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Conservative councillors unhappy after Edinburgh 2050 word cloud returns “Tory Free” as vision for future

Conservative councillors were left dumbfounded after a word cloud created for the Edinburgh 2050 campaign returned “Tory Free” as one of the people’s hopes for the future.

The 2050 vision campaign was launched two years ago as an initiative to help shape the future of the Scottish capital by inviting residents to share their hopes for the future.

But local Tory councillors were displeased when “Tory free” came up as one of the city’s primary aspirations.

The Conservative group on the council wrote to Lord Provost Frank Ross, protesting that overtly political messaging in the campaign was unacceptable.

The phrase appeared under the heading “My Edinburgh will be…” alongside others like “more inclusive”, “litter-free”, “carbon neutral” and words such as “vibrant”, “cleaner”, “greener”, “fairer” and “proud”, The Scotsman has reported.

It has now been added to a banned list in order to stop the phrase appearing again.

Tory group chairman Jason Rust has welcomed the move.

He said: “As a group we found it completely and utterly unacceptable. This campaign is meant to be about a positive future message and to a lot of people it would be invidious for any group to be barred from Edinburgh.

“They are talking about barring the group which currently has the largest number of seats on the council and had the largest number of first preference votes at last year’s elections. If that’s what their vision is about it seems very negative.”

But Leith Labour councillor Gordon Munro said banning the phrase “Tory free” was not fair, adding that “you have got to admire these citizens and their vision for the future”.

“Given Leith and Leith Walk wards are Tory-free, it’s a legitimate future scenario”, he added.

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Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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