Yousaf accuses Salmond of abusing power in office
Former First Minister Humza Yousaf has accused his predecessor Alex Salmond of abusing his power while in office.
Mr Salmond, who was cleared of allegations of sexual impropriety in the High Court in 2020, said he had a âsleepy cuddleâ with one complainer in his official residence.
In a new BBC documentary, concerns are also raised about Mr Salmondâs temper, with one former colleague saying she was brought to tears.
Mr Salmond has accused high-ranking members of the government led by his protĂ©gĂ©, Nicola Sturgeon, of conspiring against him â something she dismissed as âabsurdâ.
He has defended his behaviour in office and said he rests on the verdicts of the court cases into his conduct.
Harassment complaints
Mr Salmond led the government between 2007 and 2014, with Ms Sturgeon succeeding him.
Their relationship broke down following complaints about his conduct, both to Scottish government officials and to the police.
Mr Salmond successfully took civil legal action against Ms Sturgeonâs administration for its handling of an internal investigation â ruled to be âtainted with apparent biasâ â and was awarded ÂŁ500,000.
At the subsequent criminal trial, Mr Salmond admitted to having a âsleepy cuddleâ with one complainer and what his defence lawyer called âa bit of howâs your fatherâ with another.
Both members of staff were considerably younger than the ex-first minister.
Mr Yousaf, who replaced Ms Sturgeon after she unexpectedly resigned last year, told the BBC documentary that the first minister is ordinarily the most powerful person in the room.
âYou can choose to use that power appropriately or you can choose to abuse it,â the former SNP leader said.
âAnd on too many occasions, given the behaviour that Alex has already admitted, there was too many instances of that abuse of power.â
He also said the civil court defeat made the government look âincompetentâ.
Mr Salmond said he regretted that he no longer spoke to Ms Sturgeon.
âI donât really do hurt feelings very much ⊠but itâs a big regret that Nicola and I are no longer on speaking terms,â he said. âAnd I seriously doubt if itâs going to improve.â
The ex-SNP leader added: âNow thatâs a great pity, because I did indicate that you shouldnât say anything is forever, but thatâs the way it looks and thatâs just the way itâs going to be.
âWeâll just have to let the past take care of itself.â
A Holyrood inquiry into the governmentâs handling of complaints against Mr Salmond found Ms Sturgeon had misled MSPs over a meeting with her predecessor in her home in 2018, but cleared her of breaching the ministerial code.
In 2021, Mr Salmond launched the Alba Party. It has been highly critical of Ms Sturgeon, Mr Yousaf and current first minister John Swinney.
Ms Sturgeon said Mr Salmond was âfor a long time, a very positive force in my lifeâ, adding: âBut I think I had to learn how to be myself.â
Mr Salmond described himself as a âtough taskmasterâ when he was in charge of the government.
Ms Sturgeon said her predecessor was prone to âoutburstsâ and that his temper âwas out of controlâ at times.
She said while people in the SNP had âlearned to put up withâ it, she suggested it was not âactually always acceptableâ when in government.
Former SNP MSP Linda Fabiani told the documentary: âAlec would let rip.
âThe first time it happened to me I was so shocked, a little bit tearful on the way home.â
She said she did not consider it bullying.
Mr Salmondâs former adviser Geoff Aberdein said he was sacked seven times. âFor some reason heâd always expect to see me the next day,â he added.
âHe didnât really careâ
Mr Aberdein also said that his former boss was âvery, very angryâ about losing his Westminster seat in 2017, believing he had been âlet downâ by the party.
Following the election defeat, Mr Salmond launched a show on Russian state broadcaster RT.
Ms Sturgeon said her former mentor knew how difficult the job was, adding: âShouldnât he have tried a bit harder to make sure that managing his ego wasnât one of the problems that landed on my desk?â
Liz Lloyd, Ms Sturgeonâs ex-chief of staff, told the documentary: âIt was a real sign that he didnât really care how he was perceived any more.
âHe was going to do what served him and not what served the party, not what served the country.â
Mr Salmond, who suspended his RT show in 2022 following Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine, said his successor had been âannoyedâ because she had not been told about the show before it launched.
He added: âI wasnât a member of parliament. The simplest thing to say was Alec makes his choices, I make mine, full stop.â
Salmond and Sturgeon â A Troubled Union will be available on BBC iPlayer from Tuesday, as well as being broadcast on the BBC Scotland channel on Tuesday and Wednesday.