I
recently had a conversation with Roddy MacLeod, Barrhead Boy of
Through A Scottish Prism. Roddy reminded me of a time when some
people considered me to be a rising star of the Scottish National
Party, which, in turn, reminded me of an article in a newspaper from
when I was an MSP. The article stated: “Martin is spoken of as a
possible future leader of the SNP,” but it concluded with a quote
from an unnamed SNP parliamentary colleague, which said: “Yeah, but
there are a number of us who will do whatever it takes to make sure
that never happens” – and they did.I
was elected as an SNP MSP in 2003…and expelled by the party in
2004. That has to be some sort of a record. It only took them a year
to decide they had to get rid of me. I was the first SNP
parliamentarian to be expelled by the party and the first MSP of any
party to be expelled. My ‘offence’ that led to my expulsion was
to have publicly criticised the ‘leadership’ of John Swinney –
the Doyen of Devolution – and to have argued that the SNP should be
demanding ‘independence, nothing less’, rather than seeking to
manage the devolved Scottish Parliament within the United Kingdom.
My
time at the Scottish Parliament actually started in its first days,
in 1999. I was employed as the Parliamentary Assistant to the
legendary Kay Ullrich. In addition to constituency work, I helped Kay
in her role as the SNP Shadow Minister for Health and Community Care.
In 2000, when Kay became the SNP Chief Whip, I moved with her to the
Whips Office and took on the role of SNP Whips Administrator. This
position meant I was privy to a lot of sensitive information about
SNP MSPs. In my autobiography – Was It Something I Said? –
I set-out some of the issues we had to deal with in the Whips Office.
I’ll refer to all three of my books at the end of this piece.
Back
in those very early days of the Scottish Parliament, I remember
having a conversation with a few SNP MSPs about how many people on
the SNP floor of the parliamentary offices would
actually
be working for the other side, for the British State. It seemed to us
to be a certainty that there would be British State assets amongst
us, both MSPs and staffers. It was, and remains, insane to think that
the British State would not have infiltrated the SNP, a political
party that claimed to have as its raison d’etre the break-up of the
British State.
The
difference between those early days of the Scottish Parliament and
today, is that the British State assets in the SNP have, over the
intervening years, risen-through the ranks and now hold senior
positions that have allowed them to influence party policies and
direction, such as adopting a lack of urgency in delivering
independence…and that’s putting it mildly.
John
Swinney has always been a devolutionist. He once told me he admired
what Tony Blair had done with the Labour Party, and his ambition was
to re-create that transformation with the SNP, to create New SNP. His
plan was for the SNP to copy New Labour by moving the party from its
traditional, moderate left-of-centre position to adopting a moderate,
right-of-centre position. As happened with New Labour, Swinney’s
vision was for New SNP to become a Tory-lite party, and that is what
happened when he succeeded Alex Salmond as party leader in 2000.
Swinney
almost killed the SNP, which was why I spoke-out publicly, calling
for him to resign and for Alex
Salmond to return as party leader.
I
was expelled in 2004, just before Swinney resigned as leader. He
orchestrated my expulsion, which he demanded should happen before he
tendered his resignation. Within a couple of weeks, Alex Salmond
returned and saved the SNP.
I
was approached about re-joining the party, but I asked why I would
want to be a member of a political party that had broken its own
constitution and rules in order to expel me, and I declined the
invitation. I served the remaining three-years of the parliamentary
term as an Independent MSP, sitting beside a legend of the
independence movement who also found herself outside of the SNP, a
woman who became a great friend of mine, Margo MacDonald.
Having
saved the SNP, Alex Salmond turned around the party’s fortunes and
took Scotland to the brink of independence in the 2014 referendum.
Sadly, the immediate aftermath of the referendum saw what I believe
was a rare error on Alex’s part: he decided he should stand down as
leader. I don’t think he had to stand down, but as a man of
integrity he probably felt he failed to deliver for the independence
movement. I think that judgement was too harsh. If Alex had remained
leader of the SNP in 2014, I firmly believe Scotland would be an
independent country today.
What
we got when Alex stood down, though, was a return to devolutionist
leadership of the SNP.
Nicola
Sturgeon was the new leader, but Devo-John (Swinney) was back in a
very influential position. This also brings us back to British State
infiltration of the SNP.
Within
espionage circles there are four accepted reasons for why people
betray a cause. The acronym for those reasons is MICE, which stands
for: M – money; I – ideology; C- compromise; and E – ego.
Compromise is, essentially, blackmail. I’ll leave it to others to
decide who within the SNP might fall into each category.
It’s
also worth mentioning that there are different types of traitors. Not
everyone is an agent of MI5 or Special Branch: some are known as
‘assets’. Their job is simply to listen to what they hear from
colleagues or party members, and pass-back anything they think would
be of interest to the British State. Agents are different: they have
been placed within an organisation, such as the SNP, and have been
given specific tasks to carry out. Tasks such as undermining the
organisation and neutralising its effectiveness in challenging the
control of the British State.
How
many British State agents and assets are there within the SNP? Who
knows? Well, obviously, the British State knows. I will say, though,
that I remember reading a statement made by a former Special Branch
agent who had infiltrated the Socialist Workers Party. The SWP was a
tiny left-wing political party, but it had been so heavily
infiltrated that the agent recorded in his statement that he felt
when he attended some meetings most people there were either MI5 or
Special Branch. Agents and Assets didn’t know each other, they were
all carrying out their roles independently.
If
the British State had so heavily infiltrated a tiny socialist party,
how much attention would it have directed to a Scottish political
party that had risen to the brink of power? Today, after all that has
happened, I still see SNP loyalists claim the party has
not been infiltrated.
That assertion is just insane.
During
‘the troubles’ in the north of Ireland, the British State had
infiltrated the IRA to such an extent that one its agents was a man
called Freddie Scapiticci, codenamed ‘Steaknife’. Scapiticci was
the IRA’s Head of Internal Security, and he was an MI5 agent.
In
the 1970s, when British governments feared powerful trade unions,
particularly the National Union of Mineworkers, a Special Branch
agent was a man called Joe Gormley: he was the National President of
the Mineworkers Union. You can’t get higher than National
President, and he was a Special Branch asset. In the bitter,
year-long Miners’ Strike of 1984-85, papers prepared for then Tory
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher showed MI5 were receiving reports
from one of their agents called Roger Windsor. Windsor was the Chief
Executive of the NUM. Still, though, SNP loyalists argue the British
State has not infiltrated the party.
In
1984, a woman called Cathy Massiter went public about her former work
as an MI5 officer. One of the reasons Cathy Massiter gave for leaving
MI5 was that the job had changed, she said it had become more
political. She added that the role of MI5 had changed from
counter-espionage to domestic surveillance.
Recently,
I spoke with a senior serving-officer of Police Scotland. They spoke
on condition of anonymity and stated there were some questions they
would not answer. I started the interview with the core question: has
Police Scotland infiltrated the SNP? The officer replied that they
could not answer that question. Before I said anything more, the
officer added, ‘Although, by giving that answer, I have probably
told you what you want to know’.
Police
Scotland does not actually have a Special Branch, but if you press
them on the matter, they do admit to having officers who carry out
duties that are normally associated with the work of a Special
Branch. One other thing the Police Scotland officer said chimed with
what Cathy Massiter said when she left MI5. The officer said that
since the creation of Police Scotland, the job had become much more
political. They felt that the most senior officers in the force were
taking direction from politicians and Civil Servants. They also
offered the opinion that the same relationships existed in the Crown
Office Procurator Fiscal Service.
If
that is the case, it certainly explains some recent prosecutions in
Scotland. It would also throw light onto the comment by outgoing
Police Scotland Chief Constable Iain Livingstone, when he told The
Times newspaper that, “our close relationship with Nicola Sturgeon
complicated the criminal investigation into the SNP’s finances”.
I
used to know Nicola well. We are both from North Ayrshire and cut our
political-teeth fighting a dominant Labour Party in our local area.
We also later served together as SNP MSPs, albeit for only a year,
before the party expelled me. Nicola’s leadership of the SNP –
with the input of Devo-John Swinney and Angus ‘BBC World Service’
Robertson – has returned the party to the brink of disaster. Back
in the mists of time, I once suggested that Swinney and his clique
were not interested in independence. They would take it if it fell
into their laps, but they were never going to fight for it. All they
wanted was to get their backsides onto the back-seats of Ministerial
Mondeos and to be ‘important’ Government Ministers in a devolved
Scottish government within the British Union.
How
captured the SNP has become was encapsulated for me in the final
letter Nicola Sturgeon wrote as First Minister of Scotland. It was a
letter of resignation to the English King, Charles III. The final
sentence of the letter, just above Nicola Sturgeon’s signature,
read: ‘I have the honour to be, Sir, Your Majesty’s humble and
obedient servant’. No-one who sees Scotland as a progressive,
potentially independent country, could have signed their name to such
a grovelling letter to the pinnacle of the English/British
establishment. To also see Nicola and then Humza Yousaf bow their
heads to the English King confirmed the total capture of the SNP by
the British State.
When
I saw Nicola’s letter and the bowing and scraping to the English
King, I was reminded of an incident that took place in Ireland in
1916, shortly after the Easter Rising by Irish freedom-fighters.
Edinburgh-born James Connolly was the Commander of the Irish Citizens
Army at the rising. He had been so badly wounded during the fighting
that the British had to strap him to a chair in order to execute him
by firing squad. A few days later, Lillie Connolly, James’ widow,
went to the British headquarters to retrieve her husband’s effects.
She was met by the man who had ordered James’ execution, Major
General Sir John Maxwell, who held out his hand as Lillie approached
him. Lillie held his gaze and her hands remained firmly behind her
back.
One
of the many messages Scots need to learn from Ireland is the actions
of Lillie Connolly. Some things do not deserve civility or respect or
obedience. She faced-down the authority and power of the English.
While Scotland has leaders who bow to the English King, and who sign
letters as the King’s ‘humble and obedient servant’, Scotland
will never be an independent country.
The
SNP is completely compromised, it has been captured and controlled by
the British State. I’m now in my sixties and for the first time in
my life I am thinking that I might not see independence. In the last
two years, four of my best friends have died. They all supported
independence and voted SNP. They never lived to see the sun rise on
the morning of Independence Day. I know all of us have lost such
friends who fought so hard over the years for independence, but never
lived to see it.
The
reality we face means we may have to go back to square-one and start
all over again, build the independence movement all over again,
through the Alba Party led by Alex Salmond. There are so many of us
who built the SNP from a party on the fringes of the political
spectrum to a party the people of Scotland trusted sufficiently to
put them into government. If we have to do it all over again, we can.
This time, though, we need to look-out for those whose loyalties lie
not with the interests of Scotland, but in maintaining British State
control of our people and assets.
You
have to hand it to the British State, it has played a blinder:
today’s SNP is so corrupted by British agents that it has sidelined
independence and embraced gender policies that make the party
unelectable. For the British State that is job done.
The
people of Scotland are the sovereign power, not the SNP. In terms of
the Independence Movement, the SNP is the past. The future is
Scotland United for Independence. One pro-independence candidate in
each constituency that the people can unite behind. Despite the SNP,
independence is still achievable.
NOTES
My
life-story is told in my first book – Was It Something I Said? –
including my time in politics and what actually happened during my
time in the SNP Whips Office, and as a Member of the Scottish
Parliament. My two other books, Outspoken – Part One and Outspoken– Part Two, take us through the eventful last ten-years of Scottish
and UK politics, from the Independence Referendum to the present day
and the British State capture of the SNP. All three are available
from Amazon Books. If you don’t want to buy from Amazon, they are
also available from Lulu Publishing.
This article was first published in August 2023 by barrheadboy.com and grousebeater.wordpress.com.