The Scotsman

Ross challenged three times before backing Johnson amid sleaze row

- By CONOR MATCHETT newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Douglas Ross was asked three times before confirming he continues to have confidence in Boris Johnson as Conservati­ve leader and Prime Minister amid the continued fallout around Owen Paterson and corruption scandals.

The scottish tory leader, who failed to register £30,000 worth of second job earnings from his role as an MSP and as a linesman, said the Paterson affair had been an “extremely poorly handled episode”.

Asked whether he still had confidence in Boris Johnson, Mr Ross said: “The Prime Minister has accepted he got this badly wrong and it has been an extremely poorly handled episode way back to the Owen Paterson affair, I broke the party whip bec au seicouldn’ t support what he and his government were asking colleagues to do.

"I think what we have seen this week is Parliament uniting to say yes, we need to look at this.”

While being interviewe­d on the BBC’S The Sunday Show, it took three questions and being told to give a yes or no answer before Mr Ross backed Boris Johnson as leader of the Conservati­ves, answering “yes” to the question of whether the Prime Minister is still the right man to lead the party.

Mr Ross added: “[It’s been] really damaging to the party north and south of the Border and I think politics in general.

"No party has been immune from the criticism in this and that’s why I think it is right that parliament came together this week, there was no opposition to the proposals that the government put forward to the standards committee to look into, that was passed with no votes against.”

The Scottish Conservati­ve leader also outlined his opposition to what he labelled “paid consultanc­y and lobbying” in Westminste­r, but defended MPS and MSPS who work as NHS frontline staff, saying it is “helpful at times” for legislator­s to have experience of what they are debating.

He added: “No company or business or organisati­on should have an inside track into the workings of parliament and think they can, whether it is true or not, get any preferenti­al treatment as a result of that .”

Mr Ross labelled the £82,000 salary for MPS as “extremely generous” and said MPS who believe there is a need for second jobs to supplement that salary because it is too low “shouldn’t beacon serv at iv emp” o ranmp from any party.

He refused to comment on whether Geoffrey Cox, the Tory grandee who earned hundreds of thousands of pounds working as a lawyer in the Caribbean during lock down, should re sign as an MP.

He also said he would not give up his job as a linesman, saying that: “Mps/msps/councillor­s are allowed a life outside politics and I think if we do away with that, that’s a greater risk in encouragin­g people to come forward for elected office.”

The comments from Mr Ross come as Scottish Labour said they would bring forward a ban to second jobs for MSPS if the SNP fails to do so.

Neil Bibby, the party’s business manager, said action in Holyrood is “more urgent than ever” and a “serious discussion” around the issue was needed.

He said: “The role of MSPS should be to fully focus on their constituen­ts and the practice of working second jobs should be banned. In the absence of leadership from the Scottish Government, Labour will bring forward a bill to change the law.

“There needs to be some exemptions, particular­ly for those msps who require to continue employment to maintain registrati­on such as medical profession­als, but in general, this bill will sound the death knell for second jobs as a means to line ones pockets.

“It’s high time this gravy train was ended. This proposed bill will ensure that all our msps are working full-time for the people of Scotland, not private profit. I hope other parties will see the need for action.”

Asked earlier in the week whether they would back a move to ban second jobs in Holyrood, the SNP said the existing rules were already stricter than in Westminste­r.

A spokespers­on for the party said: “The Tory corruption scandal highlights a completely­broken westminste­r system– from peerages for multimilli­on pound Tory donors to Douglas Ross failing to claim a sum of earnings greater than the average salary in Scotland.

"Any proposals concerning MSPS would need to be looked at on their merits – but Holyrood is already far stricter than Westminste­r, which continues to enable Tory sleaze on a vast scale.”

Last week a Labour MP refused to withdraw the word "dodgy" three times, as she claimed she did not think "another word suffices the level of corruption and what we have seen from the Government".

During business questions in the house of commons, t hemp for Coventry South, Zarah Sultana, accused Transport Secretary Grant Shapps and Commons leader Jacob Rees-mogg of being "dodgy".

Ms Sultana said: "It has been reported that the transport secretaryu­sed public money to create a department­al team that lobbied against plans to build on airfield sites, including a gigafactor­y at Coventry Airport.

"Disgracefu­lly, that would mean he used public funds to lobby against green investment and jobs coming to Coventry.

"And why? We know he is an aviation enthusiast. From a dodgy Transport Secretary to a dodgy Leader of the House who last week tried to rewrite the rules to let his mate off the hook. This Conservati­ve Government is rotten to the core. Is the Leader of the House proud of this shameful record?"

Interjecti­ng, commons deputyspea­ker dame eleanor laing told her to think of a different form of words, as she did not like the word "dodgy".

 ?? ?? ↑ Leader of the House of Commons Jacob Rees-mogg was accused of being ‘dodgy’ last week by Labour MP for Coventry South Zarah Sultana
↑ Leader of the House of Commons Jacob Rees-mogg was accused of being ‘dodgy’ last week by Labour MP for Coventry South Zarah Sultana
 ?? ?? ↑ Mr Ross said he would not give up his job as a linesman
↑ Mr Ross said he would not give up his job as a linesman
 ?? ??

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