It has been established, beyond reasonable doubt that the criminal passing of confidential government information about false allegations of misconduct in office by Alex Salmond to the Daily Record and journalist David Clegg in October 2017, was the act of a senior Scottish Government SPAD. That person is still in the employ of the Minister concerned so it follows (interpreting the rule) that the leak was authorised, in advance by the Minister. That person needs to be exposed to the public and the police so that appropriate action can be taken to restore the confidence of the electorate who are disillusioned by the s***house politicking of its government ministers.

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The John Smith Centre at Glasgow University

The secret service, Glasgow University supported John Smith Centre exists to undermine the integrity and authority and what is left of the impartiality policies of the UK civil service through the expansion and influence of political special advisors SPADS.

This article provides a look-back at the unfettered growth of the political SPAD, many of whom go on to  become career politicians resulting in the austerity punished taxpayer being lumbered with an additional massive and ever expanding expense in the many £billions supporting thousands of privileged party animals who sponge off the state from the time they leave university until retirement. The monstrosity should be discontinued and the Civil Service reinstated

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18 Oct 2021: Scotland Cannot Afford Sturgeon and her Tumefied Collection of Overpaid Failures

Sturgeon’s pickpocket politicians and special advisers is costing Scottish taxpayers more than £5m a year after doubling in size since she took up leadership of the SNP.

In 2007, the year the SNP first won power, the cost of ministerial salaries, office staff and advisers was around £2.5m, (not including the salaries of First Minister or Deputy First Minister) and soared to around £5m in 2021. Projections are total additional cost will be around £15m over the lifetime of this government. Costs are attributed to the number of cabinet secretaries doubling from four to eight and the number of junior ministers increasing from ten to 17. There was also a surge in special advisers, with 21 now employed by ministers – more than double the figure for Alex Salmond’s 2007 government.

Ministers salaries (excluding Sturgeon & Swinney) – now cost £1m annually, while private office salaries are £2.7m, and salaries for special advisers is £1.3m. All underestimated approximates.

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Roles and responsibilities of the SPAD

SPAD’s are not civil servants but as paid employees of the State they are – subject to specified exceptions – required to conduct themselves in accordance with the Civil Service Code.”  which states that the highest standards of conduct are expected of them.

i. “Specifically, the preparation or dissemination of inappropriate material or personal attacks has no part to play in the job of being a special adviser as it has no part to play in the conduct of public life.

ii. “Any special adviser ever found to be disseminating inappropriate material will automatically be dismissed by their appointing minister.

iii. “Special advisers…must observe discretion and express comment with moderation, avoiding personal attacks.”

iv  “All contacts with news media should be authorized, in advance by the appointing minister.”

Afternote 1: Liz Lloyd was awarded civil servant status and received more than £6,000 in legal advice relating to her conduct. She refused to to appear at the inquiry and instead submitted written evidence which could not be challenged. The content of the £6,000 letter to the inquiry was rendered useless since it was so heavily redacted by the Scottish Government before submission.

Afternote 2: It has been established, beyond reasonable doubt that the criminal passing of confidential government information about false allegations of misconduct in office by Alex Salmond to the Daily Record and journalist David Clegg in October 2017, was the act of a senior Scottish Government SPAD. That person is still in the employ of the Minister concerned so it follows (interpreting the rule) that the leak was authorised, in advance by the Minister. That person needs to be exposed to the public and the police so that appropriate action can be taken to restore the confidence of the electorate who are disillusioned by the s***house politicking of its government ministers.

Nepotism.There is no formal recruitment process or interview so how does it work?

A minster decides he needs a SPAD and gets in touch with Sturgeon and obtains permission to appoint. Approval granted the minister contacts a colleague, family member or old friend from University who might be between jobs and awards employment to a person suited to their needs. Nice if you know the right people.

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Westminster – The SPAD breeding ground

In his final months as Prime Minister,  Blair accepted that his government had:  “paid inordinate attention to courting, assuaging, and persuading the media” (Blair: 2007). The admission, made ten years after he had led the Labour Party to a landslide general election victory in 1997, was confirmation of one of the defining characteristics of his wasteful and corrupt government.

In July 2009: there were 74 SPADS in post at Labour controlled Westminster providing advice to government ministers at a cost to the taxpayer of £6million.

In December 2015: under the Tory coalition government the number of SPAD’s increased to 97. Costing £11million.

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Spin doctors

In addition to the political SPAD’s the government employs “spin doctors” whose role is to put a positive face to anything the government might do regardless of truth or probity.

The most infamous “Spin Doctor” in recent times was Blair’s, Alistair Campbell who, less than a week on from forming the first “New Labour” Government signalled his intentions to reform the government communications system,  telling a meeting of information officers that he: “wanted them to be able to predict what would be on the front page of the Sun the next day-and help write it.”

The message was clear: Campbell wanted a civil service press machine which was more assertive, more proactive, and one which was able to respond at speed. Paul Waugh, a political journalist since the 1990s, recalled that Labour spinners found the civil service:  “an interference at worse, and an obstruction at best.”  (http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/74743/)

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Mundell -The Scottish Office and his abuse of Scottish finance

The Scotland Office was branded a “marketing campaign for the Union” after figures showed its budget for press officers had increased fivefold in little over 5 years.

In 2010/11 the Scottish Office employed 2 communications staff at a cost of £108,439.  By 2015/16 staff had increased to 9 at a cost of nearly £500,000.

An analysis of Scottish Office press briefings indicated each release had cost the Scottish taxpayer nearly £7,000.

Further examination of the content of the releases revealed that all of it was aimed at marketing the benefits of the “Union”

The (late) Sir Jeremy (Cover-up) Heywood I am the law!!!

Then Cabinet Office Supremo and Head of the Civil Service, he was aptly nicknamed “Sir Cover Up” after preventing the Chilcott Iraq War inquiry from seeing letters and records of phone calls between Blair and was caught up in a row over bending the rules of the Civil Service by illegally permitting Cabinet Office, SPAD’s  to campaign for the Tory Party in a bye-election.

Sir Jeremy was a powerful force at No10. Cameron once joked: “Remind me, Jeremy, do you work for me or do I work for you?” Critics alleged he was complicit in the culture of “sofa government” when Blair was PM.

The SPAD’s and Spin Doctors wield the Power in the murky sewers of Westminster

Disparagingly dubbed the: “people who live in the dark”. They are often spotted darting through the television studios of Westminster with their minister, briefing papers under arm and media tools in hand. Young, sharp and driven, they are aspiring politicians just waiting advancement by the boss. Cameron, Osborne and the Miliband brothers, were SPADS.

Employed as temporary civil servants, the do not have to be politically impartial like their civil service colleagues. They link together the minister, the party and the department. They are also the bridge between the neutral civil service and politicians. They help write speeches, some are policy wonks, while others focus on the media. If a journalist wants to know what a cabinet minister thinks or understand what a policy is about, a call to the special adviser is one of the first ones to make.

Michael Jacobs, former special adviser to Gordon Brown, told the BBC that: “while ministers needed civil servants for impartial advice, they needed SPAD’s to help them to make political judgments and consider different options: “They are the lubricant in the machine.”

Spad’s first became a permanent fixture in Whitehall in the 1970s. Their number ballooned under Labour. In 1996 there were 38 working in government, costing the taxpayer £2m. In 2004 the number peaked at 84 and in 2008/9 there were 74, at a cost of £6m.

Their ever expanding ranks caused concern within the electorate that the American, politically driven civil service was sneaking in via the special advisers and lines of accountability were being blurred.

Just after the terror attacks in the US on 11 September 2001 the Labour government SPAD Jo Moore sent an e-mail to a colleague saying it would be a good time “to bury” bad news. His behaviour triggered a number of reviews into the role and power of SPAD’s.

Another SPAD related scandal was the revelation that Gordon Brown’s Spin Doctor, Damian McBride had been guilty of smearing senior Tory’s in e-mails forcing Brown to ask the cabinet secretary to review and tighten the rules of conduct relating to SPADS.

Agreed limits to the number of SPAD’s at Westminster and beyond

The Conservative opposition committed to a reduction in the number of SPAD’s. A democracy task force, headed by Ken Clarke MP, recommended they be halved.

But under successive Westminster governments, special advisers roam the corridors of Whitehall in ever increasing numbers. Their close relationships to cabinet ministers and lobby correspondents give them influence – a power that can hatch into a political career later on.

A successful stint as a SPAD is a significant crucial political apprenticeship – as many of the current crop of professional politicians can testify – so long as they stay in the dark

Number of SPAD’s employed at Westminster:

1996: 38, 1997: 70, 2004: 84, 2006: 68, 2008: 74, 2009: 71, 2010: 74, 2011:81, 2012: 85, 2012: 98, 2013: 103, 2015: 97, 2016: 88, 2017: 99.

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SPAD’s are over protected and should be accountable. They are among the most shadowy figures in government. They sit at the right hand of Cabinet ministers and in some cases wield more influence than even the most senior civil servants. They are unelected and unaccountable to either the public or Parliament. They are the chosen few, though how they come to be chosen is cloaked in mystery. Their privileged positions are never advertised, but increasingly the posts they hold lead to the very top of politics.

Pay and Other Forms of Remuneration

Cameron and Clegg broke their promise to curb the numbers of highly-paid SPAD’s. In opposition Cameron promised to ‘cut the cost of politics’ and the coalition agreement said there would be a ‘limit’ on the number of SPADS.

In opposition Clegg said, “SPADS shouldn’t be paid for by the public”. But as soon as he got his feet under the Cabinet table, he broke his word.

Osborne froze the wages of six million public sector workers at the time the Coalition came to power, plunging many into poverty under his cruel austerity drive. Yet the heartless Chancellor handed one of the chief architects of the public sector pay freeze, fellow Old Etonian, friend and SPAD, Rupert Harrison, a 19% inflation-busting increase boosting his £80,000 salary by £15,000.

Not to be outdone, Treasury minister, Danny Alexander bumped up the pay of his own adviser, Will de Peyer by 16 per cent to £75,000 then employed an additional SPAD on a £95,000 salary.

A Tory government Cabinet Office list registered the employment of 26 special advisers in Downing Street of which six were paid £100,000 or more. Added to the list was added Cameron’s, Chief of staff, Ed Llewellyn £140,000. Director of Communications, Craig Oliver £140,000. Deputy Head of the No 10 Policy Unit, Christopher Lockwood £ 134,000. Prime Minister’s Press Secretary, Graeme Wilson £110,000. Deputy Chief of Staff, Kate Fall £100,000. Director of Communications (Mr Clegg), Steve Lotinga £105,000 Plus another 3 SPAD’s and another 16 SPAD’s to support the Lib/Dem ministers.

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Is there a way out of this mess?

A (retired) civil servant commented “When I was a civil servant I was expected to keep my political opinions to myself. It was also expected, having signed the Official Secrets Act, that I would not reveal information to which I was privy because of my job. It seems to me that there is a basic conflict of interest here. Should SPAD,s be paid for out of the public purse? If so, is it compatible with public interest for them to stand for a political interest anyway? The employment of SPAD’ at the expense of the taxpayer should be discontinued and replaced with civil servants entrants with specialist expertise.”

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Lloyd lost her job as Special Advisor to Sturgeon a few months ago only to taken back into the fold at the first opportunity in a specially created (for her) post as a “Strategic Advisor Focused On Long-Term Transformational Policies for Scotland.” The WOKE agenda is to be pursued with a vengeance. Two fingers to the electorate. I Despair.

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Aug 2021: The never ending growth in the numbers of Scottish Government SPAD’s – All paid for by Scottish Voters

Data released by the SNP led Scottish Government reveals that Nationalist ministers have 15 special advisers (SPAD’s) who will provide party political guidance for the 2021/22 financial year. 

Based on the 15 appointees, analysis shows collectively that the wage bill for SNP led Scottish Government staff is expected to be around £940,000 for the 2021/22 financial year.

However, an additional two special advisers are set to be appointed as a result of the cooperation deal struck between the Scottish Greens and the SNP.

Under the agreement, two special advisers will assist two new junior Green ministers and will be paid a salary of at least £41,000 per year taking the bill for 2021/22 above £1m.

Quietly included in the list is Liz Lloyd, who lost her job as Special Advisor to Sturgeon a few months ago only to taken back into the fold at the first opportunity in a specially created (for her) post as a “strategic adviser focused on long-term transformational policies for Scotland.” Indicators provide warning to the electorate that the WOKE agenda is to be pursued with a vengeance. point to the WOKE agenda. Two fingers to the electorate on that one.

Lloyd, along with permanent secretary Leslie Evans and SNP chief executive Peter Murrell, faced calls to resign earlier this year, following allegations, (which they denied to a Holyrood committee’s investigation ) that they were at the at the centre of inappropriate behaviour in the illegal handling of sexual misconduct allegations against former First Minister Alex Salmond.

Lloyd received more than £6,000 in legal advice relating to her conduct but failed to appear in front of the inquiry and instead submitted written evidence which could not be challenged.

At the time, the Sturgeon insisted she had full confidence in her Special Advisor however just a week ago she announced Lloyd (no reason given) had been dismissed from her “Chief of Staff” position.

Colin McAllister, now holds the title “Chief of Staff”.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has been pressured to act on alleged breaches of the civil service code by her special advisers.

Sturgeon Census Changes Will Ruin the Wedding Industry in Scotland as Scotsmen abandon Wearing the Kilt Fearing Catcalls Such as “Doris Where’s your Troosers.” Andy Stewart Will be Birrlin’ in his Grave!!!

Letting people self-identify gender in a census is another step towards erasing women completely

The Scottish Census

It is imperative that social scientists, economists, planners and society are in possession of accurate data so that they are able to ensure males and females are provided with the support they need to live their daily lives.

To facilitate this the Scottish public, under the guidance of its coalition government, led by WOKE politician extraordinaire Nicola Sturgeon and the insidious Green Party is to complete a census in 2022. An event routinely held every 10 years since 1841. So no problem there. But wait!!!

Surely the census should have been completed in 2021 as it was in all other parts of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

The answer is “Yes” but Sturgeon wasn’t ready. Her new WOKE procedures were not yet on the statute. So she simply deferred the Census until she and her Green party colleagues had put in place arrangements totally foreign to Scots and to all other persons in Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

What is so important to Nicola Sturgeon and her WOKE politicians that the census needed to be deferred for a year you might ask? The answer is devastating for the vast bulk of Scots.

The SNP coalition government is authorising participants taking part to nominate if they’re male or female based on how they’re feeling at the time they complete the forms and not according to their legal status.

But what is the problem. Why can’t people who feel a bit feminine that day simply state “I am a female”. Because it sets a dangerous precedence.

A data collection procedure, in place for nearly 200 years in Scotland and all other parts of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is being hijacked by WOKE politicians to serve an agenda for change that has not been agreed to by the electorate.

The census should not be tinkered with by politicians. But Sturgeon and her WOKE friends are determined on a course of action that will change Scottish society for ever and ruin the efficacy of vital data just to pander to a very significant but aggressively outspoken minority of WOKE activists who promote the denial of truth by refusing to accept biological reality.

Westminster politicians flirted with changing the rules for data collection, (with little public fanfare) before the 2020 census but a letter published in the “Times” signed off by 100 eminent accademics noted that the guidance would effectively transform the sex question into one of gender identity undermining reliability on a key demographic variable.

In layman’s terms accurately entering sex on the census form is important so that healthcare providers are able to project with accuracy the numbers of the population likely to develop prostate cancer, which is limited to biological men and conversely the number of woman who will become ill through cervical cancer which is limited to biological women. And many other instances.

There is still time for a politician with guts and determination to get the matter referred to the Supreme Court for a judgement which would mirror that reached in the courts in England Wales and Northern Ireland. Sturgeon should leave well alone!!!!

The Early Days of Sturgeon’s Political Career Revealed Her Ruthless Ambition to Lead the SNP Regardless of Friendship or Loyalty

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Sturgeon – 1986-2010

1986: Just 17 years old and wet behind the ears a youthful Nicola Sturgeon joined the SNP and soon got stuck into political arguments with politicians many years her senior and electioneering with gusto.

Her speedy acceptance as a budding politician of note was quite remarkable given her attention was also taken up with studies for a law degree at Glasgow University at Glasgow University and her early days in employment as a trainee solicitor at Drumchapel Law Centre.

1992 Her problem politically was that she was universally disliked by many of her political colleagues and the public who viewed her as an aggressive hard-line humourless harpy with an unhealthy preference for trouser suits.

But at the time she emerged there was a dearth of young talented Scottish nationalists and she able to apply for and was elected onto the SNP National Executive and unsuccessfully (gained less than 20% of the votes) stood as a candidate for the Shettleston seat in the Scottish parliamentary elections.

1997: She stood as a candidate for the Westminster seat of Glasgow Govan and lost and it wasn’t until 1999 when she finally gained a seat in the Scottish parliament as an unelected list MSP.

2004: John Swinney resigned. Sturgeon was convinced she would succeed him as party leader but her ambitions were apparently dealt a severe blow when in an audacious change of mind Alex Salmond, took the job despite earlier insisting: ‘If nominated, I would decline; if drafted, I will defer and, if elected, I will resign.”

But Alex taking the leadership had only ever been Plan B. It was previously agreed he would take on the role of mentor to the new leader Sturgeon. But he was forced to throw his hat into the ring when it became obvious that she was losing, badly, to Perth MSP Roseanna Cunningham.

Enhancing her prospects Sturgeon abandoned her bid to lead the party and instead submitted her application for the Deputy leader’s job only a few hours before nominations closed, tricking Roseanna Cunningham, who was denied time to muster sufficient support, out of the deputy leader post.

Roseanna, who had enjoyed the company of Sturgeon on many nights out dining at Glasgow restaurant’s was appalled at Sturgeon’s treachery and with her political career effectively blunted she never forgave her. Friendship’s do not survive such betrayal.

With Alex away at Westminster Sturgeon took charge of the party at Holyrood and did well. In an interview with the BBC when asked about her image change she said: “When you’re younger, you take yourself far too seriously – particularly being a young woman in politics, where you feel a pressure to be taken seriously. If I were honest, I was probably a bit po-faced”.

Her new found persona confirmed she had dramatically reversed her opinion of Margaret Thatcher since her demeanour was now much more in common with the late Iron Lady than she would admit to.

Previously Sturgeon said : “it wasn’t fair, where a man would be judged ‘robust’, she was damned as “nippie”. He might be “articulate”, she would be “strident”.

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2007: It was 13 years after she entered politics before she was elected to the Scottish parliamentary seat of Glasgow Southside and her success would be attributed to the leadership of Alex Salmond whose electioneering skills and campaigning took the SNP into power in Scotland for the first time ever.

The election also introduced a “new” Sturgeon who together with other colleagues had been equipped with effective public presentation skills after media consultants had conducted polls and identified their public weaknesses, which had to be overcome if the 2007 election was to be won. Formally “nippie sweetie” Sturgeon engaged with the public as a smiling, mild mannered and at times flirty young woman. She was transformed.

2010: Towards the end of 2003 the press revealed Sturgeon was in a relationship with Peter Murrell, Chief Executive of the SNP. After nearly seven years together they married in July 2010.

While some within the Party were content with the new but unusual arrangement there were many whose views were much more cynical observing:

“She part-controls the political side of things and he completely controls the organisational side of things. It’s a pretty powerful axis to be sat around one breakfast table.” It was her insistence on the continuance of the “special arrangement” when she became party leader that brought about the rift between herself and Alex who advised against it.

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Sturgeon and the SNP Panic as BBC Curries Favour With Westminster Government – Adopting Anti-Woke policies – Major Shake-up in News and Current Affairs Presentation -Bye-Bye Kuenssberg – Smith and others

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23 Oct 2021: Andrew Neil in talks with BBC to return

The new BBC Director General, Tim Davie is actively negotiating the future of the BBC licence fee and is shifting “News and Current Affairs” away from from the “Woke” agenda in an effort to persuade Westminster politicians that the corporation’s partiality towards the Tory government is assured.

In another unexpected move, seen as a message of good intention to the Tory Government, Davie met with Andrew Neil to help “clear a path and repair the damage done to his reputation” allowing the right-wing news presenter to return to the BBC after his dramatic exit from GB News. But Neil will only return on his own terms which links the move to a major power shift within the news and Current Affairs Department….

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23 Oct 2021: Laura Kuenssberg to step down as BBC political editor

Those with knowledge of negotiations say her tenure as BBC political editor and her anti-brexit views, (she had to be provided with a bodyguard) coincided with unprecedented scrutiny of how the corporation’s political journalism shapes the national news agenda and there is to be a major reshuffle of senior on-air staff leading to her relegation to presenting the Today programme on Radio 4 increasing the number of presenters to six.

https://caltonjock.com/2015/04/02/italian-born-laura-kuenssberg-is-descended-from-austrian-german-nobility-her-g-grandfather-and-other-members-of-the-wider-kuenssberg-family-embraced-the-ideals-of-the-nazi-party-her-background-reve/

As part of the reshuffle of leading BBC journalists, Jon Sopel is stepping down as North America editor and returning to the UK. Sopel’s return also means he is now a candidate to be the new BBC political editor, having been connected to the job back in 2015. At that time the job instead went to Kuenssberg, who became the first woman to hold the position of BBC political editor.

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Sarah Smith, the current BBC Scotland editor and occasional Today presenter is rumoured to bed taking over Sopel’s current job in the USA. Her departure would in turn open up a vacancy leading national coverage of Scotland at a time when the corporation is under attack from the Scottish Independence Movement. (The Guardian)

https://caltonjock.com/2021/04/30/bbc-reporter-sarah-smith-impartial-presentation-unlikely-when-mummy-is-a-head-bummer-in-the-british-secret-service/
https://caltonjock.com/2016/11/19/good-news-the-pervasive-influence-of-the-labour-party-in-scotland-over-bbc-news-and-current-affairs-is-to-be-curtailed-bad-news-broadcasting-policy-content-and-control-has-been-transferred-to-lon/
https://caltonjock.com/2015/04/01/people-of-influence-sarah-smith-bbc-presenter-arrived-in-scotland-quietly-grew-fast-and-strong-then-crowded-everyone-else-out-of-the-nest-is-there-nothing-we-can-do/

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The View of the Top Echelon of the SNP is That Seceding from the UK Would be the Height of Irresponsibility – Yet Another Scottish Political Party Bought for the Queens Shilling

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Stewart McDonald MP for Glasgow South speaks for the SNP on Scottish Independence

McDonald and many of his SNP MP/MSP colleagues are openly hostile to the movement they purport to represent. When support for Scottish independence rises they publicly argue against holding a second referendum claiming to do so before the SNP had “renewed its case” for seceding from the UK would be “the height of irresponsibility”. Adding insult to injury McDonald himself launched an extraordinarily vicious broadside against ‘cybernats’ – Scottish independence supporters on social media – accusing them of being “creepy” and “vile”, “spreading poison and cynicism”, and behaving like “obnoxious thugs”. Reporting on his comments, Conservative MSP Adam Tomkins, in a Glasgow Herald article heartily endorsed McDonald’s stance.

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Stewart McDonald SNP MP – his associates within the SNP and wider afield and their links to the Integrity Initiative and British Secret Services

McDonald MP for Glasgow South is Westminster’s most enthusiastic Russia-basher. His anti-Russia campaigning is quite remarkable. Until 2018, he showed little or no interest in the country at all, but, following an SNP Leadership supported (undeclared to Westminster) fully funded jolly to Ukraine with his close friend and personal adviser Neal Stewart and fellow SNP MPs Douglas Chapman and Chris Law to reassure the Ukraine the SNP was not pro-Russian he was transformed into an ardent opponent of Moscow and a passionate supporter of the British establishment position on foreign policy.

For an elected representative of the Scottish National Party (SNP) to place such faith in the commitment of British intelligence agencies to truth and the defense of democracy is odd to say the least, given the party and the Scottish independence movement more widely have been subject to widespread surveillance, infiltration and disruption by British spooks throughout its existence.

McDonald’s fixation on “disinformation” may have overseas origins. In February 2020, he took an all-expenses-paid seven-day trip to Washington, DC to attend a conference on “combating disinformation online” convened by the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, a leading globalist think tank. Not long after, he wrote a fiery article for the Times, alleging that Russia was “infecting the planet with disinformation,” calling for an “international coalition” to “defeat the virus.” Russophobic rhetoric is also rife on McDonald’s Twitter account – where he frequently posts about the country, in the process amplifying and promoting the writings and rantings of individuals intimately involved in the secretive “Integrity Initiative” organisation.

https://www.rt.com/russia/519804-mcdonald-spy-foreign-propaganda/

A bombshell publication revealing all that is unsettling with the UK’s media disinformation -http://syriapropagandamedia.org/working-papers/briefing-note-on-the-integrity-initiative#offices-and-team

The Integrity Initiative and the Institute for Statecraft

This is a covert UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office military intelligence operation which maintains clandestine networks of journalists, academics and military and intelligence operatives across the world – dubbed “clusters” – which spread pro-Western, anti-Russian propaganda.

McDonald’s very close friend Neal Stewart has given secret briefings at the offices of its pseudo – parent ‘charity’, the shadowy “Institute for Statecraft” which established its headquarters in the Fife constituency of the then SNP, MP, Stephen Gethin who maintains very close links with a number of highly placed secret service individuals and the John Smith Institute at Glasgow University and the Integrity Initiative.

MI5 operative – Euan Grant a member of the Integrity Initiative’s, Inner Core “attended the Neal Stewart event” at Two Temple Place, the secret London offices of the Institute for Statecraft, the Integrity Initiative’s shadowy parent organisation. Grant, worked for many years under the direction of retired MI5 Director General Andrew Parker. Read: https://wikispooks.com/wiki/Euan_Grant

Another associate is self-styled “Dr.” Jennifer Jones – who in August 2018 falsely accused a large number of online independence supporters of being “bots” She allegedly met with representatives of “Integrity Initiative”, which she described as “super interesting.” Full coverage of the exposure of a British Secret Service attack on Scottish nationalist campaigners here: https://wingsoverscotland.com/a-sad-sad-robot-all-alone/

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Shell companies

The Ukraine is the most common abuser of Scottish Limited Partnership’s (SLPs), used for asset protection but also for criminal activities. The partnerships are heavily promoted in Ukraine as a way to secretly move substantial amounts of fraudulently gained money out of the country. $7 billion out of the $20 billion in the, Laundromat‟ case was routed through Scottish SLP’s.

The Ukraine also exported huge amounts of munitions to the Middle East at a time of conflicts using an SLP company based in Scotland. SLP’s are also used to
export coal from Donbass. Russian oligarchs purchase Donetsk coal. Move it to Rostov then send it to Turkey under the name of an SLP registered in Scotland.

SLPs were also used to break the UN Crimea blockade. A council house in Inverness was the address of the “owner” of a Russian ship that had run out of money in a Turkish harbour.

The revelations of the “Ferret” make the presence of the Secret Services in Scotland (The John Smith Foundation) and the SNP politicians visit to the Ukraine more interesting to the political observer. Full story: https://theferret.scot/edinburgh-offices-linked-secretive-partnerships/

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Where’s Nicola????

Resilience Scotland – The SNP’s Secret army

In May 2020, McDonald outlined plans for a “civilian army” which would be “deployed” at times of national crisis. a development fully in harmony with the aspirations of “Statecraft” since it advocates a number of policies instilling a military ethos at every level of Scottish society. Conversely, the scheme met with widespread opposition from grassroots Scottish Independence supporters.

McDonald acknowledged his proposals were not universally popular but they were a necessary response to proposals announced by the Modern Deterrence Project (MDP) of the Royal United Services Institute, a think tank with close ties to the UK national security establishment.

MDP chief Elisabeth Braw – former “non-resident senior fellow” at the ultra right wing think tank the “Atlantic Council” – reportedly liaised directly with McDonald on the plans further undermining his denials of ties with Integrity Initiative, given she is named as part of the organization’s North American “cluster.”

The SNP MP would have every reason to repudiate a relationship with Integrity Initiative, given its clear hostility to the values of the very movement he supposedly represents. In March 2018, the organization solicited a confidential briefing on the SNP’s internal dynamics and nationalist figures, groups and factions from prominent Scottish journalist David Leask. Referring to independence movements “separatist loons,” Leask noted “SNP going to Ukraine – to reassure allies they are not pro-Russian.”

Whatever the truth of the matter, three years earlier, Leask dismissed WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s suggestion that independence supporters were “right to be paranoid” about MI5 interference in the 2014 independence referendum as a deranged conspiracy theory. But his views were far from fringe during the vote itself. In all, 26 percent of Scots believed MI5 was meddling in the 2014 independence referendum campaign to ensure a “no” vote prevailed.

It’s surprising that the figure wasn’t even higher, given the agency is known to have maintained for many years a dedicated section on independence groups and activists, headed by Stella Rimington, who became MI5 director general in 1992. The significant rise in nationalist sentiment in recent years culminating in the formation of the “John Smith Institute” operating out of Glasgow University suggests it continues to do so.

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The Secret Service tightens its grip on Scotland

In 2015, British intelligence agency GCHQ was quietly authorized to eavesdrop on politicians from the devolved legislatures in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland prompting a plea from the heads of the devolved governments urging Whitehall to protect the privacy of parliamentarians in the three nations. Their entreaties fell on deaf ears.

McDonald, and his associates had no need for concern since legal instructions specifically barred GCHQ from monitoring MPs at Westminster.

In April 2019, Westminster based SNP MP Stephen Gethins – who has since lost his seat – asked then-secretary of state for foreign and commonwealth affairs Alan Duncan what steps were being taken by Whitehall “to tackle the distribution of disinformation in Ukraine, Belarus and the Baltic States.”

The answer was Open Information Partnership (OIP), which leaked Foreign Office documents exposed as an avowed “disinformation or troll factory” targeted at Russia, run by an organization staffed by individuals with military and intelligence backgrounds in London and Scotland.

See the source image

See also:

https://caltonjock.com/2021/04/09/i-kid-you-not-nicola-sturgeons-darling-boy-stephen-gethins-is-on-the-board-of-the-john-smith-trust/
https://caltonjock.com/2020/09/24/stephen-gethins-forgot-his-purpose-and-lost-his-seat-at-westminster-now-heading-for-kinross/
https://caltonjock.com/2020/09/24/stephen-gethins-forgot-his-purpose-and-lost-his-seat-at-westminster-now-heading-for-kinross/
https://caltonjock.com/2018/08/30/the-bbc-is-the-most-effective-tool-in-the-secret-services-formidable-armoury-and-it-will-be-a-cold-day-in-hell-before-they-give-it-up/

Many thanks to: Kit Klarenberg, an investigative journalist who reports on the British intelligence services in shaping politics and perceptions within and out with the nation.

See the source image

Craig Murray Jailed and Citizen Journalist’s under threat of similar punishment in the future. But nobody cares. Is it “So Long as it isn’t me I don’t care” !! If affirmed I fear for democracy

One of the key factors contributing to the decision of the court and Lady Dorrian to impose a previously unheard of draconian jail sentence on Craig Murray was that he was not, in the opinion of the court entitled to the same rights and privileges as a mainstream journalist.


Paragraph 4 of the judgement stated in disparaging terms:


“The applicant describes himself as a “journalist in new media”. Whatever that may involve, it is relevant to distinguish his position from that of the mainstream press, which is regulated, and subject to codes of practice and ethics in a way in which those writing as the applicant does are not. To the extent that the submissions for the applicant make comparisons with other press contempt’s, and the role of mainstream journalists, this is a factor which should be recognised.”


But online activity is not a devolved matter. It is reserved to the Westminster government who publicly announced 3 week before the judgement and comments of Lady Dorrian that Craig Murray was fully entitled in Law to consider himself to be a bona fide journalist.

Lady Dorrian’s judgement was predicated on a misinterpretation of her powers and that of the court.


This is the position of the Westminster government, published 3 weeks before lady Dorrian’s sentencing of Craig Murray.


Media minister John Whittingdale, speaking for the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) said; “citizen journalists will have the same protections for their work as professional news providers adding, “we don’t want the legislation to lead to a ‘woke web’ where legitimate journalism is censored. That’s why we’ve built in safeguards so that content from news publishers will not be in scope of new laws, including content shared on social media platforms, and media providers will need to factor in the crucial role of journalism as well as freedom of expression in their moderation decisions. A vibrant and free media is essential to our democracy and our Bill will make sure vital public interest journalism can reach its audience without interference.
But the response to the publication of my article has been disappointing. Does anyone really care about the future of Citizen journalists!!!!

Citizen Journalists Such as Craig Murray are Guaranteed the Same Rights and Privileges as Mainstream Journalist Contrary to the Judgement of lady Dorrian and the High Court of Justiaciary- His Jail Sentence Should be Revoked

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8 Jun 2021: Opinion of the Court Delivered by Lady Dorrian, The Lord Justice Clerk in Petition and Complaint by Her Majesties Advocate Petitioner Against Craig Murray

Introduction:

One of the key factors contributing to the decision of the court to impose a previously unheard of draconian jail sentence on Craig Murray was that he was not, in the opinion of the court entitled to the same rights and privileges as a mainstream journalist.

Paragraph 4 of the judgement stated in disparaging terms:

“The applicant describes himself as a “journalist in new media”. Whatever that may involve, it is relevant to distinguish his position from that of the mainstream press, which is regulated, and subject to codes of practice and ethics in a way in which those writing as the applicant does are not. To the extent that the submissions for the applicant make comparisons with other press contempt’s, and the role of mainstream journalists, this is a factor which should be recognised.”

Click to access 2021hcj3.pdf

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But only three weeks before the delivery of the opinion of the court in Edinburgh the UK government published proposals for the early introduction of legislation fully recognising the rights and privileges of “citizen journalists.”

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21 May 2021: Online Safety Bill: New law will protect journalism from censorship

The media will have a statutory duty to safeguard UK users’ ability to access journalism under the new Online Safety Bill. The Government has made clear that content on news websites, including articles and user comments, is not in scope of the legislation.

Media minister John Whittingdale, speaking for the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) said; “citizen journalists will have the same protections for their work as professional news providers adding, “we don’t want the legislation to lead to a ‘woke web’ where legitimate journalism is censored. That’s why we’ve built in safeguards so that content from news publishers will not be in scope of new laws, including content shared on social media platforms, and media providers will need to factor in the crucial role of journalism as well as freedom of expression in their moderation decisions. A vibrant and free media is essential to our democracy and our Bill will make sure vital public interest journalism can reach its audience without interference. Ofcom will be keeping a watchful eye to ensure media platforms remain open and impartial theatres of debate. The bill will force the removal and limit the spread harmful content including child sexual abuse, terrorist material and suicide content, plus user-generated online fraud such as romance scams and fake investment opportunities. Mis- and disinformation is also in scope.The legislation will also tackle racist abuse. The Publication of content deemed “democratically important”, meaning anything promoting or opposing government policy or a party ahead of an election, or campaigning on a live political issue will be protected.

The pronouncement of the court in Edinburgh is at variance with the views and intent of the higher authority of Westminster. The judgement is imperfect and the sentence should be reversed.

See the source image

The Destruction of the Independence of Scots law Confirmed by the Latest Pronouncements From the Westminster Supreme Court

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6 October 2021: The UK Supreme Court has determined that parts of two Scottish Government Bills were outside the legislative competence of the Scottish Parliament.

The judgment follows the UK Law Officers’ (the Advocate General for Scotland and the Attorney General) referral of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (Incorporation) (Scotland) Bill and the European Charter of Local Self-Government (Incorporation) (Scotland) Bill.

Supreme Court rules in favour of UK and against Scottish Parliament

Westminster Jurisdiction over appeals to the sovereign (1876- 2009)

The House of Lords had authority over appeals from the lower courts since all such matters were to the Sovereign-in-Parliament, and she was represented by the Lords. Commoners did not participate in judicial matters.

The House of Lords did not necessarily include them but would be attended by judges who gave their opinions when the Lords desired. They did not, however, have a vote in the House and the “Lords of Appeal in Ordinary,” commonly known as Law Lords, were appointed under the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876 to the House of Lords of the United Kingdom in order that it would be enabled to exercise its judicial functions including acting as the highest court of appeal for most domestic matters.

To be appointed a “Lord of Appeal in Ordinary “under the 1876 Act, an individual was required to have been a practicing barrister for a period of fifteen years or to have held a high judicial office (Lord Chancellor, before 2005 or judge of the Court of Appeal, High Court or Court of Session) for a period of two years.

Appointees were required to retire from judicial office at 70 or 75 years of age, although as peers under the style of Baron they continued to serve as members of the House of Lords in its legislative capacity for life.

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Scottish appeals procedures to be absorbed by English law

In 2003 the Lord Chancellor, Lord Falconer brought forward the “Constitutional Reform Bill” which contained his proposals for reforming the powers of the Lord Chancellor and the dismantling of his office. The argument promoted in support of his initiative was that it would formally separate the powers of law makers from the judicial authorities. A major part of the reformation would be the repeal of existing legislation replacing it with a “Supreme Court.”

The Lords said there was no need for a “Supreme Court” and they were also discontented about a lack of consultation of the proposed changes to remove the Law Lords from the upper house to a new court and the absence of public debate. They also gave warning that the legislation, as drafted threatened the independence of Scots law which was guaranteed in perpetuity by the, “Claim of Right.” The “New Labour” government was defeated and the matter was remitted to the “Constitutional Affairs Committee” for discussion and amendment.

The committee interviewed a number of eminent figures from the political and judicial system, including Scotland’s most senior judge Lord Cullen and an amended bill was finally introduced into law in 2009. From that time there has been an amount of controversy in regard to the operation of the court and the matter of the Scots “Claim of Right” that pre-dates the 1707 “Act of Union” which dictates that the “Independence of Scots law” is guaranteed, in perpetuity and remains extant.

Afternote: On 4 July 2018, the House of Commons officially endorsed the principles of the Claim of Right, agreeing that the people of Scotland are sovereign and that they have the right to determine the best form of government for Scotland’s needs.

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Dec 2003: Lord Cullen, Lord Justice General of Scotland and Lord President of the Court of Session addresses the Constitutional Affairs Committee

The Chair: We are particularly pleased to have the head of judiciary in Scotland.

Lord Cullen: we have met before when we were carrying out our inquiry into the judicial appointments in Scotland before the Government announced its plans for England and Wales.

The Chair: What we thought we might do is start by looking at the Supreme Court issue and initially looking at it in general terms before coming on to those aspects which are particular to Scotland.

Lord Cullen: It all depends what kind of Supreme Court we are talking about. We seem to be talking about one which is simply taking over lock, stock and barrel the existing functions of the Appellate Committee and perhaps also the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, so what is happening is to happen somewhere else in a different atmosphere and I do not quite see how that takes you any further. There may be opportunities possibly for making pronouncements which would be of use to the whole of the United Kingdom, but one has to remember that the existing civil jurisdiction as far as Scotland is concerned is that the Appellate Committee functions as a Scottish court (with a wall, as it were) between it and its functioning as an English court.

Q: Could I address my comments to you, Lord Cullen. I understand from your evidence that you are not wildly enthusiastic about the proposed changes?

Lord Cullen: That is right.

Q: Many of us were astounded that the Government could come up with proposals to reorganize our court of final appeals without consulting the outgoing Lord Chancellor, the incoming Lord Chancellor, the present members of the Judicial Committee of the Lords, and I think we would do better to discuss this in terms of a court of final appeal and leave the title to be chosen afterwards. Referring to perceptions. What would be the minimal changes that might meet the perception point?

Lord Cullen: I am not sure what you mean by “minimal changes”.

Q: Largely that the Lord Chancellor should not be able to sit as a law lord. The minimal change is the Lord Chancellor saying “I will not sit as a law lord” rather than throwing the whole system in the air. People argue that having the law lords meeting in the House of Lords is somehow the executive interfering, forgetting of course that Parliament is not the executive and that any arrangements are likely to be more expensive. Could they be cheaper than the present arrangements?

Lord Cullen: I cannot say because I do not sit as a Lord of Appeal but my impression is that it would be cheaper to leave things as they are than to create something free-standing outside, and there also is the advantage at the moment, as I understand it, that the Appellate Committee is funded through the House of Lords whereas if it is to be exported to some other place it would then be funded by the Department of Constitutional Affairs, hence you get a closer association or greater association with the executive which did not previously exist. Now that itself raises a problem of independence.

The Chair: Turning, Lord Cullen, to the Scottish aspects of this, are the Government’s proposals compatible with the Act of Union, Article 19 and the “Claim of Right” and, if not, what would have to be done to them to make them compatible?

Article 19 of the Act of Union states “… that the Court of Justiciary do also after the Union, and notwithstanding thereof, remain in all time coming within Scotland, as it is now constituted by the Laws of that Kingdom, and with the same Authority and Privileges as before the Union, subject nevertheless to such Regulations as shall be made by the Parliament of Great Britain, and without Prejudice of other Rights of Justiciary…”

Lord Cullen: I venture this matter in my response really in order to make the point that this aspect ought to be considered by the Government.

Before the “Act of Union” there is the “Claim of Right”, which was a Scottish provision at the time when the monarchy was returning to Scotland in 1689 and there was then a declaration by the Scottish Parliament as to the right of subjects to protest for remede of law to the King and Parliament and that is the ancestor, so far as Scotland is concerned, of the hearing of civil appeals from the Court of Session to the House of Lords.

The “Act of Union” was silent on the question of appeal from the “Court of Session” or, indeed, the “High Court of Justiciary” but it was later, much later, interpreted in such a way as to indicate that the “Court of Session” and its decisions should be subject to review whereas the “High Court”, the criminal court, would sit its decisions to be regarded as final and conclusive, so what you have, firstly, is an interpretation of the “Act of Union.”

The second point is that, until now, it has been recognized that there are some situations, not easy to define, where certain elements in our constitution may be unalterable – that is a possible view. It arises from time to time, most recently in the case involving Lord Gray’s Motion where certain members of the “Committee for Privileges” reserved their view on that matter. So however strange it may seem there is an argument that Parliament might not be able to alter or undo certain elements of a constitutional nature. That is a sketch of the argument: whether it is good or not I do not propose to advance, but simply say it is there to be considered.

The Chair: Are you proposing any way in which the Government’s proposals might be modified to avoid collision with that argument?

Lord Cullen: I am inclined to think that it may very well be that so far as civil appeals are concerned there is not a problem, but it is simply something that ought to be looked at. Therefore my answer to that is probably that no alteration is, in fact, required.

The Chair: Do you agree that legislative competence so far as any changes to leave to appeal and things of that kind are concerned does not lie with Westminster under the devolution settlement but with the Scottish Parliament?

Lord Cullen: That is quite a difficult matter. If you look at the Scotland Act you will find that what is reserved is the continued existence of the Court of Session and the High Court of Justiciary. The way that the Scotland Act is constructed certain matters are specifically reserved: the rest are not, and therefore it appears on the face of it that matters other than the continued existence of these courts is a matter for the Scottish Parliament. Nobody is entirely clear as to that being the case but that seems to be the position, in which case there seems to be a role here for the Scottish Parliament. Now I would hope that the matter was not, so to speak, nodded through in Scotland but given serious consideration, but that is the position, as I understand it.

The Chair: Lord Hope expressed the view that the Scottish Parliament would need time to deal with this matter before it proceeded at Westminster?

Lord Cullen: I would agree with that and the consultation paper, whereas it makes clear what the executive’s attitude is and we have seen the executive’s response since then, so far as I know as yet there has not been a considered discussion in the Scottish Parliament.

The Chair: There is a phrase which I think you may have challenged already which the Government use in respect of constitutional issues where they say that the establishment of the new court “accordingly gives us the opportunity to restore a single apex to the United Kingdom’s judicial system where all the constitutional issues can be considered”.

That is in the consultation paper. Is it your view that, leaving aside the devolution issues, there ever was or should be a single apex which combines the judicial systems of England and Scotland?

Lord Cullen: I do not think that is correct. The position until now is that the Appellate Committee functions sometimes as an English court and sometimes as a Scottish court, and I say that because what is binding in England is not binding in Scotland.

You have two completely separate jurisdictions so that whatever decision the House of Lords reaches in regard to a civil matter it does not bind in Scotland, and vice versa, so you really have two apices rather than one apex and, if the position is that that is to be taken over by the Supreme Court, it will have those two high points, whereas the paper tends to talk as if this is the opportunity for the United Kingdom court. Well, I say that is obscuring the point: that you have two separate jurisdictions each with its own head happening to be administered under one device, namely the Appellate Committee. That is what we have: it is a result of the separate growth of two legal systems, and it is preserved, of course, by the Act of Union.

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Oct 2009: The Introduction of the UK Supreme Court

A new United Kingdom Supreme Court was formed separating the judicial function from Parliament (those who make the law from those who interpret it in courts). It assumed jurisdiction on points of law for all civil law cases in the UK and all criminal cases in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

The Lords of Appeal in Ordinary (the Law Lords) are the first justices of the 12-member Supreme Court and are disqualified from sitting or voting in the House of Lords. When they retire from the Supreme Court they can return to the House of Lords as full Members but newly-appointed Justices of the Supreme Court will not have seats in the House of Lords.

http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2009/1603/contents/made

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Apr 2015: Lord Carloway condemns the UK Supreme Court

The lord Justice Clerk attacked the UK Supreme Court, calling it remote from the realities of Scots law and a “depressing influence” on the legal system in Scotland. His remarks came in his speech, in Edinburgh, to the: “Conference of Commonwealth Law Reform Agencies.”

He said: “The UK Supreme Court, which has hitherto sat only in London, may be deemed to exercise greater autonomy in the selection of topics for the reform of Scots civil law than the Scottish Law Commission itself. While the criminal law court hierarchy in Scotland ends with the High Court of Justiciary, the Supreme Court can deal with particular questions relating to devolution and arising from civil or criminal proceedings. In some respects, the oversight of Scots Law from a position that is relatively remote, far removed from the practical realities of operating the Scottish legal system and of Scots society as a whole, is apt to have a depressing influence on the efforts of those operating positively within the jurisdiction.”

http://www.scottishlegal.com/2015/04/15/lord-carloway-attacks-supreme-court-as-having-depressing-influence-on-scottish-legal-system/

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Nov 2015: UK Supreme Court overrules Scottish judges on two human rights cases

The UK Supreme Court over-ruled Scotland’s highest appeal court in two important human rights cases. In both, judgements passed in Edinburgh were unanimously overruled by a five-judge panel sitting in London on fundamental legal issues. Their decisions raise the possibility of another judicial and political cross-border row. Senior political figures such as First Minister Alex Salmond and Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill have already raised concerns about what they see as the Supreme Court interfering in Scottish legal affairs. The Supreme Court bench in both cases was headed by Lord Hope, deputy president of the London-based court and former Lord President of the Court of Session in Edinburgh who has previously spoken out against the “corrosive anti-English sentiment” in Scotland’s courts, describing it as an obstacle to legal progress, and has been the subject of biting criticism by Alex Salmond, who accused Lord Hope of allowing “some of the vilest people on the planet” to win compensation from the taxpayer.

http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/13082711.UK_Supreme_Court_overrules_Scottish_judges_on_two_human_rights_cases/

Supreme Court judgement

Nov 2016: Scotland’s application to overturn Brexit ruling triggers court battle

Scotland is to apply to the Supreme Court to be allowed to table a legal challenge at the Court against the UK Government as it tries to overturn a Brexit court ruling. The attempt is to make sure MPs and Scotland’s parliament have a say on triggering Article 50. First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said “it simply cannot be right” that European Union membership “can be removed by the UK Government on the say-so of a Prime Minister without parliamentary debate, scrutiny or consent”. She added: “legislation should be required at Westminster and the consent of the Scottish Parliament should be sought before Article 50 is triggered. Let me be clear – I recognize and respect the right of England and Wales to leave the European Union. This is not an attempt to veto that process. But the democratic wishes of the people of Scotland and the national Parliament of Scotland cannot be brushed aside as if they do not matter.”

http://news.sky.com/story/scotland-will-apply-to-supreme-court-to-overturn-brexit-court-ruling-10649998

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Dec 2018: Brexit Legislation – UK Supreme Court Upholds  Scottish Parliament – But its ruling is thwarted by the Westminster Government’s Introduction of counter legislation, (with Royal Assent) before the Supreme Court judged the Westminster government appeal.

Preamble:

Brexit legislation was drafted as an alternative to Westminster’s EU Withdrawal Bill, which MSPs refused to give their consent to following a row over how powers currently exercised from Brussels will be used after Brexit. Holyrood Presiding Officer Ken Macintosh wrote an official memo saying the bill was “not within the legislative competence of the parliament”. His assertions were denied by the Scottish government’s legal advisers. But the delay (as designed) provided time for UK law officers to apply to the Supreme Court for legal certainty about whether the Holyrood vote was valid. A two-day hearing was then held in London in July, with the UK government arguing that the bill should be struck down.

“On 4 July 2018, the House of Commons officially endorsed the principles of the “Claim of Right”, agreeing that the people of Scotland are sovereign and that they have the right to determine the best form of government for Scotland’s needs.”

Lord Keen

Lord Keen Advocate General argued the case for the Westminster government. The Supreme Court judgement

Lady Hale said the judges had unanimously rejected all but one section of the UK government’s arguments. She said “the whole of the Scottish bill would not be outside the legislative competence of the Scottish Parliament”, but that one section – relating to MSPs having to give consent for UK Brexit laws – was not within Holyrood’s remit. The judges explained in their ruling that changes had been made to the UK legislation, (before the appeal hearing) adding a special schedule of protected legislation which MSPs could not modify , returning to Westminster authority over 21 previously devolved provisions. This meant that the bill was entirely competent when it was passed by MSPs in March 2018.

Lady Hale

Supporting documentation

The UK Withdrawal from the European Union (Legal Continuity) (Scotland) Bill – known as the “continuity bill” – was passed under emergency procedures

Lord Advocate James Wolffe

What happened next?

The ruling meant that the EU Withdrawal Act remained the basis on which Scotland’s statutes will be prepared for Brexit. MSPs could potentially bring the continuity bill back for reconsideration at Holyrood, but only provided action was taken in the areas highlighted by the Supreme Court.

Supreme Court

The 2017 General election had Murrell been the chief strategist of any political party other than the SNP he would have been given his marching orders. Incredulously the First Minister awarded him a massive pay rise and an extended contract.

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Devolved Government in Scotland

The introduction of a Scottish parliament in 1999, with devolved powers (forced on the UK government by the EC) should have been a game changer.

For the first time in 300 years Scots were to have a forum allowing discussion of matters local to Scotland over which their elected representatives would be able to bring about change.

But the established political parties simply rubber stamped the wishes of the Westminster parliament on the electorate.

Labour and Liberal Democratic coalition governments  proved to be incompetent at all levels and voters transferred their support to the Scottish National Party (SNP) who provided progressive, efficient and enlightened government.

In 2010 the SNP were rewarded for their achievements gaining a stunning victory taking over government with an overall majority (turning the Westminster gerrymandered electoral system on its head). It was very successful, even when hamstrung with the forced implementation of destructive financial austerity measures foisted on Scotland by Westminster  The party was rewarded with a return to government in 2015.

Nicola Sturgeon's husband Peter Murrell contradicts her evidence to Alex  Salmond inquiry | Scotland | The Times

The Scottish Voter

In the period up to 2005 voting was largely tribal and class driven. Workers backed Labour whilst the rural communities, white collar workers and upper classes supported the Tory party.

But the failure of the Scottish Parliament to deliver real change for the benefit of Scots and illegal wars in Serbia, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and Syria coupled with the rapid expansion of the internet challenged the old ways and political party’s experienced the impact of declining voter bases as vast amounts of new information, previously denied the public became wide spread through internet driven social networking.

From 2014 enlightened Scots became increasingly more independent thinking and a new class of voter was born. One which demanded from politicians information and policies relevant to their individual needs. 

scotl007

Tory Electioneering Strategy

The “My-Personality” app was launched in 2007. In excess of six million people completed the questionnaire, allowing psychometric centres to access their Facebook profiles. This permitted an algorithm trawl through the persons likes and social media posts. The information gathered allowed the creation of statistical models which used “digital-foot-printing” to predict personality types. The Tory Party contracted  analysts who dipped into the large database of anonymized information, and targeted the Scottish electorate.

Body language expert analyses SNP chief Peter Murrell's appearance before  Alex Salmond inquiry - The Sunday Post

Mar 2017: The Petition Against a Second Scottish Independence Referendum

A petition was launched on the internet by the Tory’s stating;

“We in Scotland are fed up of persecution by the SNP leader who is solely intent on getting independence at any cost. As a result, Scotland is suffering hugely. The majority of Scottish voters wish to remain in the British union, despite Nicola Sturgeon’s latest demands for a Scottish referendum, according to the latest polling from YouGov.”

The “data mining ploy” petition had been created and added to the internet by the Tory media team. And the tactic worked since it succeeded in raising the public profile of the possibility of another Independence referendum, which (at the time) had not been given mention by anyone other than the Tory Party.

Peter Murrell, SNP Chief Executive | Ewan McIntosh | Flickr

Apr 2017: Use of Gathered Data – Analysis of Petition Outcome

Aware of the Tory tactic I compiled an analysis using publicly issued data  and produced a predictive 2017 election outcome.

Electorate totals were included and a percentage signatory total was established for each constituency. From that I used the mean figure of 3.75% to forward project the outcome of an Independence referendum.

The figures suggested that from an electorate of 4,021,203 the outcome of another referendum would result in a: 48.00% “Yes” vote in favour of independence with 52.00% preferring to remain with the Union. 

This was important information which if used wisely would allow effective forward planning electioneering strategy.

Edinburgh, Aberdeen, East Renfrewshire and East Dunbartonshire recorded higher than average figures favouring remaining with the Union. Other regions were less fixed.

SNP's Mr Invisible may be taking the flak from dissidents, but critics are  also targeting his wife

My Predictive 2017 General Election Forecast 

The General Election in Scotland will not be a re-run of the 2015 General Election and the landslide victory achieved by the SNP cannot realistically be achieved.

My analysis suggests 25 seats might change hands with the Tory Party being the main benefactor.

Significant SNP financial resources and additional teams of activists will need to be deployed in force in the under-noted constituencies otherwise they may be lost.

This group of seats are marginals – Risk decreases as the % number drops:

71749: Edinburgh West, Michelle Thomson MP : 4388-6.12% Lost

69982: East Renfrewshire, Kirsten Oswald MP: 4241-6.06% Lost

66966: East Dunbartonshire, John Nicolson MP: 3977-5.94% Lost

65846: Edinburgh South, Ian Murray MP: 3579-5.44% Labour hold

73445: West Abdn, Stuart Blair Donaldson MP: 3961-5.40% Lost

80978: Edinburgh North & Leith, Deidre Brock MP: 4280-5.29% Held

66208: Paisley & Renfrew, Gavin Newlands MP: 3158-4.77% Held

68875: Argyll & Bute, Brendan O’Hara MP: 3277-4.75% Held

62003: North East Fife, Stephen Gethins MP: 2937-4.74% Held

67236: Stirling, Steven Paterson MP: 3175-4.72% Lost

77379: Ochil & Perth, Tasmina-A-Sheikh MP: 3645-4.71% Lost

79393: Gordon, Rt. Hon Alex Salmond MP: 3711-4.68% Lost

68056: Aberdeen South, Callum McCaig MP: 3618-4.65% Lost

79481: East Lothian, George Kerevan MP: 3676-4.63% Lost

72178: Edinburgh S-West, Joanna Cherry QC: 3283-4.55% ) Held

72447: Perth & N-Perthshire, Pete Wishart MP: 3033-4.19% Held

71685: Moray, Rt. Hon Angus Robertson MP: 2995-4.18% Lost

78037: Lanark & Hamilton-E, Angela Crawley MP: 3272-4.19% Held

68483: Dumfries, Clydesdale, David Mundell MP:2816-4.11% Held

74179: Berwick, Roxburgh, Selkirk: Calum Kerr MP: 3026-4.08% Lost

86955: Linlithgow, East Falkirk, Martyn Day MP:3570-4.11% Held

68609: Banff & Buchan, Dr Eilidh Whiteford MP: 2772-4.04% Lost

73445: W. Abdn,  Stuart-B-Donaldson MP: 3961-5.40% Lost

71685: Moray, Rt. Hon Angus Robertson MP: 2995-4.18% Lost

68056: Aberdeen South, Callum McCaig MP: 3618-4.65% Lost

Revealed: The secretive SNP chieftains helping Alex Salmond break up the  Union | Daily Mail Online

The 2017 General Election and the resurgence of the Tory Party in Scotland

The 2017 General Election in Scotland first exposed Scottish voters to “data mining”. A new form of politics imported from the USA, providing tools and profiling information allowing Tory candidates to communicate personally with their prospective constituents.

The benefits were astounding. The Tories gained a stunning result, increasing their MP’s from 1 to 13 in total.

Pollsters were flabbergasted at the turnaround in the voting since the SNP appeared to be invulnerable.

But Tory candidates had been well briefed about the individual targets within their constituencies. The new voting strategy used predictive data models which identified, engaged and persuaded swing voters to turnout.

This was achieved through the use of internet, phone and personal surveys combined with many other data sets, created by teams of contracted data scientists, psychologists and political consultants allowing the campaign to map the Scottish electorate based on ideology, demographics, religious beliefs, strongly held opinions on key issues e.g. Independence, the Orange Lodge, Celtic, Rangers, The SNP and or political personalities.

The information gathered provided Tory campaign strategists with a predictive analysis based on thousands of data points on just about every voter in Scotland.

From that teams of political consultants and psychologists, hired by the Party directed the campaign and candidates on what and how to say it to selected groups of voters.

Other voter targeting, included use of Facebook adverts, one to one scripted phone calls and provision of the content of messages for door-to-door canvassers ensuring consistent communication with voters on any issue.

What won the day for the Tory party in 2017 was that they utilised “data mining” to gain a comprehensive understanding of the Scottish electorate and then used every communication aid available facilitating discussions with voters about matters important to them as individuals.

Throughout the campaign the Tory tactic was to constantly broadcast the “no new referendum” message stressing that this was an important major difference between the Tory and any other candidates firmly imprinting this in the electorate’s minds.

In contrast the SNP campaign lacked inspiration. It was poorly directed (he starved “at risk” constituencies of financial and other resources) and failed to get the SNP voters out.

Information is power and an incompetent Peter Murrell, the SNP strategist allowed the Tory Party to outwit him.

He failed and had he been the chief strategist of any political party other than the SNP he would have been given his marching orders. Incredulously the First Minister awarded him a massive pay rise and an extended contract.