Jim Murphy

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Jim Murphy has been the Labour member of parliament for Renfrewshire East (formerly Eastwood) since 1997 and is the current leader of Scottish Labour.

Early Life

Murphy grew up in a council estate in Glasgow, before moving to South Africa for six years with his parents in search of a 'better life'. During this time Murphy became appalled at the inequality of the apartheid system in South Africa and left when he was 18 to avoid conscription into the country's army.[1]

Murphy then attended Strathclyde University, however did not complete his degree.[1] In 1992, whilst still at university, he was elected president of the National Union of Students Scotland and in 1994 as president of the UK National Union of Students, serving until 1996. In 1995, under Murphy's leadership, the NUS dropped its opposition to the abolition of the student grant in line with the Labour Party's policies, which led to Murphy being condemned by a House of Commons Early Day Motion signed by 17 Labour MPs for 'intolerant and dictatorial behaviour'.[2]

Politics

Murphy was elected as the member of parliament for Eastwood in 1997 (renamed Renfrewshire East in 2005), beating the Conservative's Paul Cullen by 6.2 percent. Since the '97 election Murphy has comfortably held the seat, winning by over 15 percent in each election and even obtaining over half of the vote in 2010.[3]

Whilst in Parliament, Murphy has held the roles of Murphy served as Parliamentary Private Secretary to Helen Liddell as Secretary of State for Scotland (2001-2002), Assistant Whip to HM Treasury (2002-2003), Lord Commissioner to HM Treasury (2003-2005), Parliamentary Under-Secretary to the Cabinet Office (2005-2006), Minister of State to the Department for Work and Pensions (2006-2007) and to Europe (2007-2008), Secretary of State for Scotland (2008-2010) and Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland (2010), Defence (2010-2013) and International Development (2013-2014).[4]

On the 13th of December 2014 it was announced Murphy had been appointed leader of Scottish Labour, replacing Johann Lamont who left the role in October.[5]

Scottish independence

Murphy was at the forefront of the 'Vote No' campaign, wanting the union to stay together. He set off on a tour to visit 100 streets in 100 days to speak to locals about the referendum, however this was interrupted when he had an egg thrown at him by a 'Vote Yes' voter.[6][7]

Murphy's role during the referendum has been criticised by many who claim he used it to apply pressure on the Johann Lamont, the then Scottish Labour leader, and to show off his own his skills for the job.

Wikileaks

In 2011, Wikileaks via the Telegraph, reported that throughout 2009 Murphy played a leadership role in organising the opposition parties as he hoped to move towards Scotland implementing the Calman recommendations as an alternative to an independence referendum. [8]

Expenses

In 2012 Murphy was revealed as one of 27 MPs who were using a loophole to claim public money to rent in London but also renting out the house at the same time.[9]

Affiliations

Donors

  • Catholic Agency For Overseas Development. Donated an estimated £1,437 for a visit to the Philippines in December 2013 to 'visit Cebu and Tacloban to assess and observe the relief effort following Typhoon Haiyan'.[11]
  • World Vision UK. Donated an estimated £1677.38 for Murphy and a staff member to visit Lebanon and Jordan in March 2014 to 'assess the humanitarian situation resulting from the Syrian crisis, understand the plight of Syrian refugees and the communities hosting them and to see the work of the charity'.[11]
  • Trade Union Congress. Donated an estimated £2,675.99 for Murphy and a staff member to visit Qatar in April 2014 to 'observe the conditions of migrant workers in Qatar'.[11]

Contact, References and Resources

Contact

Address: House of Commons,
London,
SW1A 0AA
Telephone: 020 7219 4615
Email: jimmurphymp@parliament.uk

External resources

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Mandy Rhodes Interview: Jim Murphy Holyrood, 1 February 2010, accessed 7 January 2015
  2. James Murphy Politics.co.uk', accessed 7 January 2015
  3. Renfrewshire East Guardian, accessed 7 January 2015
  4. Jim Murphy Parliament.UK, accessed 7 January 2015
  5. MP Jim Murphy named Scottish Labour leader BBC News, 13 December 2014, accessed 7 January 2015
  6. Jim Murphy Independence: Jim Murphy on ‘100 Towns, 100 Days’ Scotsman, 4 July 2014, accessed 7 January 2015
  7. Tamara Cohen and Khaleda Rahman 'Call off your yobs': Egg attack MP suspends campaign against Scottish independence over intimidation by nationalist 'mobs' Daily Mail, 29 August 2014, accessed 7 January 2015
  8. Scotland: Independence referendum not moving forward in January Telegraph, 4 February 2011, accessed 7 January 2015
  9. Jim Murphy named among 27 MPs in new expenses row Herald Scotland, 19 October 2012, accessed 7 January 2015
  10. 10.0 10.1 Alex Doherty and David Miller Even by New Labour standards, Murphy has a grim record Spinwatch, 15 December 2014, accessed 7 January 2014
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Jim Murphy The Work For You, accessed 7 January 2015