as spin doctor apologises
25 Jan 00 |  Scotland
Second Dewar aide quits
07 Jan 00 |  Scotland
Rafferty refutes dossier 'threat'
13 Dec 99 |  Scotland
'No debate' on Rafferty sacking
05 Dec 99 |  Scotland
Minister dismisses 'spin doctor' row
13 May 99 |  News
Scotland's PM in waiting
20 May 99 |  UK Politics
Who's who in the Scottish Cabinet

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