Scottish Tories follow suit

4 November 2011

The Scottish Tories have voted for David Cameron’s acolyte as leader of the Scottish Tories.

Ruth Davidson has beaten former deputy leader Murdo Fraser, who wanted to break away from the English Tory Party to form a new centre-right party in Scotland.  He had argued that the Tory vote in Scotland was down to its rump, and falling, whereas the high water mark of Scottish Toryism had been before they joined the English Tory Party.

Davidson won by 2983 votes to 2417.  Andrew Black, a BBC Scotland political reporter, described her as an “openly gay Tory MSP.”

The BBC reported that she was inspired by David Cameron and joined the Tories two years ago.  It is likely that this refers to Cameron’s homosexual agenda.  She became an MSP in May 2010 and so her meteorite rise has been aided by forces beyond herself, true of most modern career politicians, likely to be the homosexual lobby and David Cameron’s support for the homosexual lobby.

The Scottish Tories have 8000 members in Scotland, of whom 5675 voted.  Miss Davidson won by a 10% margin.  So we learn that 53% of Scottish Tories supported the homosexual agenda.  She wore a pink scarf and shirt for the count and has a male haircut.  She is making a statement to and on behalf of the homosexual constituency which got her into the position she now holds.  Without this criteria she would not be the new woman that David Cameron was looking for.  In her first interview with the BBC, she said that she will need to change the party to make it a modern fighting party, and bring in other voices.  This is code for the homosexual agenda, so that Scottish Toryism will be revolutionised in the David Cameron mold.  Evidently, Murdo Fraser and his agenda did not suit David Cameron.

The average Scottish Tory has been led by the nose to give their support to this agenda.  So much for Scottish Tory discernment.

Murdo Fraser wanted an orderly separation from David Cameron’s Tory Party.  It seems that we will now get a disorderly separation from the Scottish Tory Party as disaffected members leave to join the Scottish Christian Party or UKIP.  UKIP is not very strong nor organised in Scotland, so that this vote may simply increase its organisation in Scotland.

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