The National (Scotland)

Salmond defends suspended Ewing’s commitment to independen­ce

Greens ‘spell real trouble’ Alba leader adds

- BY ABBI GARTON-CROSBIE

ALEX Salmond has weighed in on Fergus Ewing’s suspension from the SNP and launched an attack on the Scottish Greens. The former SNP first minister, and now Alba party leader, said the Greens “spell real trouble” for his former party and defended Ewing for his commitment to independen­ce.

SNP MSPs at Holyrood had agreed to suspend the Inverness and Nairn MSP from their group for a week back in September 2023 after he voted against a Scottish Greens minister Lorna Slater in a crucial vote of confidence.

Ewing, the son of late SNP trailblaze­r Winnie Ewing and a former rural economy secretary in the Scottish Government, had appealed against that decision.

But in a statement released by his office on Tuesday evening he said it had been upheld by the party who he then turned his fire on.

Ewing voted with Tories, LibDems and Labour in a vote against Slater over her handling of the deposit return scheme.

He claimed the vote against her was a “vote of conscience” and hit out at the SNP.

“The SNP has now become an authoritar­ian party requiring strict obedience to the leadership at the expense of personal freedom for any individual member,” he said.

And now, Salmond has released a statement defending Ewing and said that for the Greens independen­ce is a “flag of convenienc­e”.

“It is not just Fergus and his halfcentur­y of service to the SNP that makes it the wrong decision,” he said. “It’s the sacrifice of the efforts of all traditiona­l independen­ce supporters at the altar of a Green Party, which pays mere lip service to the cause.

“The Greens spell real trouble for the SNP. Their contributi­on to government is entirely negative; every government­al disaster from administer­ing the bottle scheme to self-identifica­tion has green fingers all over it.

“For the Greens, independen­ce is a flag of convenienc­e, something which secures their ministeria­l meal tickets.

“For Fergus Ewing, in contrast, independen­ce and his Highland constituen­cy are his political raison d’être. An SNP which has no room for the Ewings is heading for the sands.”

Ewing, a veteran politician who has been an MSP since the first Holyrood elections in 1999, spoke out against the Scottish Government on policies such as the now-halted deposit return scheme (DRS) and the introducti­on of new regulation­s for short-term property lets.

He became known for his backbench rebellions, including ripping up the consultati­on on Highly Protected Marine Areas (HPMAs) in the Holyrood Chamber.

It was after DRS was put on hold that a vote of no confidence in Slater was called, with Ewing saying he had “stood up for my constituen­ts to protect them against a disastrous policy (the Deposit Return Scheme) and voted with my conscience against that policy, which was eventually discarded”.

But he insisted: “The SNP leadership no longer tolerates a conscience vote.”

Ewing again called for First Minister Humza Yousaf to allow SNP members a fresh vote on the Bute House Agreement, which allowed Slater and co-leader Patrick Harvie into Government and taking up junior ministeria­l roles.

The Inverness and Nairn MSP pledged he would “continue to defend” his constituen­ts, but refused to say if he would re-join the SNP.

He stated: “For my future, I vow to continue to defend the interests of my constituen­ts, and as far as the SNP is concerned let the cards fall as they may.

“If the SNP cannot cope with that, so be it.”

 ?? ?? Alex Salmond said that an SNP that has no room for Fergus Ewing is ‘heading for the sands’
Alex Salmond said that an SNP that has no room for Fergus Ewing is ‘heading for the sands’

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