Patrick Harvie
Patrick Harvie MSP | |
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Member of the Scottish Parliament for Glasgow | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 1 May 2003 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Vale of Leven, Dunbartonshire, Scotland | 18 March 1973
Political party | Scottish Green Party |
Alma mater | Manchester Metropolitan University |
Religion | None |
Website | Official website |
Patrick Harvie (born 18 March 1973) is the co-convenor of the Scottish Green Party (with Maggie Chapman) and Member of the Scottish Parliament for the Glasgow region. He was first elected in the 2003 election and was re-elected in the 2007 election and in the 2011 election.
Background, education and career
Harvie went to Dumbarton Academy between 1984–1991, and attended Manchester Metropolitan University where he was briefly a member of the Labour party.
From 1997 till his election in 2003, Harvie worked within the Gay Men's Project at the sexual health organisation PHACE Scotland (now part of the Terrence Higgins Trust) initially as a youth worker and later as Development Worker for the Lanarkshire Health Board area. Although this work was principally concerned with HIV prevention, it also involved Harvie in equality campaigning. During this period, he was active in the campaign to repeal Section 2A of the Local Government Act, more commonly known as Section 28. This campaign was successful, and Harvie has stated that the experience prompted him to become more actively involved in politics, leading to his joining the Scottish Green Party.
Member of the Scottish Parliament
Harvie has gained attention both for issues strongly associated with the Greens, such as campaigning against the extension to the M74 motorway in Glasgow, and for more 'mainstream' issues such as opposition to the Identity Cards Bill.
Quickly after becoming an MSP he caused some controversy by proposing civil partnership legislation in the Scottish Parliament. Though this legislation was ultimately handled at Westminster and covered the whole UK, the distinctive Scottish proposals helped to stimulate some public debate north of the border, both on the issue of same-sex relationships and on the process known as a Legislative Consent Motion by which the Scottish Parliament allows Westminster to legislate for the whole UK.
Harvie was a member of the Communities Committee of the Scottish Parliament throughout the 2003-7 session,[1] and through this committee he worked on the Anti-social behaviour Bill, the Charities Bill and the Housing Bill, as well as on issues of homelessness, debt, the planning system and building standards. In 2004 Harvie was given the 'One to Watch' award at the annual Scottish Politician of the Year event. In addition to the Communities portfolio, Harvie covered the Justice portfolio for the Greens, and has been active on a number of civil liberties issues. He has also been convener of the Cross Party Group (CPG) on Human Rights, and helped to establish a CPG on Sexual Health.
Following the Green Party's disappointing performance in the 2007 election, Harvie was returned with a reduced share of the vote. The tight parliamentary arithmetic and a constructive relationship with the Scottish National Party led to a Co-operation Agreement between the two parties. Under this, Harvie was nominated to convene the Transport, Infrastructure and Climate Change Committee.
Positions held[2]
- MSP for Glasgow region (2003–present)
- Green Party Spokesperson for Justice and Communities (2003–2005)
- Green Party Spokesperson for Justice, Communities, Europe and Constitutional Affairs (2005–2007)
- Convener of the Transport, Infrastructure and Climate Change Committee (2007–2011)<ref name="session3>"Previous MSPs: Session 3 (2007-2011): Patrick Harvie MSP". Scottish Parliament. Retrieved 4 August 2014.</ref>
- Co-convenor, Scottish Green Party (2008–present)
Other
Harvie is an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society, Honorary Vice-President of the Gay and Lesbian Humanist Association and a patron of Parents Enquiry Scotland. He is a board member of the Glasgay! Festival, and a member of Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, Equality Network, Stonewall (UK), Amnesty International, Humanist Society of Scotland and the Campaign Against the Arms Trade. From 2003 till 2007, Harvie wrote a weekly column in the Scottish edition of the Big Issue.
He is bisexual, and is the first openly bisexual party leader in Scotland and the United Kingdom.[3] He was also a candidate in the election for Rector of the University of Glasgow in February 2008.[4]
Harvie is an advocate of Open Source and Free Software, and a Linux user. His use of Twitter during an important political dinner drew much media comment.[5]
References
- ↑ http://news.bbc.co.uk/democracylive/hi/representatives/profiles/32701.stm
- ↑ "The Greens’ shoots of recovery", The Sunday Times, Gillian Harris, 23 November 2008
- ↑ Rectorial Elections 2008 Results, Glasgow University SRC, February 2008
- ↑ Harvie: Twitter ye not at my manners, The Scotsman, David Maddox, 18 April 2009
External links
Party political offices | ||
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Preceded by Robin Harper |
Co-Convenor of the Scottish Green Party with Martha Wardrop 2008–2013 with Maggie Chapman 2013–present 2008–present |
Incumbent |
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