Scottish Labour leader promises free bus Network for Scotland
Richard Leonard was addressing the party's conference in Dundee
A future Labour government in Scotland would introduce free bus travel for all, its leader Richard Leonard has pledged.
And to help ājumpstartā struggling bus services - which have been hit by falling passenger numbers - he called on the Scottish Government to extend free bus passes to those aged under 25.
Mr Leonard told the Scottish Labour conference in Dundee: āIf the SNP don't do it, we will do it on day one of an incoming Scottish Labour government.ā
But he added: āThen we will go further. We will build a proper bus network that connects Scotland's communities.
āLabour will build a free bus network to serve the whole of Scotland.ā
His speech however contained no mention of how much this would cost to deliver, how it would be funded, or when it could be up and running.
Mr Leonard announced the new policy as he urged party members to stay true to Labour's socialist roots.
With UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn looking on, he described himself as being āproud to be on the left of politicsā.
Labour has ānot come through the adverse electoral storms of the last decade to simply sit back and give up before nationalism,ā Mr Leonard said.
He went on to tell activists the party should āstand by our socialist idealsā, as it had a āvision of the future worth striving forā.
He insisted: āPeople are turning to us again to fight their corner. And under my leadership, fight it we will.ā
But his speech came at a time when Labour across the UK has come under fire for its stance on Brexit and for failing to tackle anti-Semitism within the party.
With several English MPs having quit UK Labour to form The Independent Group, Mr Leonard said this was āa cause for regretā.
He criticised the UK Government for the ācalamityā of its approach to Brexit negotiations, as he insisted Labour had been ātrying to steer a course through this messā.
And he stated: āIf we cannot force Theresa May to change course and accept our credible alternative, let me be absolutely clear, Labour will back a public vote.ā
Mr Leonard was clear that āBrexit is not the only challenge we faceā as he pledged the next Labour government at Holyrood would ābuild a more cohesive society by ending austerityā.
But he warned his party it must not rely on public disillusionment with the SNP to win back power in Scotland.
Scottish nationalists have been in power in Edinburgh since 2007, with Mr Leonard telling delegates: āWe need an awakening.
āWe have the vision of how much better our society could be.
āAnd I tell you that we cannot rely on an automatic disillusionment with the SNP to do the job for us.ā
Shona Robison, the SNP MSP for Dundee City East, however claimed Labour were ācompletely out of touchā.
She said: āThey're more interested in fighting each other rather than fighting for the people of Scotland.
āIn recent weeks Labour voted against an extra Ā£729 million for Scotland's health service and an Ā£8 billion investment in Scottish education. They can't match the SNP's ambition when it comes to delivering for public services.
āBoth Jeremy Corbyn and Richard Leonard seem willing to crash us out of the EU in just 20 days' time - throwing thousands of jobs on the scrapheap and damaging our NHS.
āAnd they're content to team up with the Tories to deny Scotland the right to choose its own future, while we get hammered by Westminster governments we didn't vote for.
āNo wonder Labour are trailing a distant third in Scottish politics."