5 takeaways from Nicola Sturgeon’s evidence in
Salmond probe
The first minister said conspiracy claims were
‘absurd.’
BY ALASDAIR
LANE
March 3,
2021 8:15 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/5-takeaways-scotland-nicola-sturgeon-evidence-alex-salmond-probe/
GLASGOW —
The political vultures were circling Nicola Sturgeon on Wednesday — but
Scotland’s first minister wasn’t going to give them an easy meal.
Against a
chorus of resignation cries, her message to a parliamentary committee
investigating government malpractice was clear: mistakes were made, but I’ve
got nothing to hide.
There was
no conspiracy against her predecessor Alex Salmond, Sturgeon asserted,
appearing before a marathon all-day session of an inquiry into the mishandling
of sexual harassment claims leveled at Scotland’s former leader (for which he
was subsequently acquitted in court). Her government didn’t wilfully waste
half-a-million pounds of public money fighting a doomed legal case against her
onetime mentor, Sturgeon added; nor did she mislead parliament about the
affair’s finer details. She is, in her own mind, innocent of all charges.
The
opposition disagrees. Lawmakers were uncompromising — and seemingly unconvinced
— in the oral evidence session, and the threat of a confidence vote still hangs
over Sturgeon’s head. More importantly, however, the Scottish National Party
(SNP) and its campaign for independence remains riven by a dispute that shows
no sign of abating.
Here are
five takeaways from Sturgeon’s committee appearance:
1. No
conspiracy
“I want to
take this opportunity to say sorry,” Sturgeon said this morning, her voice
charged with emotion. Sorry to the women let down by a bungled investigation
into abuse allegations; sorry to the taxpayer whose money was lost on a
mishandled court case. But for Salmond, who last year was cleared of all
harassment charges, there was no apology.
Instead,
the first minister rubbished his “absurd” claim that she and others had
conspired to ruin his reputation in an effort to banish him from public life.
“Alex
Salmond has been for most of my life — since I was about 20, 21 years old — not
just a very close political colleague,” Sturgeon said, but “a friend, someone
in my younger days who I looked up to and revered … I had no motive, intention,
desire to get [him].”
True or
not, the pair’s acrimonious split has cleaved their party in two. As Sturgeon
issued her opening remarks, #IStandWithNicola spread as an online rallying cry
for supportive colleagues. Today, their voice was the loudest — but Salmond
loyalists fill party ranks and are a group both beholden to their former leader
and skeptical of Sturgeon’s stewardship of the independence campaign.
2. Sturgeon
knew what, when?
At the very
heart of the controversy is precisely when Sturgeon learnt of the allegations
against her former boss. That may seem an inconsequential detail, but political
opponents — and Salmond — say Sturgeon misled parliament with the timeframe she
provided.
The first
minister told lawmakers it was during a meeting at her home in April 2018 that
she was notified of the harassment accusations, though it is claimed she was in
fact told days earlier by Salmond’s chief of staff, Geoff Aberdein.
“My
recollection [of the earlier meeting] is still not as vivid as I would like it
to be,” Sturgeon said Wednesday; an explanation that raised eyebrows on the
parliamentary panel given the nature of the information that was imparted to
the first minister.
This
matters because, if proven to have misled the inquiry, Sturgeon would be in
breach of her government’s ministerial code, meaning she would be expected to
resign.
The first
minister vociferously denies any wrongdoing and awaits the findings of an
adjacent investigation into the specific allegation.
3. Doomed
court case
In late
2018, the Scottish government pushed on with an ill-fated (and expensive) court
case against Salmond, though defeat was all-but-certain. Why? On Wednesday,
Sturgeon set out to provide an answer.
Yes, her
side’s argument was seriously hampered by the fact officials had had prior
contact with complainants, and yes, government lawyers shared huge doubts about
victory a full three months before concession. But the case was winnable until
the 11th hour, Sturgeon maintained; and so the cost of defeat — £500,000 of
public money — must be taken on the chin.
That’s a
difficult pill to swallow, but not, the first minister argued, tantamount to a
breach of the ministerial code, as her predecessor suggested last week. And of
the claims that she allowed the doomed civil proceedings to persist in the hope
that they would, before long, be eclipsed by Salmond’s criminal case? “Absurd
and bizarre, and just completely without any evidential or factual foundation,”
Sturgeon said.
4. Who’s
leaking?
In an
apparent breach of data protection laws, the name of one of Salmond’s accusers
was passed by a senior official to his team — or so the former first minister
claims.
Sturgeon
and the Scottish government have long disputed this, but on Tuesday night, two
individuals close to Salmond — his lawyer and a former adviser — caused
shockwaves by publicly corroborating the charge. The reaction was volcanic,
with immediate calls for Sturgeon to resign.
Challenged
on the issue, she said this new evidence amounted to hearsay, and that her
predecessor likely learned the claimant’s identity by trawling through
government social media feeds pertaining to the day of the alleged incident.
Whether
that defence will hold up to further scrutiny, only time will tell, but it’s
not the only leaking allegation. Last week, Salmond called for a police
investigation into the disclosure of complaints against him to the press — a
politically motivated move, he claimed.
“I don’t
know where the leaks came from. I can tell you where I know they didn’t come
from, they didn’t come from me, they didn’t come from anybody acting on my
authority,” Sturgeon said.
5. This
ain’t over
With May’s
pivotal Scottish parliament election fast approaching, the SNP is desperate to
put the Salmond debacle to bed. After Wednesday’s fireworks, that’s not going
to happen.
With
Sturgeon on the ropes, opposition leaders are desperate to dent her towering
popularity before voters go to the polls. Some — namely Scottish Conservative
leader Douglas Ross — want to go further, calling for a vote of no confidence
in the first minister.
Whether the
numbers are there for that to pass isn’t clear, but the reputational harm could
sting Sturgeon regardless. She is trying to sell the Scottish people on
independence, a decision of unparalleled historic significance. That requires
public trust — something the SNP will worry is now ebbing away.


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