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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Annie Brown

Sickening discrimination is dressed up as lads' banter - and it's shameful

This week has been a shameful one for the gilded cocoons of sexist and offensive privilege in Scotland.

We should not be surprised that “sickening” sexist, racist and homophobic jokes were made by an after-dinner speaker at the Scottish Football Writers’ Association (SFWA) awards in Glasgow.

But we should take heart, that in that audience were women who refused to tolerate it, who stood up, walked out and spoke up.

It wasn’t just the sexist warblings of Bill Copeland, a former QC turned after-dinner speaker, which offended the women but the alleged homophobic and racist references too.

The women were unwilling to sit there and swallow discrimination dressed up as “banter”.

Sports journalist and TV presenter Eilidh Barbour tweeted : “Never felt so unwelcome in the industry I work in than sitting at the Scottish Football Writers’ Awards.

“A huge reminder there is still so much to do in making our game an equal place.”

That a woman who has excelled in her field should feel so uncomfortable and excluded among her peers is an appalling indictment of football and the insidious bloke culture it’s immersed in.

Journalist Gabriella Bennett was among two tables of guests who left the ceremony and publicly condemned the offensive spectacle.

We have hopefully progressed from a day when those women would have been roundly pilloried as humourless. Instead, they won a small victory for all women, for female journalists.

The SFWA had their arm twisted but they have promised to do better and Copeland has been thrown back to whichever archaic world moulded him.

No such humility or recognition from the Faculty of Advocates in their handling of the degrading and sexist comments made by one of their own about one of Scotland’s most respected women’s rights campaigners.

Brian McConnachie QC (PA Wire)

This week we reported on leading QC Brian McConnachie who sent texts about the head of Scotland’s largest rape charity, saying he would “s**g” her “just to have something over her”.

McConnachie’s degrading and sinister sexual remarks about Sandy Brindley were presented as evidence in a complaint to the Faculty of Advocates which demands a QC acts with honour and integrity in their personal and professional lives.

What McConnachie, a former High Court prosecutor, meant by having “something over” a campaigner for survivors of sexual assault, only he can know.

But one can assume “honour and integrity” were not foremost in his thinking there.

The precursor to that text was one in which he quoted another male QC as having also indicated he would like to have sex with Ms Brindley.

When that complaint landed with the disciplinary committee of one our most important legal bodies, we’d assume a strongly worded reproach would have been in order.

Instead they took umbrage in the context of these messages, only with the fact McConnachie had been “disloyal” to another QC by repeating their tawdry lad chat.

There was deemed no “unsatisfactory professional conduct” in the disgusting comments he made about Ms Brindley.

The other QC may or may not have said what he did but if he had, the faculty appeared unperturbed by the prospect of two QCs sharing odious exchanges about a woman who has a professional relationship with the legal profession, including the faculty.

How depressing for any female law trainee, any woman who is a solicitor or QC or a victim in a witness box, that the legal industry tolerates the same old ­insidious “boys will be boys” attitude.

Even if McConnachie’s texts did not technically make the bar of disciplinary action, the faculty should have condemned them as sexist and intolerable, in a post #MeToo world.

If female journalists can make a stand against sexism in their industry, surely a powerful body like the Faculty of Advocates can call it out in their profession.

Crown and the clown

Prince Charles delivered the Queen’s speech yesterday with her Imperial State Crown present in her absence.

There was barely a mention in the speech outlining the Government agenda on how it will tackle the cost-of-living crisis.

Prince Charles delivered the Queen's speech (Sky News)

This picture sums it up – the priceless beside the useless delivering a speech on behalf of the compassionless.

Frontline staff have no choice but to strike

As fuel and food poverty bites, some of the hardest hit will be the frontline workers who keep our society functioning.

School staff, home care workers and waste collectors, left, are threatening strikes from the “Shetland Islands to the Borders”.

We can’t blame these people, paid so little for such crucial work, when they have been offered a two per cent pay rise in the face of spiralling inflation.

Frontline staff 'have no choice but to strike' (Getty Images)

They don’t want to strike, no one does, but they have little choice if they want to have any standard of living.

For too long the mickey has been taken out of frontline workers, clapping them on the doorsteps through Covid and slapping them in the face when they ask for a decent wage.

Those earning over £40,000 a year would get an increase of more than £800 a year, while some will get as much as £2000 more.

Meanwhile, those who earn below £25,000 would get a pay increase of just about £500 and there are far more of them in these vital services.

If striking is the only way workers can drum home that we need them more than we need billionaires, then so be it.

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