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Róisín McLaren
Róisín McLaren in November 2018
National co-spokesperson of the
Scottish Socialist Party
Assumed office
10 November 2018
Personal details
Born
Róisín Mary Bridget McLaren

(1994-10-12) 12 October 1994 (age 29)
Edinburgh, Scotland
Political partyScottish Socialist Party
Alma materScotland's Rural College

Róisín Mary Bridget McLaren (born 12 October 1994) is a former national co-spokesperson of the Scottish Socialist Party (SSP) from 2018 to 2021.

Personal life[edit]

McLaren was born in Edinburgh before moving to Livingston and then West Calder, where she spent most of her childhood. Her great grandfather was a shale miner and a member of the Independent Labour Party in West Calder.[1] Her father was a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain and later Democratic Left Scotland.[2] Her mother is a former member of the Socialist Workers Party. Her family were activists for a "Yes, Yes" vote in the 1979 referendum on Scottish devolution.

McLaren attended St Kentigern's Academy in Blackburn, before receiving a “foundationer” place at George Heriot’s School.[3] She went on to study Sustainable Environmental Management at Scotland's Rural College.[4]

McLaren has an interest in falconry.[5]

Political career[edit]

In 2013, she joined Edinburgh University Scottish Nationalist Association and became the society's president.[6] McLaren was a prominent organiser of the Yes campaign on Edinburgh University campus.[7] In 2014, she took part in campus debate on independence, urging the audience to use the momentum for the Yes campaign to "create a socially responsible country for future generations to come".

McLaren joined the Scottish Socialist Party in 2017. She attended the Scottish Independence Convention conference "Build: Bridges to Indy" and, interviewed there for the Scottish Socialist Voice, said that: "if independence is about anything, it has to be about improving the lives of working class people."[8]

On 2 June 2018, McLaren chaired a session at the Connolly150 conference - an international conference on James Connolly - which brought together speakers from across the world to discuss and celebrate James Connolly's life and ideas.[9]

In November 2017, McLaren wrote to the Guardian to highlight the issue of zero-hours contracts and the SSP's policy of a £10 minimum wage.[10]

In December 2017, McLaren wrote a joint article with the current SSP National Secretary Hugh Cullen, on radical pro-independence blog Conter which emphasised the need for an organised pro-independence socialist party.[11]

On 10 November 2018, McLaren was elected national co-spokesperson of the Scottish Socialist Party, beating Frances Curran.[12] McLaren was re-elected against Curran again at the 2019 National Conference.[13]

She was appointed to lead the SSP's climate change action group.

At the 2021 SSP conference she stood down from the SSP executive, because of work and family commitments[citation needed]. She was replaced as female national spokesperson by Natalie Reid[citation needed].

References[edit]

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