Rebel SNP MSPs threatened with de-selection, says former minister
Alex Neil served as a minister under Alex Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon, but has become a critic of the party in recent months.
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Your support makes all the difference.A former Scottish minister has claimed SNP MSPs who spoke out against Government policy were threatened with de-selection.
Alex Neil, who served under both Alex Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon in the Scottish Government, was critical of Ms Sturgeonās leadership, claiming she showed a ātotal intoleranceā to different points of view and accusing the party and Government hierarchy seeking to āsnuff out dissenting voicesā.
But Mr Neil refused to say who had been threatened with the loss of their seat for opposing Government policy ā claiming one MSP had said they would take legal action against the party as a result of the threats.
In recent months, the former minister has become an outspoken critic of the SNP, in particular Nicola Sturgeonās leadership, and was a supporter of Kate Forbes in the race to succeed her.
Speaking to the Daily Mail, he said: āThere were a couple of longstanding MSPs, good MSPs, threatened with de-selection if they didnāt stop criticising Government policy.
āIām not going to go into names because it is unfair on them for me to tell the press, but at the end of the day they managed to get through because they, in one case certainly, threatened the party with legal action if they didnāt.ā
It is not clear what form the threats took, with SNP selection processes undertaken by local party associations as opposed to being decided centrally.
Mr Neil rebelled in a vote on the release of legal advice relating to Mr Salmondās legal challenge over the handling of harassment complaints against him.
In response, he said, a memberās debate he was due to lead was cancelled.
āI had a memberās debate lined up on prison reform and, as a result of abstaining on that vote on the Government amendment, I got a letter from the then-minister for parliamentary business, Graeme Dey, saying I wouldnāt be getting the memberās debate after abstaining and not supporting the Government,ā Mr Neil said.
āThat is a very good example of where there was a total intolerance, even where fundamental principles were involved, to any kind of different point of view.ā
He added: āIn this case, I was to be denied a memberās debate that I had worked on for a year. Those are the lengths they went to, some of it very petty, and particularly, if you werenāt part of the Nicola clique, then you were singled out for special treatment and you didnāt get any favours whatsoever.ā