The People's Chamber
ISSUE 80
JUN 19-25, 2026
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Torcuil Crichton
Torcuil Crichton
MP for Na h-Eileanan an Iar
Labour

Political Biography

Torcuil Crichton is the Labour MP for Na h-Eileanan an Iar, born in December 1964 in Swordale, Point, on the Isle of Lewis, the islands he now represents. He is a published Gaelic author ("Fo Bhruid", Stòrlann, 2010), took his oath of allegiance in Gaelic on a Gaelic Bible, and his brother Donald stood as Labour's candidate for the same seat in the 2011 Holyrood election, a deeper island connection than "culturally rooted" captures.

His career was journalism, and at a senior level. He began at the West Highland Free Press in 1987, the paper that covers this very constituency, moved to The Herald and Sunday Herald in Glasgow, and was Westminster Editor of the Daily Record, Scotland's largest tabloid, for 12 years until 2022, one of the most senior political journalism roles in Scottish media. He left the Record in 2022 specifically to win the seat, securing the Labour nomination in January 2023.

The constituency has Labour history: Calum MacDonald held it from 1987 to 2005 before Angus MacNeil took it for the SNP. MacNeil was expelled from the SNP in 2023, stood as an independent in 2024 finishing third, and later joined Alba. Crichton won with 6,692 votes (49.5 percent) and a majority of 3,836 (28.4 percent), defeating the SNP's Susan Thomson. He sits on the Energy Security and Net Zero Committee, and continues to write for the Stornoway Gazette, which he has declared as a registered interest.

Crichton's strengths include being born and raised on Lewis, 12 years as Westminster Editor of the Daily Record, the West Highland Free Press start covering his own constituency, his standing as a published Gaelic author, the Gaelic oath, a brother who also carried the Labour flag in the islands, 18 months of full-time campaigning after leaving the Record, a near-majority 49.5 percent vote share, and the Energy Security and Net Zero Committee matching island energy issues. His weaknesses include his age, no ministerial office, no legislative achievement, the continued journalism raising potential conflict-of-interest questions, and the structural risk that a seat that was SNP from 2005 to 2024 could return to nationalist politics. At 61, with 37 years of journalism including 12 as the Record's Westminster Editor, a Gaelic book and a 28.4 percent majority, he is one of the most experienced new MPs in Parliament. Whether the Energy Committee work delivers on transmission charging, ferries, fuel poverty and marine energy will determine whether the journalist's understanding of how Westminster works converts to island delivery.