Margaret Ferrier has claimed she was “hung out to dry” by the SNP after posting a scripted statement in which she admitted breaching coronavirus rules.
The Rutherglen and Hamilton West MP had the party whip withdrawn after travelling while awaiting the results of a Covid-19 test.
In an interview with The Scottish Sun, she said the whip was withdrawn around an hour after the statement was released – a decision she feels was based on the public outcry over her actions.
The former SNP MP has previously said the infection caused her to act “out of character” and she “panicked” before taking the train trip back to Scotland.
She has said she has no intention of standing down as an MP.
Ferrier told the newspaper that party officials had prepared the admission statement for her and she initially did not understand their “urgency” during a virtual meeting to discuss the situation.
She said: “I just felt it was very pushy. You’ve just been told you have Covid. You’re stressed, with a lot of things going through your mind.
“You’re wanting somebody to help you. I said at that point: ‘Hang on a minute – as soon as this goes out am I going to be bombarded with abuse?’
“They were not considering the fact that I had only been diagnosed with Covid and I don’t know how that’s going to affect my mental state.
“It just went crazy. I still haven’t looked at Twitter but I have heard about it.”
The MP said another conference call took place at 6.52pm the same day, during which she was told the party whip was being suspended.
Describing the call, she said: “They were sorry. They were going to have to take the whip off me but I would get back in because I was co-operating and had been honest.
“Losing the whip was more of a slap in the face because of all the hard work that I have done for the party since I joined it.
“I could appreciate the party’s decision at the time. They told me they would be able to contain this situation.
“Why suddenly have we got to the point where they have to take the whip from me?”
She added: “It was because the statement went out and it escalated.
“They pushed me to make a self-referral to the standards commissioner straight away.
“I was intending to refer myself anyway. You can imagine how sad and angry I was.
“I felt I was being hung out to dry.”