Western Mail

‘Sturgeon must quit if she broke code’

- CRAIG PATON newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

NICOLA Sturgeon should stand down if she is found to have breached the ministeria­l code, new Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar has said.

The First Minister is the focus of an investigat­ion over whether she misled the Scottish Parliament on when she knew about allegation­s of harassment made against her predecesso­r Alex Salmond.

Ms Sturgeon said she first learned of the complaints in a meeting with Mr Salmond at her home in early April 2018, but it later emerged she had been told by his former chief of staff in her Holyrood office a few days prior, a fact she claims to have forgotten.

She referred herself for investigat­ion by James Hamilton QC, an independen­t adviser on the ministeria­l code.

If Ms Sturgeon is found to have broken the ministeria­l code, Mr Sarwar said she should step down.

“If there is a minister, forget who the minister is or what political party they are from, if a minister is found to have breached the ministeria­l

code, I think people would expect that minister to resign,” the newly elected Scottish Labour leader told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge On Sunday.

“That’s what Nicola Sturgeon would say if it was a Labour politician, a Conservati­ve politician or a Liberal Democrat politician, so let’s take the party politics out of it – it’s a point of principle.”

When pushed specifical­ly on whether or not the First Minister should step down, Mr Sarwar said: “Yes, I think Nicola Sturgeon herself would say that if an opposition politician was in government and they’d breached the ministeria­l code, they would be expected to resign.

“Let’s take the party politics and the personalit­ies out of it, it’s a point of principle and respecting the office of First Minister.”

Speaking in his first broadcast interview since becoming leader on Saturday, defeating Monica Lennon with more than 57% of the vote, Mr Sarwar said he believes the First Minister would not support touting a referendum on independen­ce if it were not for the internal struggles of the SNP.

Factions within Scotland’s ruling party have grown more impatient with the approach to independen­ce in recent months, as well as internal strife on the issue of transgende­r rights and the ongoing Salmond inquiry – where the former first minister claims there has been a “malicious and concerted” effort to push him out of public life.

 ??  ?? > Then First Minister Alex Salmond with deputy SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon in 2008
> Then First Minister Alex Salmond with deputy SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon in 2008

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