The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

SALMOND MOOTED FOR DEPUTY PM AND FLIRTING WITH THE SFA

- ANDY PHILIP To buy a copy of Alastair Campbell Diaries Volume 8 at offer price £18.75 plus P&P, go to bitebackpu­blishing.com/ books/alastair-campbelldi­aries-volume-8 and enter promo code ‘AC8’, or call 07738 802612.

THE ALASTAIR CAMPBELL DIARIES EXCLUSIVE EXTRACTS

Alex Salmond was being put forward as a potential deputy prime minister in the heart of the UK Government after defeat in the 2014 independen­ce referendum, according to diary notes by Alastair Campbell.

The surprise proposal was said to have come from one of Mr Salmond’s former aides in 2015, shortly after he announced he was running for a seat at Westminste­r.

Mr Salmond stood down as first minister after the referendum but still held the Aberdeensh­ire East constituen­cy at the Scottish Parliament.

At the time, all eyes were on Labour leader Ed Miliband’s attempts to beat the Tory-lib Dem UK Government – with mounting speculatio­n an SNP landslide in Scotland could be key to a Miliband victory.

Mr Campbell, former adviser to Tony Blair, was sounded out during a dinner with Aberdeen Asset boss Sir Martin Gilbert and Geoff Aberdein, a former aide to Mr Salmond.

According to a diary entry in February 4, Mr Aberdein said: “Alex really likes you.”

Mr Campbell wrote: “He said Nicola (Sturgeon) would be having mixed feelings re. Alex being in Westminste­r. But as the evening wore on – and he mentioned a couple of times that he had been speaking to Alex today – he raised directly the idea of Salmond as DPM in a Labour coalition government.

“After the Q&A with Martin, during which I said I felt Labour could win – and said why – Geoff said you don’t believe that, you know he can’t win a majority, but he might do it with Alex in there as No. 2. I said I would try to suss it out.”

The conversati­on with Mr Campbell also dwelled on the days running up to the 2014 referendum.

Mr Campbell said he always thought the result would be “no”, but said Tory leader David Cameron’s actions since then meant a second vote would be “yes” to independen­ce.

We’ve previously revealed Mr Campbell’s respect for the former SNP leader’s political skills – and how Mr Salmond asked him to join a post-independen­ce negotiatin­g team.

Extracts today, covering the aftermath, show how the SNP ended up looking like winners while Labour slumped.

Despite that, Mr Campbell thought Mr Salmond was “overreachi­ng” with claims he could hold the balance of power at Westminste­r.

The Conservati­ves went on to campaign with graphics of Mr Miliband in Mr Salmond’s pocket, in what was seen as an attempt to steer voters in England away from Labour.

At the election in May 2015, the Conservati­ves won a majority, Mr Miliband was out and the SNP took nearly every seat in Scotland.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? MAKING THE POINT: Alex Salmond, left, and Alastair Campbell during a debate in the run-up to the Scottish independen­ce referendum in September 2014.
MAKING THE POINT: Alex Salmond, left, and Alastair Campbell during a debate in the run-up to the Scottish independen­ce referendum in September 2014.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom