ALTHOUGH Mark McDonald is in this case simply the current name, as the SNP was the current party, in years past, other names and party affiliations have come and gone, who can remember them all?

What’s happened is set, but what’s to happen – that we still have some control over. It’s unlikely we’ll eradicate such behaviour, but we can at least take measures to both deter it and provide the victims with some small protection.

In our lives, in our times, no elected politician should be able to continue with relative impunity after harassment allegations are found to be substantiated. That this is allowed to happen, it really is a matter of national shame, one requiring immediate redress.

The man is correct in one respect, that once “rehabilitated” no individual should be required to bear a burden for past transgressions through the entirety of their future life.

The issue in the McDonald case is twofold. We’re expected to believe he’s “rehabilitated” because he stated he is, in just a few months, and the individuals he created issues for must now interact with him on what will possibly be a daily basis. Essentially, we’re victimising the victims once again. In no sane world can this be considered appropriate.

We also live in a society where society effectively makes the rules.

Perhaps then, society should be the judge, and Holyrood should endorse cross-party legislation to ensure that it does.

All that need be tabled is that any elected individual found responsible for such acts by appropriate internal investigations should be required to resign or be terminated. Resignation gives the option to re-run and allow society to decide if rehabilitation has been both implemented and effective. Termination forever bars the individual from holding elected office again.

It could be additionally suggested that repeat or multiple offenders not be permitted the resignation option, that in cases of termination such as these, all ongoing rights from their elected responsibility are stripped.

Anytime there is a victim, society pays – we pay in psychological costs, lost time, replacement labour and real health costs. It would seem appropriate to allow our society to choose if the costs have been balanced.

Surely failure to act under such circumstances places our entire parliament into what might best be described as a state of disgrace?
A MacGregor
East Kilbride

DONALD Trump and Kim Jong-un should have their summit on the golf course in Aberdeenshire, with Theresa May and David Mundell as caddies. Allfour stuck in the bunker – which is where many of us feared we would be after the antics of the US and North Korea in recent months.

Denuclearisation on the Korean peninsula is not an event. It must be the start of a process that ends with the complete abolition of nuclear weapons. Just like the chemical weapons ban.

Scotland would be the best place for such a summit. First Minister Nicola Sturgeon could bang some heads together. Scotland has long been in the front line. The door has been opened – however slightly – and the opportunity must be seized.

The South Korean Winter Olympics showed that global sporting events have the capacity to do a lot of good. Had the Scotland-Ireland joint bid to co-host the 2008 European football championship succeeded, we might not be facing the Brexit bourach.
Andrew JT Kerr
Surrey

THERESA May claims it is “highly likely” that the nerve agent came from ... where? Russia, the Kremlin or where? There is a danger that assumptions coalesce into facts without objective corroboration. The Gadarene rush to issue ultimatums is reminiscent of 1914. The equally supportive statements from other individuals and “allies” given the lack of evidence so far to substantiate “claims”.

In the immoral world of espionage, counter-espionage, double agents and so-called traitors, it is wise to wait. Any headlong rush to condemn without corroboration is dangerous to say the least. Nothing like a wee spy story or hysterical Zinoviev-letter style to deflect from inner political chaos over Brexit and the like. Let us ca’ canny!
John Edgar
Stewarton