There is a notably acerbic scene in 鈥淎 Man for all Seasons鈥 by Robert Bolt.
Sir Thomas More confronts his accuser, Richard Rich, whom he suspects, rightly, of giving evidence against him in return for material advantage. The bold Rich wanted to be richer still as Welsh Attorney General.
More says sadly: 鈥淲hy, Richard, it profits a man nothing to lose his soul for the whole world . . . but for Wales?鈥
The question for Wendy Alexander may be 鈥渇or Jersey?鈥 Or, more comparably, 鈥渇or Leader of Labour in the Scottish Parliament?鈥
The disclosure that re the donations to her campaign takes us back to the founding puzzle at the core of this long - exceptionally long - saga.
What on earth did Wendy Alexander think she was doing seeking corporate donations for a relatively minor campaign where she was uncontested?
This wasn鈥檛 an episode of the West Wing. She wasn鈥檛 seeking to occupy the Oval Office. She wasn鈥檛 even seeking to be first minister.
She was seeking to be the leader of the largest opposition party in the Scottish Parliament. Nobody stood against her.
So why did she need to raise thousands of pounds? Why did she need to trouble the Phoenix Car Company (who had previously helped her with the publication of a constituency calendar)?
Why did she need to tap business folk like Nicholas Kuenssberg or David J Pitt Watson? Why take 拢995 from former MP John Lyons or the former Solicitor General Neil Davidson?
Above all, why take
Her explanation? That, under Labour rules, the 鈥渃ontest鈥 went ahead even with a single candidate, that she had to fund visits around Scotland and a website.
Carried away
But couldn鈥檛 they have done it on the cheap, especially when there was no real contest? Couldn鈥檛 she have stayed with friends or Labour supporters on her campaign tour round Scotland?
Couldn鈥檛 the local parties have laid on tea and buns? Couldn鈥檛 she have skipped the website?
My guess? Team Alexander - Wendy plus her close advisers - got carried away.
They saw themselves as the vanguard that would transform their party. They saw themselves stirring the stubborn, thrawn beast that is Scottish Labour.
They were to be the bright new dawn.
Remember the early bold talk about changing the very nature of the Labour Party, sorting out HQ, altering the ground rules. (That project, by the way, is now somewhat on hold and won鈥檛, as promised, be presented to the spring party conference.)
How could the vanguard, how could the bright new dawn scrimp and save? Big, serious, transformational politicians had big, serious, corporate budgets. They must have one too.
So why keep the donations deliberately below 拢1,000, the point at which they must be declared to the Electoral Commission? Same reason. It鈥檚 what big, smart people do.
Legal advice
So why did Charlie Gordon revive his contact with Paul Green to attract 拢950 for the cause? My guess? Charlie wanted to show his new boss he was a player.
The Standards Commissioner, Jim Dyer, originally thought she didn鈥檛 have to declare these donations on the parliamentary register because they were received by her campaign and NOT personally in her capacity as an MSP.
She was advised to that effect, in writing, by Parliamentary officials.
Dr Dyer has now changed his mind, on legal advice. Hence, he is obliged, atuomatically, to report same to the standards committee - and to the fiscal.
So what new have we learned? Firstly, that Dr Dyer is investigating, presumably in response to a complaint.
By the rules, he doesn鈥檛 confirm whether or not an investigation is taking place. Strictly speaking, the complainer and the target should also keep quiet - but no matter.
Secondly, that Wendy Alexander broke the rules in not disclosing the fact of these donations to parliament.
Her defence on that point is pretty sound: she was advised that declaration was not required. One might say she should have declared anyway, to avoid any doubt.
Alexander's future
But she has a defence, in writing.
Which brings us back, once more, to the original issue which the Electoral Commission is studying . . . and studying . . . and studying . . . and, for the avoidance of doubt, studying once more.
Was the law broken when Team Alexander accepted the donation from Jersey? Yes.
Such a donation is impermissible. As the sands shift around her, Wendy Alexander is adamant on at least one point. She did not knowingly break the law.
Notwithstanding, will the commission, when they rule, choose to report that issue to the fiscal, quite separately from Dr Dyer鈥檚 automatic referral on another point?
That is the question which will help determine Wendy Alexander鈥檚 political future. And it is, in essence, the same question as at the outset of this long, long affair.