The Scotsman

Ewing slams ‘authoritar­ian’ SNP after suspension upheld

- Katrine Bussey PICTURE: JANE BARLOW

MSP and former Scottish Government minister Fergus Ewing has branded the SNP an "authoritar­ian party" that demands "obedience to the leadership" as he revealed a suspension imposed upon him has been upheld by party bosses.

SNP MSPS at Holyrood had agreed to suspend the Inverness and Nairn MSP from their group for a week back in September 2023 after he voted against a Scottish Government minister in a crucial vote of confidence.

Mr Ewing, the son of late SNP trailblaze­r Winnie Ewing and a former rural economy secretary, had appealed against that decision.

But in a statement released by his office last night, he said it had been up held by the party who he then turned his fire on.

Claiming his vote against the circular economy minister and Scottish Green co leader lo rn as later had been a "vote of conscience ", mr ewing hit out, saying: "The SNP has now become an authoritar­ian party requiring strict obedience to the leadership at the expense of personal freedom for any individual member."

He insisted that the public "do not want MSPS to be mere ciphers or rubber stamps of leadership dictation", with Mr Ewing claiming: "If my constituen­ts wanted a doormat, they would have gone to B&Q."

His comments came after the veteran politician, who has been an ms p since the first Holyrood elections in 1999, spoke out against the Scottish Government on policies such as the now halted deposit return scheme (DRS), and the introducti­on of new regulation­s for short-term property lets.

It was after DRS was put on hold that a vote on no confidence in Ms Slater was called, with Mr Ewing saying he had "stood up for my constituen­ts to protect them against a disastrous policy and voted with my conscience against that policy, which was discarded".

But he insisted: "The SNP leadership no longer tolerates a conscience vote."

The party's leadership brought in new rules in 2021, preventing SNP MSPS from using a conscience vote or constituen­cy grounds to go against the Scottish Government, Mr Ewing claimed, addveteran ing the party had never before exerted such control over its members at Holyrood.

Refusing to say if he would re-join the party, he repeated his call for SNP leader and Scottish First Minister Humza Yousaf to put the power sharing agreement with Greens at Holyrood to a fresh vote.

This Bute House Agreement gives the SNP a majority in the Scottish Parliament, but Mr Ewing, who has previously branded the Greens as "wine bar pseudo-intellectu­als", insisted it was a "disastrous deal".

He told how he had "served" the SNP for 50 years as it was "the main vehicle for independen­ce", but added: "Over the past two years, we have borne the high electoral cost of a disastrous deal with the Greens.

"It is dragging us down. I suspect that, were it put to a vote, the party members may call a halt to it before even more electoral harm is caused.

"I therefore again call upon Humza to put this to the vote. After all, that's democracy, not authoritar­ianism."

He stated: "For my future, I vow to continue to defend the interests of my constituen­ts, and as far as the SNP is concerned... let the cards fall as they may. If the SNP cannot cope with that, so be it."

 ?? ?? It is unclear whether Fergus Ewing will rejoin the SNP after his suspension ends
It is unclear whether Fergus Ewing will rejoin the SNP after his suspension ends

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