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Daily Record
Daily Record
Politics
Torcuil Crichton

Nicola Sturgeon under pressure on claims botched ferry contracts awarded to 'maximise publicity'

Nicola Sturgeon coming under direct pressure on explain her role in awarding the botched contract for two CalMac ferries that are £150 million over budget and still incomplete.

The First Minister has been drawn further into the ferries fiasco after Jim McCall, the former Ferguson yard owner, claimed Ministers rushed through the order in 2105 without proper safeguards to maximise publicity ahead of Sturgeon’s first party conference as leader.

Speaking to the Sunday Times, McColl suggested Sturgeon had misled the Scottish Parliament last week when she claimed the contracts were signed off by disgraced former Finance Secretary Derek Mackay.

McColl said he was sure the decision “to overrule CMAL’s advice was made by the First Minister along with Derek Mackay.”

McColl, a former economic adviser to the SNP government, said ministers acted in haste and against the advice of ferry company CMAL so the contract could be announced at their autumn conference in 2015.

He said the contracts were given “for political purposes” and “everything was about the optics and timing the announcements for political gain.”

An official investigation by Audit Scotland concluded last week that the vessels being built at Ferguson Marine will now cost £250 million, more than double their original price.

A damning report by the financial watchdog said it could not establish why ministers dropped a requirement for full repayment guarantees if the billionaire Jim McColl’s Ferguson yard failed to build the ships on time or went bust.

At First Minister’s Questions on Thursday, Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross asked Sturgeon which of her ministers had given the green light for the ferry contracts against the advice of civil servants.

The First Minister replied: “It is a matter of public record - that was Derek Mackay.”

She added: “But of course this is a government that operates by collective responsibility. Ultimately, as with any decision, whether I am personally involved with them or not, responsibility stops with me.”

The Conservatives have now demanded the First Minister appear before the Scottish Parliament on Tuesday to answer the fresh accusations from Jim McColl.

Douglas Ross said: “From what Mr McColl has said, there are serious questions for the First Minister to answer.”

“On Thursday, she tried to say this scandal was all Derek Mackay’s fault but there is more and more evidence that she may have misled Parliament by making that claim.”

“It’s the least the Scottish public deserve when there are credible claims that £250 million of taxpayers’ money has been wasted for political purposes.”

“It’s becoming clear why Audit Scotland couldn’t find any evidence to support the government’s decision to agree this contract against expert advice. The decision looks to have been made for political gain, not for the benefit of taxpayers or the island communities who desperately need these ferries.”

Responding to the claims on Sunday, Scottish Health Secretary Humza Yousaf said: “The First Minister has said herself that the buck stops with her."

“This government takes collective responsibility and nobody wants to see ferries overrun both in terms of timescale and cost. Do not forget if the government did not take the action we took then hundreds of jobs would have been lost.”

He added: “We take collective decisions and nobody shying away from that. This is not about blaming one individual who’s no longer in government, the government stands up to its responsibility and, of course, we’re here to answer those questions as we have done in the past.”

The first of the two long-awaited ferries for the ageing Cal Mac fleet is now expected to enter service in 2023, a full five years late and massively over budget.

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