Dear All
Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson once famously said, a ‘week
is a long time in politics’, and what we have seen in the last week has rocked
the Scottish political landscape, particularly in the Scottish National Party.
Alex Salmond accused of sexual misconduct by not one, but
two females.
I first met Alex Salmond in 2008; it was the Glasgow East
by-election. I was not a party member of the SNP at that time but I volunteered
to help the campaign of John Mason. Salmond came into a portabin kitchen I was
sitting in having lunch and sat down. We struck up a conversion where he talked
about politics, universities and various aspects of the by-election campaign. After that we parted, he came across as chatty, friendly and
personable.
I would over the next few years in my time in the SNP bump into
him, most notably at the Glasgow North East by-election. The SNP put a lot of
resources into that campaign, and their operation for by-elections was pretty
slick.
Last week, I took the time off to study despite the Salmond
story breaking, everyone has an opinion on whether he is guilty or innocent, but there is only one side of the
truth. A huge amount of attention has been focused on ‘process’ led by Alex Salmond, on what happened relating to how the SNP Government has handled this case.
I would say that Salmond will probably win his judicial
review because of Article Six of the Human Rights Act, the right to a fair
trial. If you don’t know what you are accused of and by whom, this represents a
breach of human rights law. Whether or not Salmond wins, you cannot fail to
spot the irony that it is his own former government is corrupt, something which
was never a problem for him while he sat on the other side of the fence.
On this blog, I previously talked about why we give 'bad
people' human rights, it isn't because they are entitled to them, and to ensure the
innocent are also fully protected. In the Salmond case, there should be no rush to
judgement; the matter is so serious that there has to be a Police
investigation.
Give that there are allegedly two female victims in this
case; people will be at some point be quoting the moorov principle.
This is a famous case from the 1930’s, a sex case.
Given how high profile this case is, a trip to a Court of
Law following a Police investigation wouldn’t surprise many people.
Many people and commentators have said that regardless of
the outcome of this episode, Alex Salmond is finished politically; it would be
hard to disagree with that viewpoint. Salmond’s book, ‘the dream shall never
die’, may prompt some laughter because he is already dead and buried, and if he
doesn’t grasp that fact, he clearly has a lot of catching up to do.
I called for Nicola Sturgeon to suspend Alex Salmond, but
she wouldn’t, her excuse is no legal basis, but the reality is that Nicola
Sturgeon didn’t want to be proactive in getting Salmond out. Salmond has a lot
of supporters in the SNP, and some of them aren’t supporters of Nicola Sturgeon.
Now, things have taken a dramatic twist, Alex Salmond has resigned
from the SNP, saying he wanted to avoid splitting the party and focus on
clearing his name. His reasons; relieve pressure on Nicola Sturgeon to
suspend him and avoid his suspension causing “substantial internal division”. I
am pretty sure that that internal division has already happened, in the SNP
there is the ‘Court of King Alex’ and the ‘Court of Queen Nicola’, and they
aren’t too fond of each other.
Salmond has been a member of the SNP for 45 years and its
leader for 20, everything comes to an end, but I doubt he figured that in the
space of 16 months he would go from being an elected SNP MP to Joe Public.
From the backbench to the park bench!
One interesting phenomena in recent years is the use by the
SNP of the launch of crowdfunding appeals to bankroll them. Alex Salmond who
has five pensions and fronts a TV show has his crowdfunder to take the Scottish Government to
court to challenge its handling of the complaints against him.
Opposition parties said he had a “brass neck” asking others
to pay for a legal action against the Government, and accused him of “dragging Scotland into
the gutter”. Scotland
has been in the gutter for a more than a decade under the SNP, small point but
always worth mentioning.
In an emotional video statement, Salmond said he “truly
loved” the SNP and the Yes movement, and didn’t want to damage the “defining
commitment” of his life.
If you don’t get what this means, this is Alex Salmond
saying goodbye, there are certain things that you can come back from in
politics, but when allegations of the kind that have been made against him pop
up, there is no way back.
One thing about Alex Salmond is his ego, he can’t get over
himself, his suggestion that he intends to reapply for SNP membership is just
ego. He is mired in a serious scandal at the moment, and although he might
think he sees light at the end of the tunnel, that tunnel is ‘pitch black’ at
the moment.
Finally, Alex Salmond is independently wealthy man, his
crowdfunding appeal is obscene, it is another error of judgement, but when you
are in personal and political freefall, knee jerk reactions and panic are the
norm. I have for years said the SNP is a party within a party, it is a ‘rat
ship’; it seems given the allegations against Salmond that Nicola Sturgeon has
emerged as the ‘last rat standing’.
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University
If he had any sense, he'd line his pockets with the considerable wealth he's accumulated and fuck off like the rest of the political classes.
ReplyDeleteIt's developing into a fair wee stooshie isnt it George ...
ReplyDeleteThe Daily Record found out about this after they received a tip (apparently). Whats the bet that tip came from within..... Im not sure he'll win the judicial review after Herr sturgeon and the civil service saying there were "considerable inaccuracies" in his version of events .... One thing is for sure it will cause lots of problems/division in the govt/snp and yes mob ...
GEORGE WE NEED TO GET YOU A WIRELESS DONGLE SO YOU CAN STAY ON LINE
ReplyDeleteSturgeon has somehow managed to reduce him, from hero to zero. Now add in his crowd funding he’s now below zero. Salmond has definitely lost the plot. And it serves him right; I bet he wishes he never promoted the ugly little troll in the first place but it’s all too late now’.
ReplyDeleteCrowdfunder is a disgrace, I think he’s using it to show that he can still command and army of followers. He’s using it to send a powerful message to Nicola Sturgeon that he can’t be ignored. The sheep will continue to bleet Westminster conspiracy and throw money at him.
ReplyDeleteHi Anon
ReplyDeleteAnyone with any decency would agree the crowdfunder is a disgrace, I see Nicola Sturgeon is calling for people to donate to women's charities, this is a face saving measure to protect her and the SNP's image.
The SNP is as I stated all those years ago, a rat ship.
George
Hi Anon
ReplyDelete"GEORGE WE NEED TO GET YOU A WIRELESS DONGLE SO YOU CAN STAY ON LINE".
I use the libraries which does for me, I didn't cover the Salmond story when it broke because I was studying something in order to fix something which I bought.
https://glasgowunihumanrights.blogspot.com/2018/08/hitman-47-enhanced-cgi-scene-using.html
The main rotor wasn't centred properly so I had to learn about what is an axis and how it is moved to centre. Some of the tutorials I watched didn't work for my problem which ,meant a lot of research as I tried to work out what the hell was going on.
As to Salmond, he is politically dead, even if he wins the review battle, he lost the war.
Back to normal soon.
George
Useful information. Fortunate me I found your web site
ReplyDeleteby accident, and I'm surprised why this accident
did not took place earlier! I bookmarked it.
Hi George what if Salmond is found guilty just imagine how all the people who have donated money his crowdfunding campaign,betrayed by a jolly wee fat man,hell slap it in to them.
ReplyDelete