The Scottish political blog. Giving you the news, views and commentary from inside the corridors of power at Holyrood and Westminster.
Meet the authors
Tom Gordon
is Scottish Political Editor of the Sunday Herald, based in Edinburgh and the Scottish Parliament. Born and raised in Glasgow, he entered journalism in 1998 and has worked principally for the Herald group since 2001.
Michael Settle
is the UK Political Editor, trying to see through the spin, counter-spin, rumour and counter-rumour that Westminster and Whitehall generate each day. After serving on the journalistic frontline in Lancashire, Yorkshire and Wales, he has worked 10 years with The Herald and been in the Lobby for 14, making him a hard-bitten veteran - almost.
Torcuil Crichton
is the Chief UK Political Correspondent with the Herald, based at Westminster. He first joined the newspaper in 1992 (when there were two mobile phones to be shared among staff and there were copytakers and a wire room in Albion Street). After a stint as an documentary TV director at the BBC he joined the launch team of the Sunday Herald in 1999.
Brian Currie
has been a journalist for 40 years. He started in newspapers and then spent almost 25 years with the BBC, firstly in London and then in Glasgow, before returning to the print media with the Evening Times as Associate Editor 10 years ago. He is now Group Political Editor for The Herald, Sunday Herald and Evening Times.
Robbie Dinwoodie
has worked on national daily newspapers in Scotland for more than 35 years. He joined The Herald in 1987 and became Scottish Political Correspondent in 1994, as Tony Blair developed an aversion to the Caledonian press corps and a London newspaper invented a character called Robbie McAngrybeard.
James Cusick
is the Westminster Editor of the Sunday Herald. He is one of the most experienced members of the Lobby and before joining the Sunday Herald in 2001, worked in London for the Independent and the Sunday Times, and as senior producer at BBC Newsnight. James is also an experienced broadcaster, offering regular analysis on Westminster for CNN and the BBC.
Stewart Paterson
is Political Correspondent with the Evening Times, dividing his time between the Scottish Parliament and the Glasgow newsroom. Stewart first joined Scotland’s best-selling evening paper in June 2000 as news reporter, and after six years moved to The Herald. In 2009 he returned to cover politics for the Evening Times.