The Herald on Sunday

SNP politician defends links to Orange Order

- Photograph: PA

BY TOM GORDON

ASENIOR SNP politician has defended accepting hospitalit­y from the Orange Order. David Stocks, leader of the SNP opposition on North Lanarkshir­e Council, attended the Order’s annual awards ceremony, known as the Orange Oscars, it has emerged.

The Orange Order, or Grand Orange Lodge of Scotland, calls itself a “Protestant Christian fraternity” but is seen by some as sectarian and representa­tive of hardline Unionist nationalis­m. It is a ferocious critic of Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP.

A registered No campaigner in the 2014 referendum, the Orange Order orchestrat­ed a 15,000-strong rally in Edinburgh on the weekend before the ballot under the banner British Together.

Recent issues of its official journal, the Orange Torch, have referred to Sturgeon as “Wee Nippy”, “Soory McSoorface” and a “furious vixen”, and called SNP Westminste­r leader Angus Robertson a “pompous windbag” and Alex Salmond a “pathetic washed-up loser”. The Torch has also called SNP members “Neandertha­ls” and “separatist stormtroop­ers”, and described the party as “a pseudo-religious sect”.

Before the 2015 General Election, it published a seat-by-seat guide on how to vote for Unionist candidates to “defeat the separatist agenda”.

It recently summed up its politics as: “The Union, with its social and political cohesion, Reformed Christian ethos, democratic liberties and constituti­onal monarchy is surely one of the principles that the Order is all about. There’s no place in the lodge room for the selfish, narrow-minded divisivene­ss of nationalis­m.”

Despite the Order’s views, Stocks, a councillor for Airdrie Central, attended its 12th annual awards ceremony in Bellshill as the guest of a constituen­t His council register of interests now states: “Invitation to Orange Order Awards Dinner at Strathclyd­e Hilton – 6 November 2015.”

Photograph­s of the night show more than 100 people, most in orange sashes, in a room filled with orange and purple balloons. The main award – Lodge Of The Year – went to the County Grand Lodge of Glasgow for “the outstandin­g success” of the its Orangefest gala in George Square.

At the time, SNP councillor­s in Glasgow said they were “deeply concerned” by the gathering and 20,000 people signed an online petition against “sectarian, hate-filled Orange marches”.

Other North Lanarkshir­e councillor­s Members of the Orange Order at Orangefest in Glasgow. Below: SNP councillor David Stocks have declared Orange hospitalit­y, including Labour leader Jim Logue, who attended the Grandmaste­r’s Annual Dinner in March, and Labour councillor Andrew Spowart, who was at the Orange Oscars and the dinner.

Stocks, however, a member of the council sub-committee that decides whether to allow Orange and other procession­s, is the only SNP councillor to have taken such hospitalit­y.

A senior SNP source said: “It’s bizarre. Whatever would possess a Nationalis­t to go along to an event where they’re hammering the First Minister? Not sound political judgment, clearly.”

A source close to Stocks added: “He’s from the protestant persuasion like myself. He’s an avid Rangers supporter. He’s got that connection. But he just happens to be a Nat.”

Stocks refused to discuss the politics of the Order but said: “We live in a culturally diverse area and as councillor­s receive invitation­s from all parts of the community. I recently attended the Kirkin’ O the Council in Christ the King Church in Holytown, and Leaver Masses in some of our schools.

“I don’t see any of these attendance­s as a chore – being a Christian, I enjoy them. As far as the Procession­s Sub-Committee is concerned, I do not feel compromise­d in any way, and having been on it for many years, I am confident I have worked with my colleagues in arriving at the correct decisions, irrespecti­ve of the organisati­on involved.”

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