National Post

Politician­s’ feud threatens Scottish independen­ce

Government acting illegally, ex-leader says

- ELIZABETH PIPER AND KATE HOLTON

LONDON • Scotland’s former first minister Alex Salmond accused the nation’s government on Friday of acting illegally and lacking leadership in a bitter row with his successor that threatens to damage the Scottish independen­ce movement.

The feud between Salmond and his successor, Nicola Sturgeon, has reached fever pitch in recent weeks, pitting the former friends against each other in a sparring match that could eventually put pressure on her to resign.

Sturgeon has denied his accusation­s.

Sturgeon and her bid for a second independen­ce referendum have been riding high in opinion polls, with many praising her handling of Scotland’s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Support has fallen back, although a majority still back a second referendum.

Salmond, who was cleared of committing multiple sex offences against women last year, has accused Sturgeon and others of working to further the allegation­s being made against him. He alleged a “malicious scheme” among senior SNP figures close to his successor to damage his reputation

He said the handling of his case by the Scottish government had shown a failure of leadership, accusing politician­s of being too close to the judiciary.

“The government acted illegally, but somehow nobody’s to blame,” Salmond told an inquiry into the government’s handling of the case.

“Collective­ly these events shine a light on a government whose actions are no longer true to the principles of openness, accountabi­lity and transparen­cy, which are the core principles on which this Scottish parliament was founded.”

He added: “Some consequenc­es should follow from unlawful conduct.”

Salmond was once Sturgeon’s mentor and the two of them formed a powerful partnershi­p that made the Scottish National Party a dominant force in Scotland and took them close to winning an independen­ce referendum in 2014, when Scots voted 55 per cent to 45 per cent to remain in the United Kingdom.

But the allegation­s of sexual harassment against Salmond in 2018, which he has denied, drove a wedge between them, and resulted in the SNP becoming fractured, which could dent the party’s predicted victory in a local election in May.

The row stems from Sturgeon’s handling of the government’s response to the case against Salmond and whether she misled parliament over the details of what and when she knew of the allegation­s against her predecesso­r.

Friday’s inquiry is looking at the government and its handling of the case. Salmond described the government as having been “found to have ... acted unlawfully, unfairly and tainted by apparent bias.”

On Thursday, Sturgeon told Scotland’s parliament that she would answer fully to the inquiry and accused opposition politician­s of siding with Salmond and sacrificin­g their principles on the “altar of the ego of one man.”

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