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Brian Whittle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Scottish Conservative politician

Brian Whittle
Official portrait, 2016
Member of the Scottish Parliament
forSouth Scotland
(1 of 7 Regional MSPs)
Assumed office
6 May 2016
Scottish Conservative portfolios
2021–presentShadow Minister for Environment, Biodiversity and Land Reform
Personal details
Born
Brian Ian Whittle

(1964-04-26)26 April 1964 (age 61)
Troon, Scotland
Political partyScottish Conservative
Sports career
SportAthletics
Event400m
ClubAyr Seaforth
Enfield & Haringey

Brian Ian Whittle (born 26 April 1964)[1] is a Scottish politician and former athlete, who has been aMember of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for theSouth Scotland region since2016. A member of theScottish Conservatives, he serves asShadow Minister for Environment, Biodiversity and Land Reform.

Whittle won the gold medal in the4 x 400 metres relay at both the1986 European Athletics Championships and1994 European Athletics Championships. He also competed at the1988 Summer Olympics inSeoul.

Early life

[edit]

Whittle was born in 1964 growing up in the Scottish town ofTroon. His father was a sprinter until his late teens. Whilst at school, Brian tried a wide range of sports, enjoying many of them but it was apparent that he had a natural talent for running. He has maintained that his talent lay in his discipline and ability to train.

Brian Whittle was educated atMarr College in Troon and went on to read Chemistry atThe University of Glasgow andKilmarnock College.

Athletic career

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At club level, Whittle ran for bothAyr Seaforth andEnfield & Haringey. His best performance in the 400 m was 45.22 at the1988 Summer Olympics inSeoul.[2] He finished 1st in his heat, 3rd in the quarter-final, but did not progress past the semi-final. He ran 45.5 on the first leg of the 4 × 400 m relay (team – Whittle,Kriss Akabusi,Todd Bennett,Phil Brown), but for once the GB team performed below par and finished fifth in the Olympic final. Perhaps his greatest achievement, and what he is best remembered for, is the manner in which he helped Great Britain win the gold medal in the4 x 400 metres relay at the1986 European Championships in Stuttgart. He ran the third leg of the race with one shoe, running a personal best leg time of 45.09. As he took the baton from Kriss Akabusi, Akabusi stood on his shoe and it ripped off, leaving him to run the race without it (thereafter the press nicknamed him 'One-shoe Whittle'). The other members of the team wereRoger Black andDerek Redmond, all of whom ran Personal Best times on the day.

Whittle also won a relay gold medal in the1994 European Athletics Championships4 × 400 metres relay team alongsideDavid McKenzie, Roger Black, andDu'aine Ladejo. He also ran in the heats of the 4 × 400 m relay at the1990 European Championships in Split.

He moved to 800 m after the 1988 Olympic Games, and ran in the final of the1990 Commonwealth Games 800 m in New Zealand, where he finished fourth ahead ofSebastian Coe andTom McKean. Whittle ran the last leg of the Commonwealth Games 4 × 400 m in 1990, anchoring the Scottish Team to a silver medal. He ran 44.7 seconds for his leg.

He also ran the 800 m in the1991 World Championships in Tokyo. His personal best for 800 m was 1:45.47 in 1990.

Other notable performances included running 45.98 at the1988 European Indoor Championships in Budapest winning the silver medal – a feat he repeated in 1989. He ran the last leg of the winning 4 × 400 m relay in theEuropa Cup in 1989 (Gateshead), helping Great Britain to win the team title for the first time.

Whittle was an international schools' high jumper, and also competed in the 200m at the1986 Commonwealth Games, making the semi-final.

His run of 45.98 seconds for the 400 metres indoors in Hungary in 1988 stood as the Scottish indoor record for 37 years until it was beaten byBrodie Young in February 2025.[3]

Political career

[edit]

Whittle contested the2015 UK general election in the constituency ofKilmarnock and Loudoun for theScottish Conservative and Unionist Party, coming 3rd with 12.5% of the vote.

At the2016 elections to theScottish Parliament, he was elected for theSouth Scotland region.[4]

Controversy

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Whittle sparked a row over the two-child cap on tax credits by claiming “there is no such thing as a rape clause”, claiming it was impossible to debate the controversial welfare reform as “the term rape clause is an invention to beat the Tories with”. The remarks were widely condemned and described as “skin-crawling” by other parties.[5]

Personal life

[edit]

Whittle has three daughters.[6]

References

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  1. ^"Team GB".www.olympics.org.uk.
  2. ^"Athlete Profile".www.thepowerof10.info.
  3. ^"Record breaker! Brodie brings down Men's Indoor mark over 400m . . . after 37 years".Scottish Arhletics. 9 February 2025. Retrieved11 February 2025.
  4. ^"South Scotland – Scottish Parliament electoral region – Election 2016" – via www.bbc.co.uk.
  5. ^"Tory MSP claims 'there is no such thing as a rape clause'". The Scotsman. 18 December 2018.
  6. ^Joan Mcfadden (14 July 2009)."Legendary athlete Brian Whittle happy to help daughter follow his example". Daily Record. Retrieved12 February 2019.

External links

[edit]
1977-1997
Elected in the2021 election
Constituency MSPs
Additional members
SNP (7 seats),Conservative (6 seats),Labour (3 seats)
Authority control databases: PeopleEdit this at Wikidata
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