The Scotsman

Murray: SNP should be angry at ruling Tories not Speaker

◆ Shadow Scotland secretary says the Government set a trap for the nationalis­ts during debate – and they duly fell into it

- Alexander Brown Westminste­r Correspond­ent

Shadow Scotland secretary Ian Murray has told the SNP its anger should be directed at the UK government over the Gaza ceasefire vote, rather than the Speaker or the Labour party.

The SNP has called for a vote of no confidence in Speaker Sir Lindsay hoyle amid accusation­s he helped sirkeir st armer avoid another damaging revolt over the Middle East issue by selecting Labour’s amendment.

More than 70 MPS have now signed the motion against Sir Lindsay proposed by senior Conservati­ve William Wragg.

However, Home Secretary James Cleverly has given his backing to the Speaker, saying: “I think he’s been a breath of fresh air compared with his predecesso­r. he made a mistake. He’s apologised for the mistake. My view is that I’m supportive of him.”

The speaker’ s decision up ended parliament­ary convention, and disregarde­d warnings from the House of Commons Clerk over the unpreceden­ted nature of the move, which provoked uproar in the chamber amid voting on Wednesday night.

Mr Murray claimed the SNP’S anger was misplaced, saying it was the government pulling its own amendment that created the problem, not Labour or the Speaker. The senior Labour figure told The Scots man :“Parliament­hasn’ t covered itself in glory with the chaos, but we can’t lose sight of the subject matter and internatio­nal crisis. despite all the odds and a 55-seat Tory majority, Parliament passed Labour’s motion that contains, amongst other important things, support for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.

“That should be the story, not concocted anger and rage. And any rage should be diverted to the government for creating the chaos, because they knew the Labour motion was going to pass so they withdrew theirs, therefore stitching up the SNP.

“The SNP’S only goal on Wednesday was proposing a motion that they knew would fail, rather than propose a motion that could pass. It’s also strange to criticise Mr Speaker when it’s the same process the SNP Scottish Government uses in the Scottish Parliament.”

The Edinburgh South MP defended sir lindsay over allowing the labour amendment, saying the move broadened debate, and issues only arose when the Tories pulled their own vote.

He said: “It’s just a convention, and it has been broken twice before, in 1999, and the first line of his advice from the Clerk to the House was there was no standing order to prevent the Speaker from choosing the Labour amendment to broaden the debate.

“The speaker then said‘ok,i’ m going to allow this to broaden the debate’. It would have been the Labour amendment, yes or no, and that would fall because the government would vote it down, then the SNP motion, and that would fall, then the Conservati­ve motion that would pass. All amendments would have fallen because that’s supposed to happen.

“What has happened is, the government were worried they were going to lose the vote, so pulled out. Tory MP after Tory MP said during the six-hour debate that they’d support the Labour amendment.

“What that meant procedural­ly was the system the Speaker had set up collapsed, because the Tories withdrew their motion. That meant the

The SNP’S only goal on Wednesday was proposing a motion that they knew would fail

Ian Murray

Labour amendment was passed first, and the SNP motion went through on the nod as amended. This entire chaos wasn’t caused by Mr Speaker, it was caused by the government. What the government thought they were doing with the SNP was setting an elephant trap for the Labour party, but at 6pm Wednesday evening, they pushed the SNP into their own trap.”

Mr Murray suggested the vote should be a good thing, but the progress was being ignored by a spat over procedure.

He said :“we got an immediate humanitari­an cease fire passed, and we should be glad of that. That should be the story. It was a success, getting Parliament to speak with one voice, in inverted commas.

“It’s not a cause of celebratio­n, because we’ve lost focus on what this is all about. The most shocked people in the room were the Labour benches. But Stephen Flynn had decided this is going to be about Labour and the Speaker, but he backed our amendment, so surely he should also be content that the motion passed. I can’t understand why he would be upset that it passed .”

More than a tenth of the Commons have signed Mr Wragg’s motion expressing no confidence in Sir Lindsay after Wednesday’s SNP Opposition Day vote descended into chaos.

The Speaker has apologised for his “mistake” and offered an emergency debate on the Scottish Nationalis­ts’ motion calling for a ceasefire in a bid to calm their fury over their proposal being sidelined.

Sir Lindsay claimed his decision came amid fears over MPS’ safety, saying he’d had frequent meetings with members worried about themselves and their families. The Scotsman understand­s that multiple MPS now need security for events as well as police protection in their own constituen­cies.

S np foreign affairs spokespers­on Brendan O’hara said :“The SNP has consistent­ly called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and Israel – and the UK Parliament has only been able to vote for one because we tabled the SNP ceasefire motion.

“While the Westminste­r circus has been shameful, we have made important progress this week, including forcing Keir Starmer to U-turn on his opposition to an immediate ceasefire. What matters now is that everyone focuses on helping the people of Gaza, freeing the hostages, and ensuring the UK government uses every lever to help secure a ceasefire and lasting peace. th es np will do everything to make that happen, and we are in discussion­s about the next steps to secure progress.”

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 ?? ?? Speaker of the House of Commons, Sir Lindsay Hoyle holds the helmet of one of the most successful Ukrainian pilots, pictured earlier this month. Stephen Flynn the SNP Westminste­r leader above and Ian Murray is pictured right.
Speaker of the House of Commons, Sir Lindsay Hoyle holds the helmet of one of the most successful Ukrainian pilots, pictured earlier this month. Stephen Flynn the SNP Westminste­r leader above and Ian Murray is pictured right.
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