Gulf Today

Salmond, Sturgeon row puts Scottish politics in disarray

- Sean O’grady,

One of the women who accused Alex Salmond, the former first minister of Scotland, of sexually assaulting her has said that the inquiry now being undertaken into the way the Scotish government handled the first claims is, for her, more traumatic than her participat­ion in Salmond’s actual court trial (which was separate, though with obvious links).

The transcende­nt fact in all of this, I have to say at the outset, is that Salmond was found not guilty on all 13 charges. This is the prism through which everything else that is said and done has to be viewed. The legal fact of his complete acquital means that the Scotish parliament is trying to conduct an inquiry into alleged shortcomin­gs in the way in which officialdo­m dealt with the women’s claims in the first place.

Salmond launched a judicial review into the initial process because he always maintained that the way he was treated at first was flawed. The review agreed with him, found the Scotish officials had been biased and incompeten­t, and paid Salmond £512,000 to cover his legal fees. It did not, though, quite settle the mater of the role played by his successor as leader of the Scotish National Party and current first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, or that of whether she interfered in some way. Such questions still cast doubt, fairly or unfairly, over her fitness to govern.

So on top of the initial investigat­ion, the subsequent trial of Salmond and the judicial review, there is now yet another inquiry, this time by parliament­arians. Even to those of us watching these bewilderin­g procedural dramas with only half an eye, things are going badly wrong.

Both Salmond and Sturgeon variously postponed their appearance­s before MSPS or withheld evidence. There is litle trust in the process and no sign of it ever concluding satisfacto­rily. As is the custom with such inquiries, they attain a momentum of their own, and, as the chair Linda Fabiani insists, the inquiry will drag on just because it has to, no mater what.

No doubt if the MSPS come back with the “wrong” result (probably inevitable), there will be another judicial review, or political atempt to expel Salmond or Sturgeon, or both, from the SNP. Of course that would then need to go to court. Scotland has discovered a weird form of political perpetual motion.

Reflecting in an admirably clear way on the circumstan­ces, Salmond’s accuser has clearly had enough, and has talked to BBC Scotland’s Sunday Show about her frustratio­ns. She rightly says that the inquiry’s remit is to make recommenda­tions about protecting the human rights of women who are vulnerable, consistent with due process, but that “instead what has happened is they have taken your very personal experience­s and exploited them for their own self-serving political interests, and that is something in itself that is really traumatic”.

Of course she does not speak for all of those involved in this long-running story, but her unease and pain is perfectly genuine, and she deserves to be listened to, if only for her courage in speaking out. For her and for others, it maters a great deal – and especially to Salmond and Sturgeon.

Yet what is being played out is nothing short of a squalid argument between two politician­s who were once the closest of allies in a noble cause, or at least a respectabl­e one, and who have since fallen out in Shakespear­ean fashion. To put things rather crudely, Salmond seems to think he was treated unfairly by Sturgeon, his former friend and protegee, and he wants his revenge on her. She, I presume, thinks he is being pety and vindictive, and wants revenge on him.

 ?? Alex Salmond ??
Alex Salmond
 ?? Nicola Sturgeon ??
Nicola Sturgeon

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