John Swinney, Anas Sarwar, Alex Cole-Hamilton and the co-leaders of the Greens urged Reform’s leader in Scotland to consider his position amid revulsion at the sick gag.
Holyrood’s political leaders have called for Reform’s Scottish chief to quit over a vile homophobic joke about the late George Michael.
John Swinney, Anas Sarwar, Alex Cole Hamilton and the co-leaders of the Greens urged Malcolm Offord to consider his position amid revulsion at the sick gag.
Offord admitted he told the horrendous joke after he’d had a “bit to drink”.
The First Minister said: “He is unfit to be leader of any political party. Unfit to be a member of the Scottish Parliament.”
The Record revealed on Tuesday that Offord, who is the hand picked leader of Reform UK in Scotland, made the tasteless joke during a Burns Night speech in London in 2018.
We have chosen not to print the comments on the grounds of taste.
READ MORE: Reform UK Scotland leader apologises over homophobic joke about George Michael
Ian Lewer, who is from Surrey, told us in a statement Offord unleashed a boozy story about Michael and his surviving partner Fadi Fawaz.
He said: “The worst part was a shocking story at the expense of Fadi Fawaz, George Michael’s partner at the time of his death.”
“I was sitting next to a gay man and it was clearly an extremely uncomfortable and unpleasant experience for him.
“At the time I thought it pretty awful and indeed that was the feeling in the room. Even for a rugby club it was a crude, bad taste and insulting spectacle.
“I’m not a prude, I’m up for banter. But there is banter and taking things to that level. I don’t know who in their right mind would say something like that.”
The homophobic joke has united Scotland’s political leaders against Offord.
Swinney said: “Malcolm Offord has been found out, sharing completely and utterly intolerant and unacceptable material with audiences. If that’s what he thinks and feels, he has no role to perform in Scottish politics. That is completely and utterly unacceptable.
“We have to be really careful as a country about where we are heading.”
He added: “The thing that would worry me… is that if he was to tell that joke at a Reform conference, I suspect lots of people would laugh and applaud.”
Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, also said Offord should consider his position over the “disgusting” comments.
Cole-Hamilton, who leads the Scottish Lib Dems, said: “I think he should resign immediately. He’s unfit for public office. This wasn’t some schoolboy comment, it was a joke made in a public setting from someone decades into their professional career.
“If this isn’t an insight into how he truly views the world, I don’t know what would be.”
Scottish Green co-leader Ross Greer said: “However bad everyone thought this so-called joke was, it was so much worse. To have even thought that was funny in the first place, to have spent time constructing a joke like that, shows someone whose character is fundamentally rotten.
“He has no place in public life in Scotland. He should step down now with an unequivocal apology and that should be the last thing we ever hear from him on the public record.”
Fellow Green co-leader Gillian MacKay said: “He should absolutely be standing down and we should never see him here at Holyrood.”
Offord said he apologised at the time and made a donation to charity. In a statement on X, he also admitted he had been under the influence of alcohol:
“The media have been having another pop at me, so here are the full facts for the public to judge for themselves:
“Eight years ago, in 2018, long before I was appointed a government minister in the Lords, I gave the Burns Night after-dinner speech at a rugby club before a large crowd of members and their friends, wives, husbands, and partners. I must admit, I’d had a bit to drink by then, and finished with a crude joke about the late George Michael, as I had been connecting his songs to Burns’s works.
“It was intended to be funny through being edgy and shocking, but I’m no Frankie Boyle or Ricky Gervais. Instead of being funny, I made members of the audience uncomfortable and instantly regretted it.
“I immediately apologised to the club, and made amends by voluntarily donating to the King’s Cross Steelers, the original gay-inclusive rugby union club, to support their travel and participation in the Bingham Cup in Amsterdam. I then also arranged a fixture between my club and theirs.
“So that’s the whole story of what happened eight years ago. Most of the media won’t publish the joke, but I see that the general gist has now been reported, and I don’t want to sully your screens with something so crude.”
Meanwhile, Reform UK’s only MSP has said Offord is still fit to lead the Scottish party despite the joke row.
Graham Simpson, Reform UK MSP for Central Scotland, told media at the Scottish Parliament on Wednesday: “I don’t know what the joke was, I’ve not seen it. I don’t want to see it. ”







PATH_Paddington_(c)Alex-Brenner__12_5293-ARW-dxd-Edit-2_s.jpg?trim=0,172,0,718&quality=75&auto=webp&width=960)



.jpg?crop=8:5,smart&quality=75&auto=webp&width=960)



You must be logged in to post a comment Login