Scotland leader fends off calls to quit over case against ex ally
Published on: Thursday, March 04, 2021
By: AFP
EDINBURGH: Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon (pic) on Wednesday defended her handling of sexual assault claims against her predecessor, in a case that has erupted into a full-blown crisis for the independence movement as pressure mounts for her to resign.The leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP) vehemently denied claims that she misled the parliament in Edinburgh about when she knew of the claims against former leader Alex Salmond.ADVERTISEMENT
“I have searched my soul on all of this many, many times over,” Sturgeon told a parliamentary inquiry.
“It may very well be that I didn’t get everything right, that’s for others to judge.
“But in one of the most invidious political and personal situations I have ever faced, I believe I acted properly and appropriately and that overall, I made the best judgement I could.”
Salmond, who was cleared of all charges at a trial last year, has accused her of a failure of leadership and said he believed she breached the ministerial code, which is normally considered a resigning matter.ADVERTISEMENT
It has been a spectacular falling out between Sturgeon and Salmond, her political mentor and long-time friend, casting a shadow over the SNP’s prospects at elections coming up in May as the party steps up calls for a second referendum on Scottish independence.
Legal advice reluctantly published by the Scottish government late Tuesday showed that it ignored legal advice in pressing on with a doomed case against Salmond, according to opposition parties.
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Scottish Conservative leader Douglas Ross said he would file a no-confidence motion in the Edinburgh parliament, where the SNP has no overall majority.
“There is no longer any doubt that Nicola Sturgeon lied to the Scottish Parliament and broke the ministerial code on numerous counts,” he said.
“The weight of the evidence is overwhelming. Nicola Sturgeon must resign,” Ross added, after evidence from two other witnesses also called into question Sturgeon’s version of events surrounding the handling of claims against Salmond.
The newly appointed leader of the Scottish Labour party, Anas Sarwar, said last weekend that Sturgeon should quit if she is found to have breached the ministerial code.
But Ian Blackford, who leads the SNP in the UK parliament in London, accused the Conservatives of electioneering ahead of the May polls and hailed Sturgeon’s “very strong leadership and integrity”.
“The first minister has made it clear on a number of occasions that she has not broken the ministerial code,” he told BBC radio.
Sturgeon admitted “a very serious mistake” in the legal case had let down women who had accused Salmond of assault in the wake of the MeToo movement, and that taxpayer money was lost in the subsequent settling of costs in his favour.
“I deeply regret that,” she said, while rejecting the “absurd suggestion that anyone acted with malice or as part of a plot against Alex Salmond”.Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express’s Telegram channel.
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The row involving two of the independence movement’s biggest names has laid bare factional fighting within the SNP, and continued support for Salmond, 66, who stepped down as first minister in 2014, after Scots rejected independence in a first referendum.
Sturgeon, 50, has been hoping to strengthen her case for another referendum at the May elections, leveraging her stewardship of the response to the coronavirus pandemic and Scottish discontent over the UK’s Brexit withdrawal from the European Union.