SNP election candidate apologises for remarks over Royal Family in social media row
An SNP election candidate has been forced to apologise following remarks made about the Royal Family on social media.
Carol Beattie, a former local authority chief executive, is standing to become a councillor for the Falkirk South ward at a by-election on October 17.
She was hailed just days ago by the local SNP group as a "fantastic" candidate who offered voters a high "calibre and skillset".
It then emerged that Beattie had previously shared a social media post criticising an article on the Duchess of Rothesay.
The article on Kate Middleton, who was being treated for cancer, claimed "lesser mortals would have stayed at home" but the Royal going out in public showed ''the show goes on".
Beattie said "intelligent people don't support the monarchy" and those who did "use them as symbols of their bigotry or xenophobic values".
She said last night: "I apologise for any offence caused by the language I used and have removed the tweets."
Beattie had previously talked up her suitability for elected office.
"As a local resident I am excited to see the progress being made in regenerating Falkirk town centre and encouraged by the investment our SNP administration is making on local housing across the Falkirk South ward," she said this week.
"But I also know just how challenging things are for our people. After years of Tory austerity hitting the pockets and opportunities of everyone in our communities, this new Labour government is already showing us the type of government they are going to be.
"People may have voted for change at the recent general election, on the understanding that things will get better, but they didn’t vote to make our pensioners colder or poorer."
Scottish Conservative MSP Stephen Kerr said he was "genuinely surprised" to see Beattie as an SNP candidate. He added: "I was Stirling’s MP and had many occasions to meet with Ms Beattie.
"How does someone go from being an impartial high ranking public servant to a highly partisan political candidate in under six months?"
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