The Sunday Post (Dundee)

‘No’ to pulp leaflets

UK ministers have been left red- faced after producing thousands of antiindepe­ndence leaflets that had to be pulped.

- By James Millar and Andrew Picken jmillar@sundaypost.com

ANTI-INDEPENDEN­CE leaflets that were to be sent to every home in Scotland have had to be pulped. They had a photo of a van with a company name, but last minute checks discovered there was a real company of the same name.

The Sunday Post has learned the original version of a leaflet to be sent to every home in Scotland had a photo of a tradesman and his van with a company name on the side.

It is understood last-minute checks discovered there was a company of the same name and the leaflets were binned for fear of any comeback from the business owner.

It is thought the error will have costtensof­thousandso­fpounds to correct and it has been suggestedt­hatitwasCh­iefSecreta­ry to the Treasury Danny Alexander who spotted the flaw.

Meanwhile, The Sunday Post has also learned the Scotland Office is contacting major employers around the country to see if they want to distribute copies of the pro-Union booklet for their staff.

SNP Treasury spokesman Stewart Hosie said last night: “It looks like Danny Alexander has some serious questions to answer – his credibilit­y is in the spotlight again.

“I intend to table questions at Westminste­r as soon as possible to get some answers about this. People will be rightly shocked if Danny Alexander did waste taxpayers’ money.

“It follows the revelation that an even larger amount of public money, £300,000, was used to conduct secret opinion polls on independen­ce for theWestmin­ster Government which they still refuse to publish, despite it being public money and the findings having reportedly being shared with the No campaign.”

The Cabinet Office, overseen by Francis Maude, was responsibl­e for producing the leaflets.

It was also the department responsibl­e for commission­ing polling on the independen­ce issue that the UK Government refuses to make public.

The total cost of printing 2.5 million copies of the booklet to deliver to every home in Scotland came to £ 720,000 or roughly 30p each.

Sources close to Danny Alexander confirmed the bungle had taken place while a Downing Street source would only say that the booklet had been through“a lot of checking”.

Now the Cabinet Office is stalling on answering a Freedom Of Informatio­n request asking what happened and exactly how much it cost.

When asked if it was true the leaflets had been pulped, a spokeswoma­n said: “We won’t provide a running commentary on the printing schedule.”

 ??  ?? The leaflet at the centre of the controvers­y.
The leaflet at the centre of the controvers­y.

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