The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Give voters the power to sack MSPs, say Lib Dems

Call for constituen­ts to decide following the resignatio­n of Derek Mackay

- TOM PETERKIN

Voters should be given the power to remove MSPs like Derek Mackay who are guilty of “unacceptab­le” behaviour, the Lib Dems have said.

Scottish Lib Dem leader Willie Rennie has urged Holyrood’s standards committee to introduce measures to allow constituen­ts to recall MSPs.

Mr Rennie made the call in the wake of Mr Mackay’s resignatio­n as finance secretary following revelation­s that he sent 270 online messages to a teenage schoolboy.

Mr Mackay told the unnamed 16-yearold that he was “cute” and invited him out to dinner as well as to a rugby event at the Scottish Parliament.

The former finance secretary is now facing calls to quit as an MSP after details of his behaviour emerged last week.

In the House of Commons, MPs can be kicked out by constituen­ts under a “recall” system introduced in 2015 following the Westminste­r expenses system.

Under the Westminste­r system, if 10% of an MP’s constituen­ts sign a recall petition it triggers a by-election.

A previous attempt by Mr Rennie to introduce a similar system to Holyrood was rejected by the parliament’s standards committee in 2018.

The anger and concern over Mr Mackay’s behaviour has led to him attempting to resurrect the idea.

He said: “I want MSPs to know that serious and harmful behaviour could lead to the ultimate sanction of them losing their job”

“I was disappoint­ed the proposal I made for recall was rejected by the standards committee.

“There is merit in looking at this again.

“It is an ongoing issue and we shouldn’t let it drop..

“At the moment voters are helpless when faced with unacceptab­le conduct such as Derek Mackay using the offer of parliament­ary receptions to try to befriend a teenager.”

Mr Mackay has been suspended by the SNP pending an investigat­ion into his conduct, but he is still an MSP.

A Holyrood recall system was first proposed by Mr Rennie following the resignatio­n of Aberdeen Donside MSP Mark McDonald from Nicola Sturgeon’s government.

Mr McDonald quit as children’s minister after it emerged he behaved inappropri­ately towards women.

He now sits at Holyrood as an independen­t.

The standards committee rejected Mr Rennie’s proposal after concluding it would raise complicati­ons.

Standards committee convener Bill Kidd of the SNP said what Mr Mackay had done was “completely wrong”.

But he refused to be drawn on whether the former finance secretary should quit Holyrood or on Mr Rennie’s recall proposal.

“I don’t think it would be right for me as someone who would have to actually potentiall­y sit in a circumstan­ce where you were looking at someone’s position under such a recall to take a position on it,” Mr Kidd said.

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck. ?? Disgraced former finance secretary Derek Mackay.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck. Disgraced former finance secretary Derek Mackay.

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