Ian Murray

}} Ian Murray (born 10 August 1976) is a British Labour Party politician who has represented Edinburgh South as Member of Parliament (MP) since the 2010 general election. He served as an Edinburgh City Councillor for Liberton & Gilmerton Ward from 2003 to 2010, before his Westminster election as an Edinburgh MP. From 2015-17, Murray was the only Labour Party MP representing a Scottish constituency in the House of Commons. On 8 June 2017, he was re-elected with an increased majority of 15,514 votes.
 * name            = Ian Murray
 * honorific-suffix =
 * image           = Official portrait of Ian Murray crop 2.jpg
 * Caption         = Official Parliamentary portrait, June 2017
 * office          = Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland
 * leader          = Harriet Harman (Acting) Jeremy Corbyn
 * term_start      = 11 May 2015
 * term_end        = 26 June 2016
 * predecessor     = Margaret Curran
 * successor       = Dave Anderson
 * office1         = Member of Parliament for Edinburgh South
 * term_start1     = 6 May 2010
 * term_end1       =
 * predecessor1    = Nigel Griffiths
 * successor1      =
 * majority1       = 15,514 (32.4%)
 * birth_date      = August 10, 1976
 * birth_place     = Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
 * death_date      =
 * death_place     =
 * party           = Labour
 * alma_mater      = University of Edinburgh

Early life and education
Murray was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, UK to a cooper father and shop worker mother in 1976. Brought up in the Wester Hailes area of Edinburgh, he attended Dumbryden Primary School, then Wester Hailes High School. Upon completing his secondary school education, Murray read Social Policy and Law at the University of Edinburgh's Academy of Government. He graduated with an honours degree (BA) aged twenty. While studying at university, he had a part-time job in a local fish & chip shop before setting up and running a pizza delivery service. After graduation, Murray worked for Royal Blind in pensions management, before being head-hunted by an Edinburgh-based internet television station (Worldart.com) during the dot-com boom where he helped to build a new online TV station. Despite his efforts, the company ran out of funding and was made redundant; he then founded his own event management business (100 mph Events Ltd). Murray also organised a student exchange programme in Nepal to fund school buildings and staff. In 2003, Murray stood in the council elections for Liberton winning the seat for Labour at the age of 27; he later represented the larger Liberton & Gilmerton Ward from 2007-2010.

2010–2015 Parliamentary term
Murray was returned for the seat of Edinburgh South at the 2010 General Election. Murray served on the Business, Innovation and Skills Select Committee and the Environmental Audit Select Committee. In 2011, he was appointed to the Shadow Frontbench.

2014 Scottish independence referendum
In the 2014 Scottish independence referendum Murray campaigned for a 'No' vote. He claims to have encountered hostility from independence activists and reported that his office premises had been plastered with pro-independence "Yes" stickers, which were immediately removed.

2015–2017 Parliamentary term
Murray was re-elected to his Edinburgh South constituency in the 2015 General Election with an increased share of the vote and an increased majority but following the SNP landslide he became the only Labour MP returned for a Scottish seat. He was appointed as Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland on 11 May 2015 by Acting Labour Leader Harriet Harman. He was re-appointed to the same role by new Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn in September 2015.

Shadow cabinet infighting
Jeremy Corbyn made his first shadow frontbench reshuffle in January 2016 which were triggered by heated policy and personality disagreements. Three Shadow Ministers resigned in protest and were criticised by Corbyn ally John McDonnell as being part of a "narrow right wing clique" aligned with the Blairite Progress group. Murray as a Progress member was interviewed on the Sunday Politics Scotland programme on 10 January 2016 and criticised McDonnell saying he should "ramp down the rhetoric".

Shortly after the Brexit Referendum, on 26 June 2016, he resigned around the same time as dozens of his Labour colleagues from the Shadow Cabinet, citing a lack of confidence in Jeremy Corbyn's leadership ability to win a general election. Murray nominated Owen Smith in his leadership challenge against Corbyn.

Following on from Jeremy Corbyn's successful re-election as Labour leader with a larger majority, Ian Murray said he would only return to Corbyn's frontbench if Corbyn reinstated shadow cabinet elections and stopped using the threat of deselection to enforce loyalty.

Murray has accused Corbyn of being "all over the place" on potential Labour cooperation with the SNP. His replacement as Shadow Scottish Secretary Dave Anderson refused to rule out a deal with the SNP at Westminster.

Personal life
He supports Edinburgh-based football team Hearts and was previously Chair of the Foundation of Hearts, a bid by a fans' group to buy the club out of administration. He stepped down in May 2015 in order to focus on his parliamentary duties, and was duly replaced by the current Chair Brian Cormack.