Stormont Scandal: Police Investigation Sparks Political Clash (2026)

A Stormont showdown has sparked controversy, with First Minister Michelle O'Neill accusing a fellow assembly member of a classic political maneuver.

The Art of Deflection

O'Neill clashed with Timothy Gaston, a member of the Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV), during a Stormont committee meeting. The issue? A complaint to the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) about alleged misconduct in public office.

But here's where it gets controversial: O'Neill believes Gaston is trying to divert attention from his own recent suspension from the Stormont chamber. She called it a clear case of "deflection and distraction."

The complaint, made by loyalist activist Jamie Bryson, relates to a 2024 meeting between O'Neill and Paula Bradshaw, an Alliance Party assembly member and chair of the committee. Both O'Neill and Bradshaw claim they had no prior knowledge of the police enquiry until this week.

The committee session followed Gaston's two-day exclusion from the Stormont chamber, a consequence of a complaint by Bradshaw over a tense exchange. Gaston had criticized Bradshaw for engaging with O'Neill in a pre-meeting, which subsequently became the subject of Bryson's police complaint.

During the committee meeting, Gaston stated that there was no independent record of the meeting taken by the committee. O'Neill responded by accusing Gaston of playing judge, adding, "I watched with interest your nonsense around this all week."

O'Neill further emphasized that everything related to the meeting was well-documented in the public record, a fact that Gaston acknowledged. However, he claimed that some in The Executive Office were delaying the release of records requested under the Freedom of Information Act.

And this is the part most people miss: the clerk of the committee revealed that he became aware of the PSNI enquiries as early as June 2025. He sought legal advice, which instructed him to keep the matter strictly confidential and not inform any committee members.

The controversy didn't end there. Tense exchanges also occurred between O'Neill and Phillip Brett, a Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) MLA. Brett questioned the impact of the executive's climate change policies on the long-delayed A5 road upgrade, leading O'Neill to accuse him of being a "climate denier." Brett strongly denied the accusation and challenged O'Neill to provide evidence.

The first minister responded by stating, "I think it's no secret that the DUP are climate deniers." However, Emma Little-Pengelly, the deputy first minister from the DUP, later clarified that she was not a climate denier but believed Northern Ireland should not be going deeper and faster than other places on the planet.

So, who's right and who's wrong in this political drama? Is it a case of deflection, as O'Neill suggests, or are there deeper issues at play? What do you think? Feel free to share your thoughts in the comments below!

Stormont Scandal: Police Investigation Sparks Political Clash (2026)
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