LGBTQ dominated group of Scottish MP’s have their fun and run riot at Westminster

26 Sep 2015: The SNP run riot at Westminster

Standing on chairs in Parliament’s Sports and Social bar, a band of portly gentlemen are bellowing out Scottish folk songs.

A young barmaid, only in her early twenties yet a seasoned veteran when it comes to turfing out unruly Westminster soaks, approaches a new SNP MP and politely asks him to pack it in.

Words are exchanged.

Multiple witnesses allege a drunken ‘f— you’ is uttered.

Defeated, the barmaid retreats behind the bar to mocking male laughter.

So upset is she by the incident, she will leave her job a few weeks later.

A Labour wag reaches for his coat and sighs “They’re only just getting started.”

The conquering horde of Scots Nats have come to town and they are making themselves heard.

SW1 certainly expected the worst from the new SNP cohort.

As the Glasgow East MP Natalie McGarry puts it, “They thought we would come down waving flags, with our faces painted blue and white.”

Yet those preconceptions were not without substance.

An extraordinary, never-before-seen document written by disgruntled SNP aides reveals that even the party’s own employees have been horrified by their MPs’ behaviour for a while.

In their own staff’s words, this new Westminster group are described as “complete arseholes”

To find out whether the new intake are living up to their reputation, Westminster’s watering holes are the only place to begin.

The Sports and Social is traditionally a Labour haunt, earning it the nickname ‘Sports and Socialist’.

Just two weeks after polling day, to quote one Blairite boozehound, it had been ‘colonised’ by the Scots.

Such are their imperial ambitions, SNP MPs confirm with almost embarrassed smiles their plans to have it officially renamed the ‘Rabbie Burns Bar’.

At kicking-out time, it’s over to the infamous Strangers’ Bar.

A taxpayer-subsidised tot of Scotch here is just £2.55, yet despite the SNP’s arrival, the managers have not had cause to double their orders.

The man at the bar claims half jokingly “‘Most of them only drink champagne.”

His theory is that the £67,000-a-year MP’s salary is a considerable pay rise for many of his new punters, and that they are enjoying their newfound riches in style.

This is an allegation heartily rebuffed by ‘real ale man’ and Midlothian MP Owen Thompson, who is having beer from his local Stewart brewery shipped in and put on tap.

Bubbly or ale in hand, the terrace is a place where MPs forget the adversarial nature of the chamber and, their inhibitions loosened, have a good gossip with politicians from other tribes.

Not so the Nats, of whom one rival party hand complains they, “all stand together in a huddle by themselves, not talking to anyone else.”

A case of dour Scots?

Natalie McGarry insists she has had “a good bit of conversation” with “amenable” Labour colleagues, but that while, “some Tory MPs are unfailingly polite, some of them are stuck up their own bahookies.”

I barely have time to ask how one might spell that, before she is telling me what happens when the SNP stick to non-alcoholic beverages.

McGarry recalls, “a cabinet minister came up to us and said fruit juice? I would have thought you Scots would have been on the booze.”

In an example of Westminster Jockophobia, she claims the minister’s aide then turned to her boss and sneered, “Now they’re here we’ll have to start nailing things down.”

There are eight new SNP MPs under 30, and the younger generation have quickly taken over Westminster’s premier 3 a.m. dive, the Players Bar in the Charing Cross Theatre.

When 20-year-old Mhairi Black is not wowing the House with her eloquence, she is impressing revellers on the dance floor.

A fellow clubber reports, “She was a bit reserved early on, but that’s understandable.

She was dancing away with the rest of us by the end of the night.”

Black’s colleague Stuart Donaldson, the 23-year old MP for West Aberdeenshire, has meanwhile undergone something of a transformation.

An admiring colleague laughs and says, “He was the most socially awkward person here when he first turned up.

Now you never see him without his harem of attractive blonde girls.”

He would not be the first Honourable Member to find the trappings of power have improved his success with women, but he might be one of the youngest.

And after a night out, where do the SNP regiment go to lay their weary heads?

The highly rated Argyll and Bute MP Brendan O’Hara warns, with a hint of irony, “the last thing you want is folk swanning around Belgravia on the taxpayer.

O’Hara himself is taking advantage of gentrification, “I’m down in Elephant and Castle. I lived in London in the 1990s and it had an awful reputation. Someone said to me, “Look at Elephant and Castle,” and I thought, “Oh I don’t think so.” But what a transformation! What you could get in Glasgow for your IPSA [expenses] allowance here, well you could get anything you want. It’s remarkable.”

Ginger-bearded Owen Thompson is a Midlothian man at the weekend, but during the week he lives in Kensington.

He tells me of his initial shock at being quoted a price of £350 a week for a high-end property in west London, but was chuffed to haggle £25 off the final price: “Doing my bit for the taxpayer.”

Early hopes for flat shares between laddish MPs petered out, leaving much of the new contingent dotted around Vauxhall and Kennington.

O’hara explains, “almost everyone I know lives within walking distance of Parliament.”

A Tory source recounts recently bumping into Stuart Hosie, the SNP deputy leader and Westminster veteran outside the Scot’s ultra-luxury apartment at Great Minster House, where a flat can fetch up to £6 million. “Even I can’t afford to live here,” exclaimed the envious Tory, to which Hosie protested: “It’s a shoebox!”

Other than the cosy living arrangements, what has been the biggest surprise?

Gavin Newlands, MP for Paisley and Renfrewshire North gushes about the ‘good value’ of the subsidised Commons cafeteria.

Outside of the Parliamentary estate, the Nats have been a little more adventurous.

Natalie McGarry is outed by colleagues as the organiser of an SNP team dinner at the upmarket Cinnamon Kitchen in the heart of the City.

The sister restaurant of Westminster’s opulent Cinnamon Club, the Kitchen’s extensive menu offers spiced red deer for £29 and Pinot Noir at £100 a bottle.

Forty-five out of the 56 SNP MPs attended.

O’hara admits,”this isn’t a change of job, it’s a change of life,” and for him the most difficult adjustment has been the Palace of Westminster itself. He says. “Labyrinth doesn’t begin to describe it I find myself running up staircases and wandering around for hours thinking, How do I get back? I’d love to get into the mind of the architect.”

For McGarry, the change in climate has caused more serious concerns, “I woke up one morning and I had massive lumps all over me! I went into a tailspin thinking I had bed bugs, so I went to the nurse. She just scoffed at me.”

Had moving 400 miles nearer to the equator left her susceptible to tropical diseases? The Nats were expecting plenty of bite south of the border, but they had not bargained for mosquitoes.

Watching them sip champagne on the Commons terrace and hearing about their fine dining and luxurious flats, one cannot help but feel the SNP’s new intake are already becoming the very metropolitan elite they claim to despise.

Owen Thomson admits, “there is a real danger with that. It is absolutely in your face all the time. I hope we’re not showing we’re all getting caught up in the establishment.”

McGarry cautions, “You could get into bad habits. I think people could get swept into the Westminster state of mind. It is “not healthy” to ‘socialise too much.”

O’Hara disagrees, insisting, “it’s really important that we don’t go around as a tribe and that we get to know a lot of people down here.”

2015 Article published in the “Observer”

The SNP claims with exuberant pride to represent Scotland at Westminster with the world’s largest contingent of gay MP’s and their gay staff.

The attraction of Westminster for aspiring Scottish LGBTQQIAAP politicians?

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Questioning, Intersex, Allies, Asexual, Pansexual members, their staff and supporters make up around 60% of the SNP Parliamentary contingent.

The SNP has a duty of care to its MP’s and their staff and stories of the abhorrent behaviour of significant numbers of the Westminster SNP establishment is cause for concern.

It is time to bring an end to Scotland’s participation in the wacky politics of the madhouse that is Westminster.

London is a cesspit society hosting crime, vice, drugs, sex, politicians, lobbyists and agents of foreign governments of all ages and sex who prey on vulnerable and impressionable politicians new to the metropolitan scene.

The churn factor is high with deaths and casualties primarily drug-related or otherwise linked to the hedonistic lifestyle much enjoyed by a financially favoured elite who live much of their lives funded by the taxpayer entering politics direct from university taking up political advisor posts through nepotistic or cronyism arrangements.

The 900-year-old Palace of Westminster, the seat of the Unionist government, is home to a subculture of booze-fuelled revelling that puts many a university campus to shame.

Long accused of inhabiting a “bubble” removed from the outside world, many MPs, parliamentary staff and political hangers-on not only work together but socialise, drink, and sleep together too.

It is a lifestyle pattern made even easier by cheap alcohol offered in parliament’s taxpayer-subsidised bars and the nearby haunts of Soho.

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Addicted to Chemsex – a horror Story

Increasing numbers of London based gay men are taking part in multi-day, chemsex drug-fuelled orgies – despite the health risks.

Chemsex is identified as the habit of engaging in weekend-long parties fuelled by sexually disinhibiting drugs, such as crystal meth, GHB, GBL and mephedrone.

These parties involve multiple people and are mostly arranged online.

Those involved in the subculture directly link chem sex to alarming rates of HIV infection.

In London, four new positive diagnoses are made daily linked to the practice of “pozzing up”, knowingly becoming infected with the virus.

Meth, meph and G create a potent cocktail enabling extremes of behaviour, which carries significant risks for the sexual and mental health of habitual users.

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Scotland’s National Investment Bank morphed into a tool for corporate business to capitalise on – another deceit foisted on a trusting electorate

Scotland’s National Investment Bank

Set up by Sturgeon to make strategic investments for the common good of the people of Scotland it morphed into a tool for corporate business to capitalise on.

Travelnest Ltd, received £3 million in start-up funding, with more finance promised. The company specialises in providing infrastructure for the rapidly growing number of holiday homeowners enabling them to list and rent their properties.

Comment: Encouraging the uncontrolled market expansion of 2nd and 3rd home purchases in Scotland’s rural areas by primarily English residents can be likened to providing billets for 20,000 English soldiers who through claim of residence are extended the privilege of a vote in Scottish elections. Kiss any successful independence referendum goodbye!!!

Take a look at some of the other corporate networks involved:

The Chair of SNIB is Willie Watt. Watt is an Advisory Board Member of Scottish Equity Partners, a private sector Glasgow-based investment consortia which is already investing in projects into which SNIB is investing.

Carolyn Jamieson is a Non Executive Director of the Scottish National Investment Bank and is also an Advisory Board Member of Scottish Equity Partners.

She is formerly Chief Legal Officer at Skyscanner. Interestingly the new “Chief Entrepreneur” is also formerly a top executive at Skyscanner. Small world.

In 2021 Kate Forbes set up something called the Scottish Technology Ecosystem Review.

It was outsourced and led by Mark Logan.

A contract valued at £100,000 went to a private business called Ipso Facto Ltd.

Mark Logan is the co-founder of Ipso Facto. He is also a director of, (drum roll) Travelnest Ltd.

https://www.gov.scot/news/accelerating-scotlands-tech-led-recovery/

All of the foregoing fits neatly into a climate of patronage set up around the leadership of the Scottish Government sprawling beyond the corporate sector and into wider parts of public life.

The Chair of the Economic Recovery Group, is also the Chair of Buccleuch Estates and is also Chair of the National Galleries of Scotland board, alongside Andrew Wilson of Charlotte Street Partners who is also the author of the Growth Commission, alongside Willie Watt who is also the inaugural chair of the Scottish National Investment bank.

Role of government

The First Minister claims to be a progressive individual focussed on delivering good things for Scots through the outwardly appealing but internally dictatorial corporate lobby.

But in the wacky world of the Scottish National Party the interests and concerns of the many are subsumed by the financial rewards for those who are willingly supplicant to the demands of the party leadership.

Commitment to the cause of independence is a key part of the SNP strategy since it attracts vital voter support always provided any campaigning is processed through party political elites.

Andrew Dunlop – The Scottish unionist who never fails is intent on destroying devolved government in Scotland.

Andrew Dunlop – The Scot intent on destroying devolved government in Scotland.

Dunlop has been closely associated with the Conservative Party for most of his adult life. He was a special adviser to the Defence Secretary (1986 – 88) and a member of Margaret Thatcher’s Policy Unit (1988 – 1990).

The demise of Thatcher brought his budding career to a halt and he moved away from active politics to found and develop his own strategic communications consultancy business.

Over 20 years later he sold the business, for a very tidy sum of money to the Brussels-based Interel Group (lobbyists).

The return to power of the Tory Party in 2010 sparked his interest in politics once again and he linked up with his friend and former colleague David Cameron in his former role of special advisor (2012 to 2015) with specific responsibility as the principal adviser on Scotland and devolution to the Prime Minister and Chancellor of the Exchequer.

He was elevated to the House of Lords in 2015 which allowed Cameron to take him into government where he served as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Scotland and Northern Ireland between 2015 and 2017.

In the Lords, he is a member of the UK Constitution Committee and an Expert Member of the UK Civilian Stabilisation Group.

Retaining contact with Scottish affairs he is a Board member of the Scottish Council for Development and Industry. In this capacity he was tasked with formulating and implementing Tory government policies for Scotland post Brexit.

In a debate covering the: “possible effects of Brexit on the stability of the Union of the parts of the United Kingdom”. He said:

“Attention should be paid to the machinery of intergovernmental relations, which needs to be strengthened. We also need to look at the cross-UK synergies, weakened since devolution, which need to be reinvigorated. We need to pursue a decentralised, pan-UK strategy for rebalancing the economy, driven by city regions across the country. This means moving away from seeing everything through a four-nation prism. Many of the problems confronting Glasgow, for example, are similar to those of Manchester or Birmingham. They provide embryonic structures which can be built upon. Strengthening our union must be an urgent priority whatever our post-Brexit future.”

This is the career of Dunlop. It is a long read but very enlightening.

Summary

This is the direction the Unionist government, of any persuasion is intent on taking Scotland.

So far as Scotland is concerned there will be no further independence referendums and devolution is to be rendered impotent being bypassed by UK government agencies working within Scotland but not responsible to the Scottish government.

The shadowy UK Stabilisation Unit is closely monitoring Scottish politics, events and personalities and has unlimited resources available to deal with any disruption or attempts at destabilisation of the UK.