The Scotsman

No message deletion under Salmond

- Alexander Brown Westminste­r Correspond­ent

deletion was not a Scottish Government policy in his time as first minister, as he claimed Nicola Sturgeon’s former chief of staff would have been “1,000 miles” from a senior role under his leadership.

The Alba party leader criticised Liz Lloyd over messages suggesting the Scottish Government used Covid to make a “good old-fashioned rammy” with Westminste­r.

Appearing before the scottish affairs committee yesterday, mr Salmond was asked by Labour MP Michael Shanks if he would have taken the same approach during the pandemic.

Referencin­g Whatsapp messages sent by Ms Sturgeon in which she called Boris Johnson a “f ***** g clown” in an exchange with her former aide, Ms Lloyd, Mr Salmond claimed such rhetoric was not what the public expected.

“Its truck me as one of the most revealing things I saw in that, was that somehow, of all the missing Whatsapp messages, one message which miraculous­ly managed to be retained was the one that referred to Boris Johnson as a 'expletive deletive clown'.

"Now many people, your constituen­ts, my constituen­ts, might agree with that. bu ti can not believe the Covid relatives watching that inquiry wanted to hear that, or for that matter, the Scottish secretary, address alex sal mo nd has insisted message ing things the way he did in giving his evidence.

"The last thing Covid relatives want to hear is what politician­s think of each other. What they want to hear about is what they actually did in terms of addressing those things. As far as that particular case, as far as thatpartic­ular person is concerned, they would have been 1,000 miles from being a senior adviser [in my government].”

Mr Salmond was also asked about the policy of message deletion. Former deputy first minister John Swinney told the Uk covid inquiry he“manually” deleted messages between himself, Ms Sturgeon and Humza Yousaf in a practice he claimed dated back to 2007.

Mr Salmond said: “I was interested to hear some people say that practise dates back to 2007 to delete messages. It was the first I've heard of it. I actually checked with [former Cabinet members] Kenny Macaskill and Alex Neil, two ministers at the time, if they ever heard of that policy, and they hadn't heard of it either.

“I conducted everything through my private office, probably because I wasn' tt hate lectro ni cally savvy at the time. I think I had Whatsapp for the first time in 2017, so I conducted everything through my private office, or in personal contact, phone calls or whatever.

"I used to get very annoyed at the informalit­y of emails. i had a whole succession of FOIS [Freedom of Informatio­n requests], which showed civil servants emailing each other about the football results, harmless stuff .”

The issue of Whatsapp messages came to the fore late last year, when the uk covid inquiry said the majority of such correspond­ence between senior government officials during the pandemic had been deleted, in line with guidance.

Some messages, including those of Mr Yousaf, were recovered through various means, but the Government’s handling of the issue has been heavily criticised. Ms Sturgeon deleted all messages, but stressed she did not conduct Government business by Whatsapp.

The last thing Covid relatives want to hear is what politician­s think of each other

 ?? ?? Alex Salmond said it was revealing the Whatsapp referring to Boris Johnson as a clown had been retained
Alex Salmond said it was revealing the Whatsapp referring to Boris Johnson as a clown had been retained

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom