Berliner Boersenzeitung - Alex Salmond: the man who took Scotland to the brink of independence

EUR -
AED 4.293301
AFN 80.91469
ALL 97.787327
AMD 448.804147
ANG 2.09223
AOA 1072.009797
ARS 1467.66093
AUD 1.776117
AWG 2.107194
AZN 1.996407
BAM 1.954947
BBD 2.35987
BDT 142.117981
BGN 1.954947
BHD 0.440608
BIF 3482.380329
BMD 1.16904
BND 1.495547
BOB 8.093468
BRL 6.502088
BSD 1.16879
BTN 100.194276
BWP 15.604191
BYN 3.824831
BYR 22913.180953
BZD 2.347676
CAD 1.601293
CDF 3373.84901
CHF 0.929043
CLF 0.028934
CLP 1110.325467
CNY 8.38032
CNH 8.386429
COP 4691.85253
CRC 589.442774
CUC 1.16904
CUP 30.979556
CVE 110.216903
CZK 24.665221
DJF 208.129175
DKK 7.461806
DOP 70.379287
DZD 151.705797
EGP 57.855752
ERN 17.535598
ETB 161.022032
FJD 2.62128
FKP 0.865594
GBP 0.864387
GEL 3.167714
GGP 0.865594
GHS 12.154696
GIP 0.865594
GMD 83.600903
GNF 10140.57477
GTQ 8.978082
GYD 244.523293
HKD 9.175561
HNL 30.573658
HRK 7.534001
HTG 153.403057
HUF 399.554125
IDR 18972.815253
ILS 3.894224
IMP 0.865594
INR 100.333429
IQD 1531.031875
IRR 49231.189978
ISK 142.400936
JEP 0.865594
JMD 186.89844
JOD 0.82891
JPY 171.328617
KES 151.004104
KGS 102.232519
KHR 4685.955103
KMF 492.341083
KPW 1052.13586
KRW 1612.293457
KWD 0.357481
KYD 0.973975
KZT 610.663514
LAK 25188.008244
LBP 104720.201315
LKR 351.47662
LRD 234.337738
LSL 20.841105
LTL 3.451871
LVL 0.70714
LYD 6.314245
MAD 10.527106
MDL 19.787365
MGA 5177.740494
MKD 61.508159
MMK 2454.439773
MNT 4192.345121
MOP 9.450276
MRU 46.492711
MUR 53.144715
MVR 18.00875
MWK 2026.615608
MXN 21.771016
MYR 4.971343
MZN 74.771705
NAD 20.841105
NGN 1786.900626
NIO 43.01123
NOK 11.83933
NPR 160.311042
NZD 1.940154
OMR 0.449494
PAB 1.16879
PEN 4.144391
PGK 4.831891
PHP 66.037306
PKR 332.36396
PLN 4.253144
PYG 9058.047173
QAR 4.260841
RON 5.081582
RSD 117.098899
RUB 91.210197
RWF 1688.863
SAR 4.384484
SBD 9.733995
SCR 16.480808
SDG 702.005309
SEK 11.176844
SGD 1.494853
SHP 0.918682
SLE 26.304978
SLL 24514.185634
SOS 667.908532
SRD 43.497044
STD 24196.7645
SVC 10.226537
SYP 15199.68675
SZL 20.847902
THB 37.929457
TJS 11.295971
TMT 4.10333
TND 3.419508
TOP 2.738005
TRY 46.93678
TTD 7.940535
TWD 34.184946
TZS 3029.977753
UAH 48.831091
UGX 4189.171894
USD 1.16904
UYU 47.259377
UZS 14766.556046
VES 133.584453
VND 30528.89102
VUV 139.873191
WST 3.045947
XAF 655.670873
XAG 0.030452
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.159388
XDR 0.815444
XOF 655.670873
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.732516
ZAR 20.949517
ZMK 10522.773788
ZMW 27.056193
ZWL 376.430353
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Alex Salmond: the man who took Scotland to the brink of independence
Alex Salmond: the man who took Scotland to the brink of independence / Photo: Andy Buchanan - AFP/File

Alex Salmond: the man who took Scotland to the brink of independence

Alex Salmond, who died on Saturday aged 69, was for years the figurehead of Scottish independence, a wily political operator who divided opinion as he took the nationalist movement from the political fringes to the mainstream.

Text size:

He never got to see his beloved Scotland break away from the rest of the United Kingdom, but he was making the case for the country to go its own way right to his last breath.

Salmond, who died after falling ill after making a speech in North Macedonia, stepped down as Scotland's first minister after losing the 2014 independence referendum, handing power to his deputy and one-time protegee Nicola Sturgeon.

But he remained a larger-than-life presence in the background, prompting some former colleagues in the Scottish National Party to suspect he was plotting a political comeback.

Just before the Scottish parliamentary elections in 2021, they were proved correct, as Salmond launched what he claimed would be a complementary nationalist movement -- Alba -- to deliver a "supermajority" for independence in the Edinburgh parliament.

With the SNP and Alba in Holyrood, he argued, the UK government in London could not ignore Scots' backing for independence -- or at least another referendum.

Alba, though, failed to win a seat in the devolved parliament, leaving Salmond out in the cold.

The SNP had already cast him adrift: a year earlier he fought for his personal reputation in the courts after being charged with sexual offences, including attempted rape.

With Scotland more than most a place of political skullduggery, the acquitted Salmond quickly pointed the finger at his enemies for having pushed for the prosecution.

Sturgeon had already pointedly distanced herself from her former mentor, and the bad blood reinforced rifts in the SNP between those loyal to the former leader and his successor.

- Pragmatist -

Alexander Eliott Anderson Salmond was born in 1954 in Linlithgow, near Edinburgh. Appropriately, he arrived on Hogmanay -- the Scots term for New Year's Eve, a night of whisky, song and dance beloved of Scots around the world.

After studies in economics and medieval history at St Andrews University, he became an economist with the Royal Bank of Scotland before entering the UK parliament.

In 1990 he took over the leadership of the SNP, moving it to the centre ground, four years before Labour's Tony Blair did the same.

David Torrance, author of "Salmond: Against the Odds", said both Salmond and Blair were more pragmatic than dogmatic and their slogan could be summed up as: "Whatever works".

In the first elections for the re-established Scottish parliament in 1999 -- created under Blair's leadership -- the SNP lost to Labour and Salmond quit as leader, claiming it was "forever".

But he was re-elected in 2004. "I changed my mind," he said.

Three years later, he was elected first minister of a minority SNP government in Edinburgh, then in 2011 won an absolute majority -- then the promise from London of a referendum.

- Regrets -

For loyal supporters, Salmond, who often sported tartan scarves and ties with the blue and white Saltire of Scotland, had unflagging determination and canny political know-how.

Detractors branded him arrogant and misogynistic with a penchant for populism.

From 2017, he presented a talk show on the Kremlin-funded channel RT, for which he was also criticised.

But both sides agreed that Salmond was one of the most talented politicians of his generation.

Just last month, Salmond, who had a passion for horse racing, fine wine, Indian curry, football and golf, said he regretted standing down as first minister, with independence seemingly off the table.

Sturgeon stepped down unexpectedly early last year. Labour's progress in Scotland at this year's UK general election could imperil the SNP's grip on power in the 2026 Scottish parliamentary vote.

For their critics, Salmond, Sturgeon and the SNP's push for independence came at the expense of addressing the day-to-day issues Scotland's parliament controlled: health, education, housing and transport.

"I thought to make a point of departure for the referendum in the future was a right thing for the national movement," Salmond told an ITV documentary in September. "Looking back, that was a mistake.

"Now, in retrospect, that was a daft thing to do. But then... I thought we were set for independence in a reasonable timescale.

"If you'd told me then that 10 years later, we'd still be waiting despite the manifest opportunities there have been, then I would have said, 'well, I'll just hang about then and see the matter through'."

Salmond leaves a wife, Moira, 87, whom he married in 1981. The couple had no children.

(K.Müller--BBZ)