The former socialist leader has been followed by TV cameras for almost a year for a BBC-comissioned show about his controversial career as a left wing politician.
Tommy Sheridan has revealed that a new BBC documentary on his life is being filmed as he tries to return to Holyrood.
The former socialist leader has been followed by TV cameras for almost a year for a BBC-comissioned show about his controversial career as a left wing politician.
And just days after Sheridan announced he was standing for a new pro-indy alliance, he believes the film crew could be there to capture his return to Holyrood.
The 62-year-old – who was jailed for perjury in 2010 after claims he attended swinging parties – said: “The production company approached me in August last year and have been filming since then.
“I’m 62 and they’re going through my whole life, so it’s taking a while.
“They suggested two one-hour documentaries, which looks at the social political history of Scotland through my eyes.
“I was involved in the miners’ strike and the poll tax. I was elected a councillor from prison in 1992 after being jailed for for defying a court order banning me from a warrant sale.
“They’re looking at all the things I’ve been involved in and what it says about Scotland’s political history.”
Tommy is standing in the Glasgow regional list as number one candidate for the Alliance to Liberate Scotland, which formed in February.
His wife Gail also a candidate on the party’s Glasgow list.
The move came after it was announced the late Alex Salmond’s pro-indy Alba Party is to wind up and deregister after being left financially unviable amid a police probe into alleged financial “irregularities”
.
Sheridan had been part of a group bidding to take over leadership and save Alba.
But he says his future is now firmly with Alliance.
A poll conducted by Find Out Now, a member of the British Polling Council, has predicted eight per cent of voters being ‘definitely’ or ‘very likely’ to consider voting for the party.
List MSPs have been elected in the past on six per cent support in Glasgow, but usually at least seven per cent is required.
People who voted SNP at the last Holyrood election were the most likely to say they’d consider backing the Alliance. In the national poll, 1 in 7 (14%) said they’d be ‘definitely’ or ‘very likely’ to consider it.
Sheridan said: “This opinion poll shows clearly we can win enough support to be elected and the people of Glasgow know I can do the job. I proved that during the eight years I represented the city and championed the abolition of warrant sales and the introduction of free and healthy school meals.
“I’m more equipped now than ever to lead the charge for Scotland’s independence from the parasitical chains of the corrupt Westminster Parliament which robs Scotland blind and then accuses us of being incapable of standing on our own two feet.
“The days of Westminster misrule are numbered. I am determined to wage war on poverty, low pay and the chronic underfunding of our NHS and local council services. The only way to do that is with the economic powers of an independent nation.
“People are realising the voting system has to be understood and giving the SNP a list vote in Glasgow is simply giving a vote to the right wing. It’s giving it to Reform and to the Tories.
“What that poll shows is that my victory will be a defeat for the Tories.
“Unionists aren’t going to vote for me. I know that. But in terms of the vast number of SNP and independence supporters, they are willing to use their vote if they think it’s going to be effective.”
Get more Daily Record exclusives by signing up for free to Google’s preferred sources. Click HERE.







You must be logged in to post a comment Login