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Michael Russell (Scottish politician)

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Michael Russell
Minister for Environment
Assumed office
17 May 2007
First MinisterAlex Salmond
Preceded bySarah Boyack
Member of the Scottish Parliament
for South of Scotland
Assumed office
3 May 2007
In office
6 May 2003 – 1 May 2003
Personal details
Born (1953-08-09) 9 August 1953 (age 70)
Bromley, Kent
Political partyScottish National Party

Michael Russell (Mike Russell) (born 9 August 1953 in Bromley, Kent) is a Member of the Scottish Parliament for the South of Scotland region, a television producer and director and the author of seven books. Educated at the Marr College, Troon and Edinburgh University he worked in television and the media prior to establishing his own media company, Eala Bhan Ltd. He was Chief Executive of the SNP from 1994 to 1999 and was elected to the Scottish Parliament as a regional MSP for the South of Scotland at the first Scottish Parliament Elections in 1999. However he lost his seat in the 2003 Scottish Parliament Election. Russell was re-elected in May 2007 and was appointed Minister for Environment in Scotland's first-ever SNP administration by First Minister Alex Salmond.[1]

Political evolution

Mike Russell was Chief Executive of the SNP in the period prior to the first Scottish election and has been an active member of the SNP for over three decades, often working closely with party leader, Alex Salmond.

Originally a member of the Labour club at Edinburgh University Russell joined the SNP in 1974 during the February election of that year, was active in Edinburgh , in the Western Isles and in the Inverness Constituency and stood for the first time for as an SNP candidate in 1984 in Clydesdale in a local government election. He was then the Clydesdale candidate for the Westminster Parliament in June 1987. Later that year he became the elected Vice Convenor of the SNP responsible for Publicity (succeeding Alex Salmond) and in 1990 was Salmond's campaign manager during the SNP leadership campaign.

During that time he worked as Executive Director of Network Scotland, a media and educational company , but he gave up his party posts in 1991 to concentrate on establishing his own TV production company , Eala Bhan Ltd. He returned to active politics in December 1994 when he became the SNP's first full time Chief Executive. In that role he was the party's election director for the 1997 and 1999 campaigns as well as for the successful Perth and Kinross by-election in 1995 (having been deputy campaign director in the 1992 General Election and for the Govan and Glasgow Central by elections of 1987 and 1988).

He was placed second by the party on the South of Scotland list for the 1999 Scottish Parliament elections (as well as standing for the Cunninghame South Constituency which he also fought in 2003) and after his election was appointed SNP Business Manger in the new Parliament which resulted in him becoming a founding member of the Parliamentary Bureau. After John Swinney was elected leader of the SNP in 2000 Russell became Shadow Minister for Education and Culture, a post he held until 2003. He was named as "Debater of the Year" in the "Herald" Awards in 2000 and was nominated for "Scottish Politician of the Year" in the same awards in 2002 as well as for the Channel 4 Scottish Politician of the Year Title .

When he lost his seat at the end of the first Scottish Parliament, Russell focused on his work as an author and newspaper columnist, commenting on various aspects of Scottish culture and Scottish politics. . He did, however, stand for the leadership of the SNP in 2004, in the election prompted by John Swinney's resignation. He finished third behind Alex Salmond and Roseanna Cunningham. Russell continued as a political commentator generating some controversy with his strongly pro-modernisation views which were more fully expressed in a book co-written with entrepreneur Dennis MacLeod called Grasping The Thistle (2006) .

Many SNP members saw Russell's absence from the Scottish Parliament as a great loss to the SNP's profile and performance there. In 2006 he was once again placed second on the SNP regional list in the South of Scotland - though this time the list was chosen by a one member one vote system which Russell had argued for over a long period - and was re-elected to Parliament in 2007. He was also the Party's candidate in the Dumfries Constituency.

Following the SNP's narrow victory at the 2007 Scottish Parliament Election, Russell was appointed the Minister for Environment.

Campaigner

For many years, Russell has campaigned for justice on behalf of former police detective, Shirley McKie, who was awarded £750,000 compensation by the Scottish Executive in a February 2006 out-of-court settlement. The Justice 1 committee of the Scottish parliament conducted a nine-month inquiry into the McKie case in 2006, and its report was published on February 15, 2007.[2]

In April 2007, Michael Russell and Shirley's father, Iain McKie, published a book on what they described as the worst miscarriage of justice in a generation: Shirley McKie - The Price of Innocence (ISBN 9781841585758).

The McKie case has now assumed an international significance with a possible linkage to the case of convicted Lockerbie bomber, Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi, who was granted leave to appeal against his conviction for a second time by the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission on June 28, 2007.[3]

References

See also