The Herald on Sunday

Murphy’s secret chats with Tories

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BY TOM GORDON

FORMER Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy has been having cosy political chats with senior members of the Conservati­ve government, the Sunday Herald can reveal. The arch-Blairite has held meetings with Scottish Secretary David Mundell and his Scotland Office deputy, Lord Andrew Dunlop. Murphy said that he “wanted to catch up privately about a couple of political issues” with the Conservati­ve politician­s.

However, a Westminste­r source suggested Murphy, who was a cabinet office minister, Europe minister, and finally Scottish secretary under New Labour, had offered the pair tips on high office. The SNP last night called on Mundell to make a full disclosure about the talks, especially as Murphy now runs a one-man business advising foreign government­s.

Murphy, 49, led Scottish Labour to its worst general election result last year, losing his own East Renfrewshi­re seat as 40 of the party’s 41 constituen­cies fell to the SNP. The collapse followed his highly divisive tour of Scotland for the Better Together campaign during the independen­ce referendum.

Late last year, he set up a consultanc­y, Arden Strategies Ltd, and began working for Finland’s Crisis Management Initiative (CMI) advising on “conflict resolution in central Asia”.

He took part in a CMI meeting with government staff in Armenia in October, then popped up in Georgia, the pro-Western former Soviet state in the Caucasus, for a peace workshop with local officials.

Now material obtained by the Sunday Herald under Freedom of Informatio­n shows that Murphy also had meetings with a government rather closer to home.

In his own words, he had a “good conversati­on” with Mundell in December, then followed it up with a meeting with Dunlop at Dover House on Whitehall in February.

An email trail shows Murphy contacted Dunlop’s diary secretary on January 19. He wrote: “Apologies for the impersonal approach and for getting in touch out of the blue, but I wanted to see if I could get a slot in Andrew’s diary at some point soon. I just wanted to catch up privately about a couple of political issues. I had a good conversati­on with David Mundell on similar terms before Christmas.”

A week later the secretary replied saying Dunlop was “happy to meet with you”, and offered a choice of 11 possible times and dates in February and March. Barely an hour later, Murphy grabbed the first available slot, noon on February 17. “Should I come to Dover House?” he asked.

When the secretary confirmed the meeting, Murphy emailed his thanks and included a shameless link to a website selling his “acclaimed book” about football.

The Scotland Office said no notes were taken during Murphy’s half-hour meeting with Dunlop. Nor was any briefing material prepared for Dunlop.

An SNP spokeswoma­n said: “It seems Better Together is still alive – even if it isn’t very well.” A Scotland Office spokesman: “This was a meeting between a previous Scottish secretary and a current Scottish minister to discuss Scottish issues. There is nothing surprising in that.”

Murphy failed to respond to calls and emails.

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