The Scotsman

SNP ministers set for court battle over Sturgeon conduct evidence

- By CONOR MATCHETT conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

Evidence about alleged misconduct by Nicola Sturgeon around the Alex Salmond inquiry is set to be subject to a court battle with ministers disputing a transparen­cy ruling.

Ministers were found to have incorrectl­y claimed they did not hold the written evidence provided to the independen­t investigat­or on the ministeria­l code, James Hamilton, for his investigat­ion into the conduct of the First Minister.

In a ruling earlier this year, the Scottish Informatio­n Commission­er (SIC) ruled the Government had incorrectl­y claimed the evidence, which included highly controvers­ial and legally challengin­g claims and detail, was held by mr hamilton rather than by ministers.

Ministers were asked by an applicant to publish all the written evidence in full in April 2021. But it was claimed they did not hold the informatio­n and it was instead held by Mr Hamilton, who was outside the scope of the Freedom of Informatio­n legislatio­n. The commission­er, however, disagreed.

This ruling will now be subject to a court battle after ministers informed the requestor and the Commission­er they intend to appeal the decision to the Court of Session for just the ninth time in the history of the Freedom of Informatio­n (Scotland) Act.

The applicant, Benjamin Harrop, told The Scotsman he hoped the courts sided with “transparen­cy and common sense”.

He said: “I find the decision to appeal completely bizarre. In nearly 20 years since the 2002 Foi act came into force, scottish ministers have appealed only a handful of cases from the independen­t SIC.

“My original request was submitted in April of 2021. Nearly two years on, the case is still ongoing, and this appeal is not even in reference to whether the evidence should be disclosed or not, but whether, as Scottish ministers argue, they even hold this evidence. Which is simply an outlandish position to take.

“The investigat­ion was instigated by the First Minister, civil servants assisted Mr Hamilton, the report was submitted to the deputy first minister, and its findings were binding on the First Minister. I only hope that the courts side with transparen­cy and common sense.”

The Hamilton Report was undertaken concurrent­ly with the Scottish Parliament’s inquiry into the Government’s botched handling of harassment complaints made against the former first minister, mrs almond, now leader of the Alba Party.

Ms Sturgeon was cleared by Mr Hamilton after referring herself to the investigat­or over concerns about her conduct connected to the handling of harassment complaints against Mr Salmond.

She was found to have not misled holy rood, despitethe parliament­ary inquiry ruling she had misled the committee about her involvemen­t.

Had the investigat­ion ruled she had breached the ministeria­l code, Ms Sturgeon would have been expected to have resigned.

A Scottish Government spokespers­on said: “We are committed to openness and transparen­cy and recognise that scrutiny is essential for effective governance. As this case is now before the court, we will not comment on live legal proceeding­s.”

 ?? ?? ↑ Nicola Sturgeon with Alex Salmond whilst on the general election campaign trail in Inverurie in the Gordon constituen­cy in 2015
↑ Nicola Sturgeon with Alex Salmond whilst on the general election campaign trail in Inverurie in the Gordon constituen­cy in 2015

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