UK

SNP rebel brands party at Holyrood ‘toxic’

The MSP claimed he has not spoken to some in leadership for ‘well over a year’ (Paul Campbell/PA)
The MSP claimed he has not spoken to some in leadership for ‘well over a year’ (Paul Campbell/PA)

Frequent SNP rebel Fergus Ewing has described the party as “toxic” and claimed some in Government or leadership roles have not spoken to him in more than a year.

Mr Ewing has become a critic of the leadership of the party in recent months, accentuated by his outbursts from the backbenches against policies including highly protected marine areas (HPMAs), the failure to dual the A9 and the deposit return scheme.

The former minister has also criticised the SNP decision to unite with the Scottish Greens, bringing the party’s co-leaders into Government as junior ministers.

Speaking to the Holyrood Sources podcast, the former minister said he had not heard from some in the party’s upper echelons.

“The atmosphere in Holyrood is not particularly happy now within the SNP group, I’m afraid to say,” Mr Ewing said.

“So much so that frankly there’s many people in the cabinet and the leadership that haven’t uttered a word to me or vice versa for well over a year.

“It’s very sad, and I do think they would have done better to have listened to people like me when I set out very detailed, logical, rational objections to some of the policies they have been pursuing.”

He added: “Does that bother me a great deal? Frankly, I don’t give a damn, I’m not there for a social club, I’m not there to have a happy time in the bar.

“I’m there to do a job for Scotland, I’m in a privileged position of being a representative of a major, hugely important part of Scotland and if people don’t like me or if they don’t like my ideas, well that’s just tough.

“I’ve reached the stage now where I can see very clearly that I know what needs to be done, I respect others that disagree with me, but I’m certainly not going to be deterred simply because there’s a bit of a toxic atmosphere amongst the SNP group in Holyrood.”

The SNP stalwart went on to say he did not believe Yes could win a referendum in the next few years, owing to “extremist” policies, such as gender self-identification, HPMAs and the deposit return scheme.

Humza Yousaf
Fergus Ewing said Humza Yousaf should ‘detach himself from this dalliance with the Greens’ (Jane Barlow/PA)

On Humza Yousaf’s leadership, Mr Ewing said: “Humza is a new leader, he was elected with a narrow mandate, and he’s entitled, therefore, to have a shot, to have a chance.

“But my feeling is that that chance is slipping away from his grasp unless he makes good on the fundamentals, and one of them is our unimplemented promise to the A9 and the A96.”

The Inverness and Nairn MSP has been outspoken in recent months about the need for the road, which has claimed the lives of dozens of drivers in the past few decades, to be dualled, going so far as to say the First Minister should “consider his position” if he cannot deliver the road and threatening to revoke his support for the Government should it fail to make progress in the next year.

The “most serious thing” the First Minister should do, Mr Ewing added, was to “detach himself from this dalliance with the Greens”.

He went on to claim that painting the Conservatives as “reprehensible” during Nicola Sturgeon’s time in Government was “not only wrong, but it’s a pretty duff political strategy”, urging the SNP to be a “broad kirk”.