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Dougie Donnelly slams Scottish Government over sacking

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Dougie Donnelly: Speaks frankly to The Scotsman about how he really feels after sport quango sacking.
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Published Date: 18 January 2008
ONE of the country's most well-known broadcasters, DOUGIE DONNELLY has been a fixture on our screens for almost 30 years. He is probably best known for being BBC Scotland's anchorman at showpiece footballing occasions, such as the Scottish Cup final, but he is equally at home in a number of other sports, with golf being a particular favourite.
He was appointed chairman of the Scottish Institute of Sport in the spring of 2005 but this week was "asked to stand down" by the sports minister, Stewart Maxwell, as part of the Scottish Government's plan to merge the institute with SportScotland. His sacking, and that of his SportScotland counterpart, Julia Bracewell, has been branded as "cynical and vindictive" by opposition MSPs.

Born in 1953, Donnelly studied law at Strathclyde University. He began his broadcasting career with Radio Clyde, and began working for the BBC in the late 1970s.

Besides covering a variety of Scottish sporting events, he has also reported on the Commonwealth Games and the Olympic Games, and is an in-demand after-dinner speaker. Although he studiously avoids stoking up controversy for its own sake, he has steadily acquired a reputation as a commentator who will be outspoken when he thinks it necessary.

He and his wife, Linda, live in Glasgow. They have three daughters – Kim, Laura and Lisa.

Q & A: DOUGIE DONNELLY

Can you see any sense in the decision to merge the Scottish Institute of Sport and SportScotland? If not, why do you think the Scottish Government has made the decision?

It's not completely inexplicable. I can see why someone who had been badly briefed about elite sport could think it might be a good idea. That doesn't make it correct, of course, and I think it shows a lack of understanding about why the institute was set up. We all know why they made the decision. Scrapping SportScotland was a manifesto commitment, which they realised they could not fulfil reasonably, so merging it with the institute allowed them to save face.

How would you sum up the role of the institute to someone who had never heard of it before?

I'd start by saying what it doesn't do. It doesn't deal with grass-roots sport. It's about elite athletes, those who are hopefully already of international or world class.

It's a one-stop shop for them where they can find every possible kind of support, from sports science to lifestyle advice, expert coaching and so on. It's designed to help them cut that extra hundredth of a second off their time, or add that extra millimetre – those very narrow margins that, at the highest level, make the difference between winning and losing.

What was your role as chairman – chiefly ceremonial, or were you able to have greater input than that?

Officially, I served four days a month as chairman, but I don't ever remember saying 'Sorry, can't do that, I've already done my four days'. I hosted a lot of functions, because it's something I'm comfortable with, but I wouldn't say the role was ceremonial.

A lot of the time it was about managing a difficult relationship with SportScotland – far too often it was about defending the institute. But a lot of the time, it was also hugely invigorating.

Are you convinced the merger of the two organisations will not work, or will it depend on the people in charge?

I'd never say it can't work, but it will be difficult. It will totally depend on our executive director, Mike Whittingham, who has been absolutely top-class since coming to the job, and SportScotland's chief executive, Stewart Harris. Or if it's about two other people, it will depend on how they manage their relationship. It will need a great deal of goodwill and compromise, but I really hope it does work.

Do you agree with the Scottish Government's decision to relocate SportScotland's headquarters from Edinburgh to Glasgow?

Yes, it makes perfect sense, particularly with the Commonwealth Games coming to Glasgow in 2014. And I think everyone is aware that Glasgow, as a city, has shown a greater commitment to sport in recent years than Edinburgh has.

You were quite outspoken in your criticism of the Scottish Government this week. Has the BBC ever suggested that you should not voice opinions on sports matters?

No. My situation is totally different from, for example, that of a newsreader who may be expected not to speak out on political matters. I'm not a staff member of the BBC, but, in any case, after working with them for so long, I'd like to think they trust me not to say anything which might bring them or my position into disrepute. And there's clearly no conflict of interest.

When The Scotsman asked 100 celebrities their view on the SNP's first 100 days in power, you said your initial impression of sports minister Stewart Maxwell had been positive. Do you have a different overall view now?

It's certainly not personal, because I've always got on well with Stewart. I just think that, sadly, he and his colleagues have got it wrong on this issue.

What are your own political preferences? Would you want to declare an allegiance to any one party?

It's not relevant to the whole issue we're discussing. I do have strong views, but I prefer not to have myself pinned down as a supporter of this or that party.

What I will say is that I want Scotland and Scottish sport to succeed. I'm a patriotic Scot, and there's no contradiction between that and my broader political opinions.

Is there an up side to all this? In a way, will you be glad to have more free time, or had you mapped out things to do with the remaining 18 months of your four-year term?

To be absolutely honest, I have felt a sense of relief. It's been a huge privilege to be involved with the institute, and I've enjoyed probably 90 per cent of my time there, but it's not been so enjoyable recently.

In sports terms, what has been the high point of your time as chairman of the institute? Scotland's success at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne in 2006 must have been pretty special.

It was. And it represented a breakthrough for the institute, because, of the 29 medallists we had, I think it was 22 who were institute athletes. It was also just a great time to be a Scot in Melbourne, and to have all sorts of people from other countries coming up to you and saying 'What are you guys doing right?'

Another special moment was Glasgow winning the bid to host the Commonwealth Games in 2014, even though the institute was not directly involved. And the appointment of Mike Whittingham was a high point too.

What is your working week like at the moment, or is there no such thing for you as a typical working week?

I've never had any great structure to my working week or month or year. I've always done a bunch of different sports for different broadcasters.

I've got a couple of European Tour golf events coming up, and when I'm covering golf, there is more structure to my week. I also do a lot of after-dinner speaking – it's something I really enjoy – and I've got three dinners to do next week.

What do you like to do with whatever spare time you have? Golf remains a big interest, presumably.

As you'd imagine, a lot of what I do in my spare time is sport-related. We bought a second home at Gleneagles, where I'm a member of the golf club, and I like to play there when I can.

But I also enjoy simple, relaxing things, like taking the dog for a walk around the course. I don't really have the time to do anything more dramatic.

If the Scottish Football Association asked your advice about who the next Scotland manager should be, what would you tell them?

I'm very upset that my old mate Smudger (Gordon Smith, the chief executive of the SFA] has rejected my application out of hand. No, I've known Gordon for a long time, and it wouldn't be fair to him or to our friendship for me to voice an opinion in public.

What I can say is that I'd be happy with any one of the four candidates who are on the SFA's shortlist. I know them all – I know Mark McGhee, Tommy Burns and Graeme Souness well, George Burley not so well – and I'm sure they'd do a good job.

I think it's a good time, too, for someone to take over as Scotland manager, certainly a better time than it was for Walter Smith or even for Alex McLeish when he took over. We've got a fine group of young players coming through now, which wasn't the case a couple of years ago.

You're a self-declared Clyde supporter, but some people insist that your real allegiance is to Rangers. What would you say to disabuse them?

Anybody who supports any team outside the Old Firm gets that – it stems from a kind of arrogance that some Old Firm supporters have. "You're a Dundee United fan – but are you a Dundee United fan who supports Rangers or a Dundee United fan who supports Celtic?"

I've been a Clyde fan since I was a kid living in Rutherglen and my grandad took me to Shawfield. I've got the cheque-book stubs to prove I'm a Clyde fan.

What's the last book you read and/or film you saw?

I love reading, and I read a great deal. The last book I read was called The Grand Slam by Mark Frost. It's about the golfer Bobby Jones, and the post-depression America in which he grew up and became a professional golfer.

I mainly tend to watch movies on plane journeys, though even then I'll often spend most of my time reading or listening to my iPod. The last film I saw was Michael Clayton, though I can't remember too much about it, I'm afraid. I'm a big fan of Dustin Hoffman, and of Al Pacino, too, but I wouldn't call myself a real cinema buff.

Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 30 January 2008 5:29 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Video Archive
 
1

,

18/01/2008 00:27:25
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2

BIG EYE,

Paisley 18/01/2008 00:31:50
Dougie comes across as a decent enough guy but he is not helping his image making a great deal about losing his position

When mergers occur in other organisations it is common for people from one organisation or the other to be replaced to make it easier for the merger to go ahead. Chairman are particularly vulnerable and so it has proved.

Agree that Stewart Maxwell is probably the weakest of a very impressive SNP team of Ministers.
3

subrosa,

18/01/2008 01:01:44
# 2

Have to admit not impressed in the least by Stewart Maxwell but then he's a lawyer and they all appear to think they're wonderful at everything.

# 3

Erm... I'm not going to type out the opposition names which don't impress me. Need to get some sleep tonight.
4

An Beal Bacht,

18/01/2008 01:37:46
I guess this big mouthed egomaniac will have the time to enjoy his second home at Gleneagles. Pish and piffle.
5

,

18/01/2008 02:00:37
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6

,

18/01/2008 02:02:17
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7

,

18/01/2008 03:56:20
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8

ddmc,

18/01/2008 07:02:42
3 days on the trot, i thought at 1st doogly was calling in favours, but i think #10 is right, are the hootsmon trying to generate anti SNP stories.
9

Conan the Librarian™,

18/01/2008 07:30:02
I thought this was the "still spouting" thread...
10

donald,

glasgow 18/01/2008 07:32:47
No mention of his furniture joab. He was often seen with Dave Murray in the Ibrox Boax.
11

Edward,

18/01/2008 08:59:13
This is PATHETIC!!!
This paper seems to think that by repeating a story, that somehow it will justify that Dougie Donnelly should still be in a job that is paid for by the tax payer, but is not required. After all he isnt unemployed, he still works for the BBC (again being paid by the licence payer).
Why does Dougie Donnelly entertain this paper? Keep it up and attention will be drawn as to how he actually became chairman of the Scottish Institute of Sport in 2005 ! After all what exactly is his qualifications? Apart from doing the commentary for BBC Scotland Sport (doesnt he cover the Indoor Bowling?)
12

Cauchy Riemann,

Wales 18/01/2008 09:08:34
Is this the fourth or fifth article on this non-event?
13

Gone Native,

Edinburgh 18/01/2008 09:11:02
Sport is unimportant.

Bread and circuses.

Get a life.
14

Jimmy the Pie,

18/01/2008 09:21:53
Reading this drivel you would think the SNP had assassinated Dougie Donnelly. (Might not be a bad idea!) Are there no 'news' stories around?? Haven't found any detail of Wendy's stunning performance at question time!! Why not make some stories up that are worth reading??
15

The Federalist (the poster formerly know as NAUON),

18/01/2008 09:52:38
I don't think there are many here who are in a position to comment about this.

None of us really know the full facts - not unless they work for Sportscotland or the Sports Minister.
16

JayJay,

18/01/2008 10:03:55
The Scottish Institute for Sport AND Sports Scotland. Why did we ever need two organisations? Can someone please explain.
Wallowing here in my stupidity, I hear successive Governments blowing about the "nations health" then, unsurprisingly, having nae money to do anything about it. We were supposed to be building national centres for sporting excellence. Anyone know where those projects have been built, because I can't find them on the map? Mind you, when it comes to finding £450m for an oddly shaped block of flats in Edinburgh there is plenty money for that.
We specialise in this country in creating quango after quango which lectures us on the patently obvious whilst doing absolutely nothing tangible to resolve the issue. That we need two quangos to handle sport in Scotland is an utter joke.
17

glassbenmhor,

18/01/2008 10:10:40
Meanwhile back at the ranch-Nuclear or not,maybe with a ring fence around the perimeter,Aberdeen Council,'New Faces' Wendy but without the BDSM effect(handcuffs and sexy pinstripe),Nicol-Who?,pension crisis supposedly for the boys in blue,bull*hit all around firearms legislation,Lordy Foulkes giving elocution lessons and the list goes on-
But no we are to here all about poor wee Dougie!
18

Shameless,

Once an insider - now outside, looking in 18/01/2008 10:53:59
What a load of utter tripe from outrageously mad lightweight spinner DD! Poor stuff from The Hootsmon for giving the permed & tinted purveyor of verbal diahorrea column inches.

On a serious level, the "Sterling" motormouth that we know as DD is no great loss. This is all about his personal ego and feelings at being dropped. His figurehead / talking head role at SIS was purely incidental and non-executive. He really ought to go more quietly. Sofa, not so good.

Sad little Mr Bathgate, you've managed to "sink" to new depths.
19

bully wee alba,

Edinburgh 18/01/2008 11:26:39
#22

Wendy’s performance at FMQ’s has been roundly ridiculed on both Radio Scotland and also The Herald.

It would appear that if The Scotsman had a reporter present, he or she seems to have missed seeing wee Wendy being yet again swept aside as she attempted to question one of the big boys at the school.

It does seem rather unfair to ask Wendy to undergo this ritual humiliation every Thursday.

Have they not got a grown-up individual to pass this task onto whilst Wendy is left to get on with what she is really good at, soliciting donations from obscure sources?
20

OscarMacApfel,

Dumfries 18/01/2008 11:36:23
If anyone in the future is reading this could you please send back a robot to make painful manlove AM2?


21

moiaussi,

18/01/2008 12:06:03
#19
"Nicol your 15 minutes of fame is up"

Unfortunately his 40 years of po-faced hypocritical mediocrity isn't.
22

moiaussi,

18/01/2008 12:07:52
#22

Wendy's performance was dire - I hope she stays on in her post even if she is guilty of what she is accused of. Annabel goldie is much better and with a sense of humour.
23

,

18/01/2008 12:11:29
Comment Removed By Administrator
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24

Patrick O'Shaunnessy,

18/01/2008 12:17:45
Expendable ? Moi ?

Too bad Dougie....now go and get a real job.
25

 Ayrshire Scot™,

18/01/2008 12:31:24
37. AM2. The record, as you posted yesterday, of SportScotland is dire. I has achieved on 2 targets out of dozens, with some of its key performance indicators actually going backward. It is a perfect example of Labour mediocre quangocracy,

The parliament voted against the SNP plans. As you are fond of supporting parliamentary democracy when it suits, you can't blame the SNP when their preferred option was rejected by the parliament on this matter.

"Scotland's performance at the Olympics" - are we having a Scottish team then?
26

 Ayrshire Scot™,

18/01/2008 12:52:21
39. So 1 out of 11 targets met, several actually going backward (such as participation of boys in sport and physical activity, one of the most important) and most not on track to be met is a good record?

Now you are using "shorthand" for Scottish/ Scotland - please use long hand old bean to avoid confusion.
27

Woodpecker,

18/01/2008 13:13:48
Why do we have to spend lots of money to train athletes who may earn lots of money?
28

 Ayrshire Scot™,

18/01/2008 13:17:48
42 I am not sure about the intangibles you pose. Not as impactful I would think than say, a Home Secretary describing the Home Office as "not fit for purpose". Are you saying that no Government can abolish a quango or seek to merge/ declutter the massive quango state that Labour have set up?
29

 Ayrshire Scot™,

18/01/2008 13:28:31
45 I think the impact of the intangible you pose is less than the impact of the more prolonged, and aborted, planned relocation of government agencies in the previous administrations which went on far longer than 8 months. It is less than the mergers and the redundancies caused by the various, rolling programmes at UK government level where departments seem to merge/ be created or disbannded on an annual basis.

Do you think the SNP should hav implemented its entire 4 year programme by now?
30

 Ayrshire Scot™,

18/01/2008 14:07:55
47 WHat was your question? What impact does some intangible and unmeasurable have? Intangible and not well measurable is the answer. Little. Less than the relocations/ dissolutions of agencies in the last admin. which went on for years not months.
31

Scotsman in Dublin,

18/01/2008 15:02:29
Is this still going on? If the SNP goverment ever needed confirmation that it is doing a good job then this is it. And the fact that 'unionist PravdaMan' can find nothing better to attack them over than merging two sports quango's into one shows up this paper for the propoganda machine that it is.

Smokescreen.
32

Geomac 1,

Kinross 18/01/2008 16:17:57
Maxwell and the SNP have lost it on this one - big time!
Ok, they wanted to merge the two Sports organisations but it's HOW they did it that stinks!
Would the sensible and good management process not have involved advertising for the new chairman of the combined board (allowing the current chairmen to apply for the new post, if they so wished), establish the new combined board in conjunction with the new chairman - THEN abolish the current board, including existing chairmen???
Too sensible an appraoch for politicians???
33

OscarMacApfel,

Dumfries 18/01/2008 16:31:43
Good news Chic Young has been invited to become the new chairman of the Scottish Institute of Sport, and has accepted.

Karen Dumbar has been offered the Chair of SportScotland, due to her advanced knowledge of ladies who golf.
34

Liberal for life,

Dunblane 18/01/2008 16:43:18
Its really a bad reflection of the political masters when they take it out on someone like Dougie Donnelly for what appears to amount to nothing more than the fact he doesn't share their political philosophy. We are often warned that politics, religion and sport don't make good bedfellows and heres an example where the politicians clearly demonstrate why this theory has arisen over the years.

It won't be the last time such spite comes from the perpetrators thats for sure. Opinions and concensus views welcome says the SNP - aye that'll be right!
35

bully wee alba,

Edinburgh 18/01/2008 16:47:07
#54

What evidence do you have that Dougie Donnelly is a Unionist?
36

OscarMacApfel,

Dumfries 18/01/2008 17:00:26
#54 illiberal for life, can you point out further examples of this spite you mention?
37

Jimmy the Pie,

18/01/2008 17:00:48
Just watched Wendy's 'awesome' performance at FMQ's. I hope she manages to stay oot of Corntonvale until the next election. She'll take Labour to the dizzy heights of being 3rd to the Libdums.
Oh happy days!!!!
38

Liberal for life,

Dunblane 18/01/2008 17:31:02
#56 -Indeed I can quote my own personal experience of a couple of months ago - as a patriotic Scot (but never,ever a nationalist) I put my name forward for one of the new Scottish Parliaments "consulting wider opinon unpaid quangos" - one of the questions on the application form related to political allegiances and I gave an honest answer. Guess what , despite meeting most if not all of the required professional criteria I didn't get past first hurdle. I reckon I could now pursue this under current discrimination laws on the basis this is not the type of qwuestion that should be asked by employers anymore than age, sex, religious beliefs etc so as more and more examples arise like this you will begin to see that whilst the SNP might talk the talk but they certainly don't walk the walk.

I wasn't really surprised but I am disappointed. Anybody else had similar experiences?
39

Alfie Bett,

18/01/2008 17:43:57
#55
"What evidence do you have that Dougie Donnelly is a Unionist?"

D.D.'s had a long time uncontroversial career as part of the BBC establishment,now his ego's been punctured by being let go from the SIS and he's greetin' about it,all signs symptomatic of probably being a unionist,similar signs have been observed among the displaced Holyrood labour executive as they also have a reluctance to accept the reality of being given the boot by the electorate and their still greetin' aboot it.
40

 Ayrshire Scot™,

18/01/2008 18:08:53
55. I think Dougie D did some party political broadcasts for the SNP in the late 80s, so more likely he is a Nat. Just shows the desperate fantasising and fiction unionists on here endulge themselves in.

Illiberal for Life going about "spite" - the UK Gov must be full of spite with all its forced redundancies....
41

 Ayrshire Scot™,

18/01/2008 18:10:38
61 or as AM2 would describe it "mixed success" lol
42

subrosa,

18/01/2008 18:53:33
# Oh yes that's happened to me 3 times since my return to Scotland 20 years ago. Once on a form for a situation similar to yours (voluntary government group) and twice verbally in interviews. Didn't get any of the jobs surprise surprise! Then again I was rather lucky as I would have been surrounded by Labour apparatchniks.
43

OscarMacApfel,

Dumfries 18/01/2008 19:40:13
#58 iliberal for life. I'm rather surprised at this news as I have been twice approached to join a specific Scottish quango, once under this administration and earlier by the previous Lab-Lib-Dem one. *

Both forms I was sent were identical, other than the header change from Executive to Government. The political allegiance question as far as I can recall ran to no more than a small box asking if I was an active member of any political party, I was under no obligation to fill that box in.

Might I suggest that perhaps the admin person who looked at your crayon scrawled application placed you in the the 'danger to self and others' list?

* Frustration at earlier working with said quango led to me rejecting the approach.
44

Jock Tamson,

Scotland, Caledonia, Alba 18/01/2008 19:48:51
Take it we'll get Julia Bracewell's opinion tomorrow?
45

OscarMacApfel,

Dumfries 18/01/2008 20:11:36
#67 Careful, Jock she'll have your eye out. World class blade merchant.

http://tinyurl.com/2lvboq
46

Jock Tamson,

Scotland, Caledonia, Alba 18/01/2008 20:34:26
Oscar, that was a dig at the paper.
47

Jock Tamson,

Scotland, Caledonia, Alba 18/01/2008 20:34:26
Oscar, that was a dig at the paper.
48

Jock Tamson,

Scotland, Caledonia, Alba 18/01/2008 20:34:34
Oscar, that was a dig at the paper.
49

Conan the Librarian™,

18/01/2008 20:49:29
66
Oscar
Gie's us a clue...gowan.
50

Conan the Librarian™,

18/01/2008 20:51:02
This website is utter cr@p.
72 Took me three times to post.
51

Conan the Librarian™,

18/01/2008 20:52:56
71
Jock-was that why you posted three times?
52

Conan the Librarian™,

18/01/2008 20:53:43
AM2
Are you having trouble posting?
53

Christina, Aberdeen,

Scotland 18/01/2008 22:06:19
I'm not sure about sport, but Scotland's parliamentarians include several talented
singers and musicians. Alex Salmond gave a passable performance of 'The Rowan Tree' with Anne-Lorne Gilles, while Wendy Alexander has the reputation of
being a formidable fiddler.
54

Liberal for life,

Dunblane 18/01/2008 23:22:17
#66 - you sound more like the annointed one rather than the appointed one - you arrogant person!
55

Liberal for life,

Dunblane 18/01/2008 23:55:40
#66 - Heres further confirmation that discrimination is alive and well in an SNP led adminstration who beleive its OK to do so. I think I will challenge the present "authority".

Except for trade union membership, the law offers no clear protection against discrimination on the basis of political activity and there is no specific legislation aimed at preventing such discrimination.

The Trade Union Reform and Employment Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 makes it illegal to discriminate within employment against individuals because of their trade union membership (this is most likely to be of relevance once you have been working for a while and if you were a union representative looking for promotion).

For other political activities, The Human Rights Act 1998 may offer some redress. However, it is still relatively untested, meaning that it is not yet known how courts will interpret it. With regard to recruitment, some lawyers believe that the Act makes it illegal for public sector employers to discriminate on the basis of political activity; others suggest that the act may also indirectly affect private sector employers. However, until test cases are brought, its impact cannot be known.
56

Copper,

Falkirk 19/01/2008 01:29:29
Great News

Ireland does it so well

If have all the trapings of wealth but you can not explain your scource of wealth and pay the the tax then your assets are held and seized by the Government for seven years. If you cannot explain where they / it came from they become public tax money
57

Copper,

Falkirk 19/01/2008 01:35:21
Just realised I have been allowed back into the set up

Does this mean that every time the SNP kill one of the money stealing QUANGOS we have someone like wee dd whining on TV ??
58

An Beal Bacht,

19/01/2008 06:41:23
80 Christina, Aberdeen, Scotland 18/01/2008 22:06:19:

Good one - LOL
59

An Beal Bacht,

19/01/2008 06:42:48
Wardog:

In kick erse mode I see! Great stuff.
60

An Beal Bacht,

19/01/2008 06:51:06
L for L - That's a really daft moniker. You are, de facto, giving life long support to a political party regardless of their policies. You are declaring yourself a "numptie". What do you stand for - if anything. Whatever party you support should reflect your politics - not the other way round. Change yer name son - get some credibility.
61

puskas,

East Kilbride 19/01/2008 08:18:42
Mr Donnelly won't be missed .
62

Nikostratos,

19/01/2008 09:19:45
we love DOUGIE DONNELLY
63

 Ayrshire Scot™,

19/01/2008 11:10:13
89 In what way(s) exactly? Were scatter cushions from Sterling involved?
64

OscarMacApfel,

Dumfries 19/01/2008 20:02:00
Here's the reason Dougie got his jotters.

Incidenatally if anyone reads this the Sunday Herald still appears to be taking political comments...


http://www.sundayherald.com/oped/opinion/display.var.1961796.0.0.php

 

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