Jimmy Reid
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Jimmy Reid is a Scottish journalist and ex-trade union activist born in Govan, Glasgow.
He came to prominence in the early 1970s when he led the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders Work-in to try and stop Edward Heath's Conservative government from closing down the shipyards on the River Clyde. An engineer by trade, and a union official, Reid, along with his colleague Jimmy Airlie, decided that the best way to show the viability of keeping the yards open was by staging a 'work-in' rather than by going on strike. The campaign was successful in persuading Heath to back down.
Reid was at this stage a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain, and was a councillor in Clydebank. He also received the most recent respectable number of votes for any communist candidate for a House of Commons seat when he polled over 6,000 votes in the Dunbartonshire Central constituency in February 1974 against Hugh McCartney.
Reid also served as Rector of the University of Glasgow, being elected in 1972, largely on the back of his union activities.
He later moderated his political position and joined the Labour Party, and was a candidate for them in Dundee East, but lost against the then Scottish National Party (SNP) leader Gordon Wilson.
Reid became a journalist, writing opinion columns for various newspapers, including The Daily Mirror, The Herald, The Sun and The Scotsman. He also presented a chat-show for Grampian Television. In 2000 he helped establish the Scottish Left Review, a bi-monthly publication.
Reid continued to support Labour up until the 1997 General Election, but thereafter became disillusioned with the New Labour phenomenon, and has since urged people to support either the SNP or the Scottish Socialist Party (SSP).
In the 2004 SNP leadership contest he urged SNP members to support Alex Salmond for leader and Nicola Sturgeon for deputy leader.
On April 21, 2005, Jimmy Reid announced he had joined the SNP.