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A controversial Reform UK councillor has been slammed by John Swinney after she claimed "sharia law" was being "inflicted" on Glasgow. Audrey Dempsey - who quit Scottish Labour following a race row - said "you just have to take a walk through the streets of Glasgow city centre, any given day" when asked to justify her wild claim. The councillor for Springburn and Robroyston told a Reform UK branch meeting: "When they arrived in this country and they were fitting in with our culture, our values and learning our way of life, that would be more than welcome.” Questioned about what she meant by “our way of life”, Dempsey said: “Instead of coming and trying to inflict their culture on other people here, like Sharia law, for instance, they’re trying to bring that here, that’s just not something we celebrate.” Pressed on who she believes is bringing Sharia law to Scotland, Dempsey said: “The asylum seekers, some of the asylum seekers, the legal migrants.” Asked where it was happening, the councillor said: “Do you not have conversations in the street?” The councillor joined Reform after previously being blasted for "scaremongering" communities after repeating false claims of rising anti-white racist attacks on teachers and pupils in Glasgow. She could not provide statistical evidence for her claims and she later quit Labour to sit as an independent, before signing up to Reform. Asked by Sky News about her sharia law claim, she added: "These migrants are posting themselves, videos of them saying they’re coming to the land of milk and honey, they’re coming to take over.” Asked if she believes migrants are coming to “take over”, Dempsey added: “I don’t quite know what I believe at the moment.” Reacting to Dempsey's comments First Minister John Swinney said “I don’t believe for a moment” migrants are bringing Sharia law to Scotland’s biggest city. “That’s what I think is the danger of where we are just now, that absolutely ludicrous, absurd and divisive comments have been made by the far-right that have the risk of undermining community cohesion in Scotland,” he said. “Scotland has been a welcoming country, is a welcoming country, where we attach the greatest significance to cohesion within our communities. “That’s what my leadership in Scotland is all about, and I want to give that principled, values-based leadership that will resist those messages from the far-right.” To sign up to the Daily R ecord Politics newsletter, click here