Part 1 â The Case of Alex Salmond One thingâs quietly emerging if you probe enough â and thatâs the ever-so-gentlemanly turf war being fought over Ibrox, well away from Ibrox. The Scottish Football Association boss Stewart Regan broke cover to me three days back, responding to questions from Channel 4 News about why Alex Salmond phoned HMRC on 11 Jan to ask about the Rangersâ tax position. Mr Regan made it clear he did not want to get into specifics on this. But equally made it plain there is a heightened sense at the SFAâs Hampden Park HQ that Scotlandâs politicians have rolled their tanks onto the SFAâs lawn. The SFA want them off. He wrote: âI have already spoken to the Sports Minister, Shona Robinson some weeks ago about the Scottish Governmentâs involvement in football matters and reminded her of the need to let football govern and regulate its own affairs without interference, especially in light of FIFAâs views on this issue.â FIFAâs views on the issue of political interference into football clubs being very public and widely known. Mr Salmondâs people vehemently deny it was political âinterferenceâ The First Ministerâs Office say the 11 Jan call: ââ¦centred on securing a settlement to enable Rangers to meet their obligations to the taxpayer and continue in business.â They say they thus acted in the public interest. Thatâs that. No story. But in football politics things are rarely so straightforward. Clearly Mr Regan, still relatively new at the SFA, sees political interference and is concerned enough to write to the Sports Minister, asking for it to stop please. Moreover, what matters is how UEFA, European Footballâs governing body, sees actions like these? Michel Platini has made great hay during his tenure as UEFA boss, of financial fair play. In public UEFA can do little more than pledge support to the SFA and Rangers. In private they are angry and embarrassed at the unfolding Rangers mess. Rangers, frankly, is a big blot on their landscape. Not least, because the club was of course the first in Scotland to get a licence in 2003 for â amongst other things â financial good housekeeping, when as we now know it was as much a casino as a football club. All this in now unfolding, UEFA know and they are unamused. And along with financial fair play comes political interference which has seen FIFA â footballâs world governing body â take strong action against some member countries with meddling politicians. The question of Scottish politicians getting involved with both the taxman and administrators over Rangers was described to me as âdifficult and complexâ by UEFAâs press office on the record. So difficult and complex that Iâve waited three days to get any answer and have thus far failed. Away from their press office one official spoke on condition of anonymity and said âwe are concerned, we have all this in our sights but the key agency here is the SFAâ. Clearly the SFA do too. Even though Mr Salmond has spoken about this phone call in a TV interview with Al Jazeera and itâs been reported in the press, thereâs still great official secrecy shrouding what was actually said, which to this day has not been cleared up. According to a recent Freedom of Information request, details relating to the call cannot be made public according to Holyrood officials because it would âprejudice substantiallyâ relations between Scottish and UK governments. Yet, a couple of lines later, the same official â Patrick Berry â who wrote that, claims the information wouldnât greatly add anything to public knowledge. Well Patrick â which is it? Either itâs substantially prejudicial or itâs not going to add to our knowledge but it certainly canât be both. Curiouser and curiouser. As for the First Minister, his staff quite rightly point out that heâs spoken to HMRC with regard to other companies in trouble. But how many of them potentially owed the taxpayer £75 million? Equally the argument that RFC is somehow another Ravenscraig, a victim of external forces and circumstance where the First Minister must act, would surely be open to question by some? RFC owes Big Tax already. It could soon owe Vast Tax. RFC created the mess RFC is in. Nobody else. And I can tell you first hand that UEFA is deeply unhappy at the mess. As, no doubt is Alex Salmond. If RFC lose the Big Tax Case many honest taxpayers will say the last thing it deserves is survival. Holyrood would say what matters is the best deal for the taxpayer. And so would the HMRC. So Alex Salmondâs damned whatever he does. Fail to act and you look like you donât care. Act and youâve the minefield of national and international football politics to contend with. To say nothing of the fans, divided as ever.
He was supposed to go on Clyde last night but they wanted him on the end of a phone. The boul' Alex doesn't play like that. He has a combative style of journalism. I suspect that is why they don't like him. As for the article, he is laying the groundwork here for more stuff. We aren't surprised by this.....are we?
He just tweeted that he has been invited on next monday. If Dawwyl thought Britney could bash him up in one sentence, this guy is going to leave him a wreck.
If we rely on the SPL to punish Rangers properly, it won't happen, however someone like Thompson may just embarrass them into action.
Part 2 One wonders if some Celtic fanatic is watching the A Team so he can learn how to send fake bombs to MSPs who are Gers fans? He may as well make a few more because I suspect a few more MSPs have also been in touch with D&P. We know Alex Salmonds has.