Actual quotes hereSNP under pressure to expel councillor over anti-gay remark
Kenneth Gunn reported to party bosses by MSP after saying on radio show ‘gays are very sad people’
A LEADING SNP councillor has been reported to party bosses by one of his own MSPs after making anti-gay comments on the BBC.
Kenneth Gunn - who is also a Nationalist constituency party chairman - described homosexuals as "very sad people" and said non-believers were "damned to hell".
The outburst prompted a senior SNP MSP, Joe Fitzpatrick, to urge his party to "take action" against his colleague.
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Linda Jackson, who lives with her partner, Barbara Harrison, in the Borders, has also lodged a complaint about Gunn with the local council.
The row broke out after a BBC radio discussion on a Glasgow exhibition that focused on gay rights in the church. Asked why "non-believers" should treat religious books with reverence, Gunn said: "Well, non-believers are damned to hell anyway, so why should we bother?"
Put to him that he had to live alongside others and show mutual respect, the Borders councillor said: "No, I don't think so. When we all went to church on a Sunday morning and we all prayed to the Lord Jesus Christ every Sunday morning, this was a much better country. Look where it is going now. We have got so-called gays who are really very sad people and we have non-believers and heathens, you know, running the country and running down Christianity."
The SNP appeared to downplay the councillor's remarks by describing his religious beliefs as "personal".
However, e-mails obtained by the Sunday Herald show that the row has reached the top of the SNP.
Jeff Duncan, who rose to prominence for his role in the Save the Regiments campaign, last week e-mailed a complaint to the party's MPs and MSPs, including First Minister Alex Salmond.
He wrote: "Why is it when an SNP councillor makes a very offensive statement on Asians/Blacks he is dealt with by the party leadership promptly and decisively - and why is it when it is an equally offensive attack on gays and lesbians the party defends him/her citing religious freedom? I am dismayed that so far the SNP leadership allowed this to go unchallenged."
Fitzpatrick, the SNP MSP for Dundee West and the party's group secretary at Holyrood, then e-mailed his Holyrood colleagues to say that he had reported the councillor to the party.
Other SNP MSPs also responded to Duncan's e-mail. Kenneth Gibson, the Nationalist member for Cunninghame North, commented: "The individual in question is not an MSP, therefore to suggest this tars' us all with these alleged comments is nonsensical."
Shirley-Anne Somerville, a Lothians MSP who is also an aide to Finance Secretary John Swinney, said in an e-mail: "Can we leave this to you, Joe, given it's a Dundee guy?"
Liz Lloyd, the SNP head of communications, stated: "A response will go to Duncan addressing his concerns."
The row is likely to lead to questions about the SNP's position on gay rights.
The Nationalists' last Holyrood election campaign was bankrolled by Brian Souter, the tycoon who funded a referendum to retain a law that discriminated against homosexuals, while Salmond has argued for exemptions to the law on same-sex adoption.
Green MSP Patrick Harvie said: "Gunn is clearly a disgrace to his party, and if the SNP is serious about building an inclusive, 21st-century Scotland, they will have no hesitation in expelling him.
Claudia Beamish, chairwoman of the Scottish Labour Party, said: "The SNP's failure to immediately condemn Gunn's wild remarks is a disgrace."
Duncan added: "Angus Robertson assured me that the issue was being investigated."
Gunn said: "I understand the offence my statements have caused and apologise for that."
Kenneth Gunn's on-air salvo – what was said
THIS is the transcript of Councillor Kenneth Gunn's phone-in conversation with Graham Stewart on BBC Radio Scotland's Morning Extra news show last Thursday.
Callers were commenting on a controversial exhibit at Glasgow's Gallery of Modern Art, which involved visitors being encouraged to scribble comments in the margins of a Bible. Christian groups had complained of obscene messages.
Graham Stewart: Let's go to Kenneth who's in Selkirk.
Kenneth Gunn: Good morning. No, I don't agree with much that has been said on the programme this morning ... you know, this is supposed to be a Christian country ... and, you know, to deface the Holy Bible is sacrilege, just the same as it is to deface the Holy Koran. I've travelled around quite a bit. I have been in Muslim countries ... these are very, very nice people. They take you round their mosques and explain all there is about Islam and they respect the Almighty; they respect the teachings of their church. In this country we seem to have lost that respect totally.
Graham Stewart: But why should this one book be so protected where many others aren't? Ok, I can accept you are religious and many other people are religious, but what about non-believers, why should they treat the book with such reverance?
Kenneth Gunn: Well, non-believers are damned to hell anyway, so why should we bother? We fought holy wars over the last 4,000 years to protect the Bible and, can I say, to protect the Holy Koran as well. If someone doesn't believe in an Almighty being and thinks that man produced everything on this earth, well they are very arrogant people and, as I say, if they are non-believers, they are damned to hell anyway.
Graham Stewart: But this is just a difference of opinion. OK, you believe that, but others will say you are wrong. You have to live alongside other people and have mutual respect.
Kenneth Gunn: No, I dont think so. Just look where this country has gone over the last 40 or 50 years. When we all went to church on a Sunday morning and we all prayed to the Lord Jesus Christ every Sunday morning, this was a much better country. Look where it is going now. We have got so-called gays who are really very sad people and we have non-believers and heathens, you know, running the country and running down Christianity. It seems that, you know, it's offensive to run down Islam, but it's not an offence to run down Christianity. This is supposed to be a Christian country.
Now many Americans (and Canadians?) may be wondering what the fuss is all about, but in the UK this kind of thing doesn't seem as common from our elected representatives, as it is across the Atlantic. I think we, over here, take it for granted that these kind of comments usually come with a southern state accent. The fact that the SNP is a left-leaning party also contributed to my surprise at this - though I feel I'm being naive.
I originally wondered why the Herald had gone with the anti-gay angle (not as if that wouldn't be justified enough) rather than the comments against non-believers, but the main focus of the radio discussion was an art exhibit which highlighted anti-gay bigotry. I also love the classic phenomenon of elderly members of the ethnic majority presuming the right to define when the good ol' days were.
Predictably enough, those who seem most offended that people could scrawl on their holy book, are themselves quite happy to lable others as hell-bound and sad. Precious sensitivity seems to be intimately connected to one's own venom.
I wonder how well he represents those non-believing constituents whom he thinks are going to hell? Has anyone here had correspondance with an elected official who exhibits disregard for those outwith their own beliefs?