Chris Law | |
Honorific-Suffix: | MP |
Office: | SNP Spokesperson for International Development in the House of Commons |
Leader: | Ian Blackford |
Term Start: | 20 June 2017 |
Term End: | 8 December 2022 |
Predecessor: | Alex Salmond |
Successor: | Brendan O'Hara |
Office1: | Member of Parliament for Dundee Central |
Term Start1: | 7 May 2015 |
Birth Name: | Christopher Murray Alexander Law |
Birth Date: | 21 October 1969 |
Birth Place: | Edinburgh, Scotland |
Party: | Scottish National Party |
Alma Mater: | University of St Andrews |
Predecessor1: | Jim McGovern |
Christopher Murray Alexander Law (born 21 October 1969) is a Scottish National Party (SNP) politician serving as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Dundee Central, formerly Dundee West, since 2015. He was first elected at the 2015 general election,[1] [2] winning a seat that had been held by Labour for the previous 65 years.[3] He served as SNP Spokesperson for International Development from 2017 to 2022, resigning from his position after the election of Stephen Flynn.[4]
Law was born in Edinburgh in 1969 and grew up in Fife, where he attended Glenwood High in Glenrothes then later Madras College in St Andrews.[5] Law later trained as a French chef, then went to the University of St Andrews where he received a degree in Social Anthropology. He developed a love of India while at university[6] and for ten years operated a business providing tours of the Himalayas on 1950s motorcycles. For a decade after returning to Scotland he operated a business as a financial adviser in Dundee. Law initially joined the SNP in 1999, and rejoined after returning to the UK in 2010.
In March 2018, Law said that he had spent time in social care in his teenage years in St Andrews.[7] In January 2019, he wrote about caring for his mother who had multiple sclerosis and supported a campaign by the i newspaper to raise money for MS Society.[8]
Law was a prominent Yes Scotland campaigner during the 2014 Scottish independence referendum and was the founder of the Spirit of Independence road tour of communities that toured Scotland in a refurbished Green Goddess fire engine. The tour was launched by the actor Brian Cox in Dundee in August 2014.[9]
Prominent members of Scottish society interviewed by Law during the tour included Yes Scotland chief executive Blair Jenkins and politicians Humza Yousaf, Annabelle Ewing and Richard Lochhead.
Law was selected to contest the Dundee West constituency at the 2015 general election and received 27,684 votes – 61.9% – as he took the seat from Labour with a majority of 17,092 votes.[10] From 2015 to 2017 he served on the Scottish Affairs Committee.[11] At the 2017 general election, he retained his seat, receiving 18,045 votes (46.7%), down 15.3% compared to the 2015 general election two years previously. His majority was reduced to 5,262 votes - 13.6%.[12] Following his re-election, Law was appointed SNP Westminster Spokesperson for International Development and Climate Justice, and now sits as the only non-Labour or Conservative member on the International Development Committee.[13]
At the 2019 general election, he held his seat, receiving 22,355 votes (53.8%), up 7.1% compared to the 2017 election. His majority was increased to 12,259 - 29.5%.[14] Following his re-election, Law was appointed SNP Shadow Secretary of State for International Development, and continued to serve on the International Development Committee.[15] In the general election of 2024, Chris Law saw his majority fall to less than 700 during the worst election performance for the SNP in 20 years.
During his first term (2015–17) as the Member of Parliament for Dundee West, Law fought against job losses at HMRC facilities in his constituency.[16] In his second term, he criticised the UK Government over HMRC's decision to close their Sidlaw House facility in Dundee in 2022 and move jobs to a new facility in Edinburgh.[17]
In September 2017, Law signed a joint letter denouncing the Spanish Government's efforts to block the 2017 Catalan independence referendum.[18]
Law was a notable critic of Aung San Suu Kyi following the Myanmar Rohingya refugee crisis, and repeatedly called for her Freedom of the City of Dundee to be stripped. In March 2018, just days before a visit to the country with the International Development Committee to investigate allegations of human rights abuses, the visas issued to members of the Committee including Law were denied.[19]
On 25 April 2018, Law secured a debate in Westminster Hall on 'Protecting Children in Conflict'.[20] In his speech, he called on the UK Government to do more to protect and prevent violence against children in conflict zones, such as Yemen and South Sudan.
Law served as the co-chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Video Games.[21] In October 2018, Law backed The Independent Game Developers' Association's calls for a Video Games Investment Fund in the Chancellor's Autumn Budget.
In 2020, Law joined the All Party Parliamentary Group on Whistleblowing which has been subject to criticism by some campaigners on whistleblowing law reform.[22] [23]
Law is a member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.[24]
He is a supporter of the right of self-determination for Tibet. In Autumn 2018, he addressed the Central Tibetan Administration on a visit to Dharamshala.[25] As co-chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Tibet, Law and fellow co-chair Tim Loughton called for the EU to adopt an equivalent to the US Reciprocal Access to Tibet Act.[26]
He has been a supporter of drug reform laws. Following his re-election in 2019, he backed the decriminalisation of drugs and the establishment of drug consumption rooms in Dundee.[27]