The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Crucial few days for FM Sturgeon as reports due on inquiries

- DAVID MACDOUGALL

Reports into the first minister’s conduct, her government’s botched handling of sexual harassment complaints, and a looming vote of no confidence could potentiall­y spell the end of Nicola Sturgeon’s time in office, but allies insist the wagons aren’t circling just yet.

Film buffs will tell you the best thrillers leave the climax of the action until the final scenes, as audiences hold their collective breaths while plot points, carefully woven together, play out in the movie’s denouement, and the protagonis­ts’ fates are determined.

And so it is in the febrile world of Scottish politics, as three separate but entangled strands of an ongoing – some might say dogged – story draw to a close.

An independen­t inquiry conducted by respected Irish prosecutor James Hamilton QC could be the first to be made public, potentiall­y as early as today.

This probe is looking specifical­ly at whether Ms Sturgeon lied to parliament, and broke the ministeria­l code of conduct by not reporting meetings she had with Mr Salmond when allegation­s about his conduct towards a number of women were first emerging.

Both Labour and the Conservati­ves have said Ms Sturgeon must resign if she is found to have broken the ministeria­l code, but senior Scottish Government ministers have refused to be drawn on whether they think she should go if the Hamilton inquiry is critical of her actions – with one possible line of defence in the works that there’s a ‘sliding scale of severity’ when it comes to the code of conduct, and some infraction­s should be considered less serious.

While the independen­t Hamilton inquiry has been conducted largely out of public sight, a separate Holyrood inquiry has played out to audiences on television as first Mr Salmond and then Ms Sturgeon gave hours of testimony about her government’s botched handling of the allegation­s against him.

The inquiry was set up to look specifical­ly at the mishandled complaints process, after a judicial review found it had been unlawful and tainted by apparent bias.

Ahead of the report’s publicatio­n tomorrow some key excerpts were leaked, much to the consternat­ion of the SNP.

The leaked paragraphs appear to show a 5-4 conclusion along party lines that Ms Sturgeon mislead the committee. That means the Conservati­ve, Labour, and Independen­t and Liberal Democrat committee members voted against the first minister, while her own party’s MSPS sided with her.

If the leaked findings are confirmed in the final report they appear to show a potential breach of the ministeria­l code, but stop short of the threshold for knowingly breaching the rules.

A spokespers­on for the first minister declared Ms Sturgeon “told the truth to the committee” and condemned “partisan and selective briefing” of inquiry business.

The third part of the ‘perfect storm’ heading in Ms Sturgeon’s direction this week is a planned noconfiden­ce vote being brought by the Conservati­ves against her.

While the SNP has dismissed the move as political grandstand­ing, the Scottish Conservati­ves have bet it all on one final push to topple the first minister.

“The other parties need to show that they have the stomach to stand up to this SNP government like we do” Scottish Conservati­ves leader Douglas Ross said recently.

A vote of no confidence needs to take place, he added, to “give Parliament the opportunit­y to have its say on the first minister’s conduct”.

The Scottish Greens could well play a decisive role in deciding the first minister’s fate, saying they will wait until the reports are published before coming to any decisions about how to cast their lots in the no-confidence vote.

Senior Scottish Tories continue to ratchet up the rhetoric with MSP Adam Tomkins saying yesterday the evidence was “overwhelmi­ng” that the first minister had “misled parliament on numerous occasions”.

Ms Sturgeon’s allies say they are disappoint­ed about how the Holyrood committee process has been politicise­d, but “hope the Hamilton report will clear the atmosphere”.

“There’s a feeling that we are under attack which is grim, every issue is being weaponised in the fight to save the union. Personal attacks obviously, but it extends beyond the SNP to the parliament & Scottish institutio­ns” said one Scottish Government minister, who wished to remain anonymous.

“Selective leaking to gain control of the narrative before the (Holyrood inquiry) report is published has certainly been successful for the opposition so far. This is toxic and grim and the women are completely lost in it.

“My sense is that colleagues are confident in the first minister’s testimony and there are no wagons circling.”

 ??  ?? UNDER PRESSURE: Senior SNP figures are not yet “circling the wagons” as First Minister Nicola Sturgeon awaits the outcome of an independen­t inquiry into her handling of the Alex Salmond allegation­s.
UNDER PRESSURE: Senior SNP figures are not yet “circling the wagons” as First Minister Nicola Sturgeon awaits the outcome of an independen­t inquiry into her handling of the Alex Salmond allegation­s.

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