Return to Westminster On 7 December 2014, Salmond announced that he would stand as the SNP candidate for the
Westminster constituency of
Gordon in the
2015 May election. Nicola Sturgeon, his successor as SNP leader and First Minister, repeatedly reminded voters at the March 2015 SNP conference that she, not he, was party leader after he gave interviews about his possible role in a hung parliament. After he declared his candidacy, he was described as a "
bogeyman" (both by
Lesley Riddoch and by himself), and was reportedly "demonised" by "Conservative propaganda" portraying
Labour Party leader
Ed Miliband "compliantly dancing to Salmond the piper's tune" after the election. During the election campaign, Salmond recorded in his diary: "The Tory candidate,
Colin Clark, cuts an impressive figure but his politics are far too dry for this area. If the constituency were composed entirely of michty fairmers then he might be the ideal candidate. But it isn't and he is not." Salmond gained the seat of Gordon with 47.7% of the vote, replacing the Liberal Democrat
Malcolm Bruce as the constituency's Westminster MP . On 13 May 2015, Salmond was appointed as the SNP's foreign affairs spokesman in the House of Commons. He tweeted that the party would advocate a "pro Europe", "pro developing world" and "against military adventurism" stance. Following his return to the Commons he attracted media attention after telling Business Minister
Anna Soubry during a debate, "Behave yourself, woman." Soubry said Salmond's attitude belonged "firmly in the 19th century". However, his then party leader, Nicola Sturgeon, defended the remarks and said, "It was in a boisterous House of Commons debate. The fundamental question, 'does that language indicate that Alex Salmond is sexist?' Absolutely not, there's no man I know who is less sexist." In the 2017 British general election, Salmond's seat was widely watched as a potential Tory gain amid a nationwide backlash to Sturgeon's decision to call for a second independence referendum. The Scottish Conservatives had taken the most votes in the area at the
2017 local council elections, prompting party leader
Ruth Davidson to say on a visit to Inverurie that, "We won the local government election in Gordon this week, beating the SNP into second place. It means that in this seat, as in many others, it is a two-horse race between us and the nationalists." In response to Davidson's comments, Salmond riposted, "It's just arrogance, for Ruth Davidson to continue the line of 'we're going to take this seat, and we're going to take that seat'. Once it doesn't happen, it's very bad news for Ruth Davidson's credibility." On election night, Salmond lost his seat as member for
Gordon to
Colin Clark of the
Conservatives, receiving 19,254 votes to the Conservatives' 21,861. This represented a swing of 20.4% away from Salmond, larger than the 14.4% swing to him from the Liberal Democrats which saw him win the seat in the 2015 election. It also marked first time since the 1987 general election that Salmond was not in an elected position in either the British or Scottish parliament. His long-time protege
Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh, who was elected alongside him in 2015 and lost her seat when he did, also starred in the show, which was produced by Slainte Media, a production company co-owned by Ahmed-Sheikh and Salmond. The first show was broadcast on 16 November 2017; the main interviewee was
Carles Puigdemont, the former president of Catalonia. In February 2022, Salmond announced that his show on
RT had been suspended, following the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. On 11 July 2023, more than a year after
The Alex Salmond Show ended, Salmond started a new show on all social media platforms,
Scotland Speaks with Alex Salmond, seen as a natural successor to
The Alex Salmond Show that was also hosted by Salmond and Ahmed-Sheikh and produced by Slainte Media. It first aired on 13 July 2023 and featured a similar format to the show albeit having a smaller budget and studio. In February 2024, the show returned on the Turkish public broadcaster
TRT. The first episode included an interview with actor
Brian Cox.
Sexual misconduct allegations Trial and acquittal In August 2018, he resigned from the SNP in the face of allegations of sexual misconduct in 2013 while he was First Minister. In a statement he said that he wanted to avoid internal division within the party and intended to apply to rejoin the SNP once he had an opportunity to clear his name. On 30 August 2018, he launched a
crowdfunding appeal to pay for the legal costs of seeking a
judicial review into the fairness of the process by which the Scottish Government has handled the allegations. He closed the appeal two days later, on 1 September, after raising £100,000, double the amount he wanted, to pay for his legal costs. The government later conceded that its procedures had been flawed and paid more than £500,000 in Salmond's legal expenses. On 24 January 2019,
Police Scotland arrested Salmond, and he was charged with 14 offences, including two counts of attempted rape, nine of sexual assault, two of indecent assault, and one of breach of the peace. He appeared in court on 21 November and entered a plea of "not guilty". The trial started on 9 March 2020; his defence was led by
Gordon Jackson, and the prosecution was led by
Alex Prentice. On 23 March 2020, Salmond was cleared of all charges. A jury found him not guilty of 12 charges, one charge had been dropped by prosecutors earlier in the trial, and one charge was found
not proven. In May 2021
The Times reported that Salmond was writing a book about his trial.
Scottish Government complaints The Scottish Parliament set up the Committee on the Scottish Government Handling of Harassment Complaints to investigate how the Government breached its own guidelines in its original investigation into the harassment claims against Salmond, and then lost a judicial review into their actions and had to pay over £500,000 to Salmond for legal expenses. Giving evidence in person in February 2021, Salmond claimed that senior figures in the Scottish Government and the SNP plotted to remove him from public life and to send him to prison. Sturgeon initially told parliament that she had first heard of the complaints against Salmond when he told her of them on 2 April 2018. They also confirmed that the government had pursued the legal case against Salmond after being advised by lawyers that it was likely to fail. Irish lawyer James Hamilton conducted a separate investigation into whether Sturgeon breached the ministerial code and concluded that she did not, with the caveat that: "It is for the Scottish parliament to decide whether they were in fact misled".
Alba Party On 26 March 2021, Salmond announced he had joined and become leader of the
Alba Party, a new pro-independence party, to contest the upcoming
2021 Scottish Parliament election. He was Alba's lead candidate on the
North East Scotland list. While campaigning, he told
The New Yorker that he did not want to destroy Nicola Sturgeon. "If I wanted to destroy her, that could have been done," he claimed. Alba polled 44,913 votes (1.7%) in total, and won zero seats. In Salmond's own region, they received 8,269 votes (2.3%). Despite a poor showing, Salmond pledged the party would continue campaigning. He also claimed that the party had established itself as a political force in only six weeks and would remain on the political scene. Alba fielded 111 candidates at the
2022 Scottish local elections, including thirteen who had defected since
2017, but none of them won a seat. The following week, Salmond stated that all pro-independence parties needed to work together if Scottish independence was to be achieved. He said that the proposed 2023 independence referendum would need to take place, but if it did not, then there would be huge political change in Scotland, in which Alba would play a strong part. For the
2024 general election, Alba put up 20 candidates across Scotland, including their sitting MPs:
Neale Hanvey and
Kenny MacAskill, both formerly of the SNP. Salmond himself was not a candidate, saying that it was his intention to contest the
Banffshire and Buchan Coast seat at the
Next Scottish Parliament election. Alba failed to win any seats, and all candidates lost their deposits. Salmond said that he voted for the SNP in
Aberdeenshire North and Moray East, due to Alba not standing a candidate there.
Relations with SNP post–Sturgeon Following the resignation of Nicola Sturgeon, his successor as SNP Leader and First Minister, Salmond was accused by leadership candidate
Humza Yousaf of making "numerous comments and interventions in the
2023 Scottish National Party leadership election". Salmond endorsed the two losing candidates,
Kate Forbes and
Ash Regan, Regan was seen as being close to Salmond's Alba Party: her campaign was run by a Salmond staffer who ran against the SNP as an Alba candidate the year prior, and the only SNP parliamentarian to endorse her is
close to Salmond. During the campaign, Regan insisted she had no interest in joining Alba, and would never join that party; despite this, less than six months after coming last in the contest, she defected to Alba, becoming the first MSP ever to directly defect from one party to another. Salmond was critical of
Humza Yousaf, the eventual victor, widely considered the candidate most supportive of Sturgeon's progressive policies, who had served as a minister under Salmond. While Forbes was outspoken that she would have voted against gay marriage, Yousaf, a practicing Muslim, said that he does not "legislate on the basis of [his] faith". Following Yousaf's selection as First Minister, Salmond continued his criticisms, calling on Yousaf, to "sweep that nonsense [Sturgeon's policy agenda] away" and change direction, and for Yousaf to end the power-sharing agreement with the Greens which kept the SNP in office.{{cite news|title=Alex Salmond tells Humza Yousaf to sweep Sturgeon 'nonsense' away|url=https://www.holyrood.com/news/view,alex-salmond-tells-humza-yousaf-to-sweep-sturgeon-nonsense-away ==Personal life and death==