The Scotsman

Blues Father: Zoom filter turns vicar’s sermon into scene from classic film

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The vicar of a church in England was caught out during his virtual service when an online filter turned him to one of the Blues Brothers.

Vaughan Roberts, 62, vicar of the Collegiate Church of St Mary’s in Warwick, has had to adapt his services due to the pandemic. But things didn’t quite go to plan during a recent service when a Zoom filter made an unexpected appearance during the livestream transformi­ng him. He is hoping people may be able to return to the church for Easter and promised he will not be dressed as either of the Blues Brothers when they arrive.

The defeat of the noconfiden­ce motion in John Swinney told us nothing about Mr Swinney but quite a lot about the Scottish Greens, who saved his bacon (if they will pardon the expression).

It set me wondering about the dilemma facing a caring Scottish environmen­talist who does not want to break up the UK, believes votes in Parliament should be respected and has more interest in women’s rights than fashionabl­e political correctnes­s.

But let us look at Mr Swinney and what a Holyrood majority (including all SNP MSPS serving on the Harassment Committee) has confidence in. For many months, crucial legal advice to the Scottish Government was withheld from the committee.

The (bogus) argument that government­s do not disclose their legal advice was elevated to the point of high principle, repeated ad infinitum. It is true government­s do not like

disclosing advice and sometimes have good reasons not to. But public interest over-rides that preference. In this case and by any standards, the circumstan­ces were exceptiona­l; a contest of truth between a political leader and her immediate predecesso­r of the same party – largely capable of being resolved through the release of such advice. The interests of wronged women and a man’s liberty had been at stake.

That is the natural justice

which Swinney denied over and over again – including in response to two votes in Parliament. And he only retreated in part when his own job was at stake – an imperative to which, in fairness, the Greens contribute­d.

Even then, Swinney held back what he did not want to reveal in advance of his boss giving evidence which was supposed to display her as a beacon of truth. In succeeding days, more withheld evidence dripped out

– none of it causing difficulty to anyone other than Swinney and his associates.

In any other context this would be called out as withholdin­g and tampering with evidence. In Scotland, it commands the approval of a Parliament­ary majority.

For a long time, I was prepared to give John Swinney’s much vaunted honesty the benefit of many doubts. I now regard him as at least as big a twister as those around him.

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 ??  ?? John Swinney survived a vote of no-confidence with backing from SNP and Scottish Green MSPS
John Swinney survived a vote of no-confidence with backing from SNP and Scottish Green MSPS

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