The Scotsman

Investigat­ive journalist is ready to go

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There have been some very good maiden speeches at Holyrood over the past few weeks – including several by MSPS with real-life, first-hand knowledge of their subjects.

Labour’s Pam Duncan-glancy on disability and the SNP’S Emma Roddick on mental health were good examples.

However, I suspect the “specialist” speech which might have jolted ministers and civil servants came from the new Tory MSP, Russell Findlay, who has made the unusual transition from investigat­ive journalism to politics.

Mr Findlay’s opening salvo, alleging that “injustice is rife in modern Scotland” deserves at least as much cross-party consensus as the aforementi­oned subjects – because we should all be against injustice, should we not? But a lot of vested interests might take a different view.

Mr Findlay declared: “While injustices will always occur, they are compounded when there is no redress and no

accountabi­lity. Too often, public bodies use unlimited funds to crush legitimate complaints, wage war on whistleblo­wers and use non-disclosure agreements to hide the ugly truth from the paying public. Bad faith, back covering and secrecy

contaminat­e too many of our institutio­ns.”

I look forward to Mr Findlay elaboratin­g often and in detail. The forensic skills of journalism – particular­ly in his specialism of investigat­ing organised crime – are all too rare at Holyrood.

Worryingly for ministers, there is nobody else to blame. As Mr Findlay said: “The injustices I am speaking about are entirely made in Scotland. This Parliament has the power to fix them”. Can we have cross-party support for that?

 ??  ?? 0 New Scottish Conservati­ve MSP Russell Findlay wants to rood out injustice
0 New Scottish Conservati­ve MSP Russell Findlay wants to rood out injustice

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