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Former Labour MP bidding to make Commons comeback eight years after losing seat

Douglas Alexander, who lost his seat to the SNP in 2015, is seeking a return to elected politics and is standing for Labour in East Lothian.

Katrine Bussey
Monday 13 February 2023 05:44 EST
Former MP Douglas Alexander is running for Parliament again, after being selected as Labour’s candidate for East Lothian. (Chris Radburn/PA Archive)
Former MP Douglas Alexander is running for Parliament again, after being selected as Labour’s candidate for East Lothian. (Chris Radburn/PA Archive)

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A former minister in Tony Blair’s government is seeking to make a comeback at Westminster, almost a decade after losing his seat.

Douglas Alexander was in both Mr Blair’s cabinet and that of his successor Gordon Brown.

But as the SNP virtually swept the board in the 2015 general election, winning all but three of the Scottish seats at Westminster, Mr Alexander lost his his Paisley and Renfrewshire South seat to Mhairi Black – then a 20-year-old student.

He is now seeking to make a return to elected politics, standing as Labour’s candidate for East Lothian in the next general election.

The seat is currently held by former Scottish justice justice secretary Kenny MacAskill, who left the SNP to join Alex Salmond’s Alba Party.

The East Lothian constituency will be one of Scottish Labour’s top targets when the next Westminster election is fought, with Mr Alexander saying he was “humbled and grateful” to be chosen for the contest.

Announcing his selection on Twitter on Sunday, Mr Alexander wrote: “He’s running! Humbled and grateful to be overwhelmingly selected today by local party members as Scottish Labour’s candidate for East Lothian.

“Change is coming to our country and I’m determined to play my part by winning East Lothian back for Scottish Labour.”

His candidacy comes more than 25 years after he was first elected to the Commons, winning the then-safe Labour seat of Paisley South seat in a by-election in November 1997.

After his role in helping co-ordinate Labour’s successful election campaign in 2001 he was made a junior minister in Mr Blair’s government, serving in various roles before being made both transport secretary and Scottish secretary in 2006.

When Mr Brown became prime minister in 2007 he appointed Mr Alexander his international development secretary.

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