The Scotsman

Rennie proposes bill to let voters ‘sack’ MSPS

● Legislatio­n put forward following anger over Mark Mcdonald case

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS

Legislatio­n allowing voters to “sack” their MSPS will be introduced following the outcry over sex harassment by former minister Mark Mcdonald, it has been revealed.

Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie said he would bring forward a private member’s bill to introduce a power to recall MSPS, matching a similar procedure introduced at Westminste­r in 2015.

Voters would get the chance to force an MSP to face a snap by-election if there is support from between 10 per cent and 20 per cent of constituen­ts.

Mr Rennie said he would raise the proposal with other party leaders at Holyrood this week. It follows anger at the lack of sanctions for Mr Mcdonald, the Aberdeen Donside MSP, who resigned as children’s minister last year and quit the SNP last week after an internal inquiry

0 Mark Mcdonald returned to Holyrood last week to stand as an Independen­t after resigning from the SNP found he sent “inappropri­ate and unwanted text messages” and “exploited his position of power” over female staff.

However, there is no means to force Mr Mcdonald to stand down from his £62,000-a-year job as an MSP. But claims that he subjected a member of staff working for SNP MSP James Dornan to “harassment and sexual innuendo” could lead to his suspension by the Holyrood standards committee.

Mr Rennie told a Sunday newspaper: “Action is required as it is unacceptab­le for Mark Mcdonald to continue as an MSP. I am hopeful MSPS of all parties would back this plan.”

In 2013, when the former SNP MSP Bill Walker initially refused to stand down despite a conviction for domestic abuse, Mr Mcdonald joined calls from parliament­arians for him to go.

The proposal has already gained support. A Scottish Labour Party spokesman said: “Mark Mcdonald’s behaviour has clearly been unacceptab­le and he should stand down.

“We support the principle of recall and will work with other parties to see how it could work in practice. Richard Leonard would be happy to meet Willie Rennie to discuss his plans.”

A Scottish Conservati­ve spokesman said: “If the last few weeks have taught us anything, it’s that a system needs to be created to ensure this doesn’t happen again.

“But if a system of recall is pursued, we have to be extremely careful about the circumstan­ces under which this can activated.”

Thescottis­hgreenssai­dthey would wait for the outcome of an inquiry by the Commission­er for Ethical Standards in Public Life in Scotland before deciding whether to support a Recall Bill.

A Scottish Government spokesman said Mr Rennie’s proposal would be for parliament to decide.

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