Dorothy_Grace_Elder

Dorothy-Grace Elder

Dorothy-Grace Elder

Scottish journalist and politician


Dorothy-Grace Elder is a Scottish journalist and former Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for the Glasgow region 1999–2003. She sat as an Independent MSP 2002–2003, having first sat as a Scottish National Party member from 1999 until she left the party in 2002. Among achievements for campaigning, she was awarded the 1996 Britain's Reporter of the Year for investigative journalism at the British Press Awards. In 2019, she was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Scottish Press Awards.

Quick Facts Member of the Scottish Parliamentfor Glasgow (1 of 7 Regional MSPs), Personal details ...

Journalism

Elder was the first woman to run an investigative team, "The Insiders", on the Glasgow Herald, where she worked on reporters, news features and leaders. She was later recruited by TV, beginning with BBC Scotland's news programme Reporting Scotland. She wrote, filmed and produced numerous documentaries on social injustices for STV and the network. Other programmes for Scottish Television include Paramedics.[1] and the first Scottish documentary on AIDS in 1988. For BBC Scotland and BBC Two, she filmed "I Preferred Madness"- the life story of Scots television pioneer John Logie Baird – filming between the UK, Canada and New York.

She worked as features editor and columnist on Scotland's first cooperatively run newspaper, the ill-fated Scottish Daily News.[2]

Elder has written columns and investigations for papers, including The Herald, Sunday Mail, Scotland on Sunday "Rattling the Cages" the Scottish Daily Express "Off the Leash", The Daily Express (UK) "Dear Dorothy".

She campaigned against conditions in Russian prisons for the destitute, including street children.

In 2007, she was appointed to an honorary professorship from Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen.[3] She lectures in investigative journalism to honours year students of the university.

Political career

In June 1998, she was announced as an SNP candidate for the newly formed Scottish Parliament in the elections that would take place the following year.[4]

In the 1999 election she stood in the Glasgow Baillieston constituency and gained a 17% swing to the SNP in a former Labour heartland. Although she did not win the seat outright,[5] she was elected on the list to Parliament as a Scottish National Party (SNP) representative for Glasgow region. She was a member of the Health and Community Care Committee and a member of the Public Petitions Committee.[6] A left-winger, she supported Alex Neil in the SNP leadership election of 2000.

As an MSP, Elder continued campaigning. She researched pollution and ill health in the East End of Glasgow, becoming the first MSP to take a pollution case to Brussels against dumping in the East End and an incinerator for dead cattle being allowed near housing and a hospital. She won the case in Europe. While in the Scottish Parliament, Elder launched a cross party group to look at shortage of help for chronic pain patients. In February 2002, she led a member's debate on the issue. Scotland had no residential service for severe chronic pain cases, with some sent hundreds of miles to Bath. Elder fought for 12 years for a residential service in Scotland, which was achieved in 2015. She continues to be strongly involved with the cross-party group, long after her term as MSP finished.[7]

She became dissatisfied with the way in which the SNP was being run and in May 2002 she resigned from the SNP. From that point, she sat in the Parliament as an independent MSP.[8] She did not stand for re-election at the 2003 election, returning to journalism instead.[9]

She is also a former Glasgow University Scottish Nationalist Association candidate for the post of rector of the University of Glasgow, losing to the actor Richard Wilson in 1996.[10] She was known for her campaigning abilities.

Reflecting on her political career in 2021, Elder wrote that despite sharing an office for three years with future First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, Sturgeon had refused to speak to her. She also claimed that: "I was reported to the chief whip after a woman MSP and one of Nicola [Sturgeon]’s chums discovered I had privately asked a women’s group for advice on male bullying in politics... I was set to be disciplined. It made me sick and I walked out."[11] The SNP responded: "Ms Elder has not been a member for almost two decades."[12]

Awards and honours

1994 Oliver Brown Award for services to Scotland

1996 Britain's Reporter of the Year at the British Press Awards[13] for investigative journalism

1998 Citation from the City of Pushkin for Humanitarian Aid to hospitals and prisons

2014 Medical Journalists' Assoc UK Health Campaign Award

In 2019, she was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Scottish Press Awards.[14]


References

  1. "Paramedics". STV Player. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  2. McGrath, Francesca. "What's happening in the Scottish Parliament". Scottish Parliament. Archived from the original on 24 April 2010. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  3. "Muldoon's science role". The Herald. 14 August 2007. Retrieved 25 November 2016.
  4. "UK Politics: SNP names Scots parliament candidates". BBC News. 16 June 1998. Retrieved 25 November 2016.
  5. "Vote 99: Constituency: Glasgow Ballieston". BBC News. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  6. Sanderson, Daniel (23 November 2015). "Government admits it is hiding figures on chronic pain waiting lists from patients". The Herald. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  7. "MSP quits nationalists". BBC News. 2 May 2002.
  8. "Farewell to the parliament". BBC News. 2 April 2003. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  9. "People: Richard Wilson". www.universitystory.gla.ac.uk. University of Glasgow. Retrieved 25 November 2016.
  10. McLaughlin, Mark (22 March 2022). "Nicola Sturgeon ignored SNP bullies, says former MSP" via www.thetimes.co.uk.
  11. "1990–1999 Winners". www.pressawards.org.uk. Archived from the original on 28 November 2016. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  12. "The Lifetime Achievement Award goes to Dorothy Grace Elder". www.twitter.com/ScotPressAwards. Retrieved 25 April 2019.

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