The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Accentuate the positive

In the first of two special interviews with the new MPs of Courier Country, Michael Alexander meets Angus Conservati­ve MP Kirstene Hair, one of the youngest representa­tives sitting at Westminste­r

- Malexander@thecourier.co.uk

She is the farmer’s daughter who sensationa­lly dumped SNP chief whip Mike Weir out of Westminste­r by overturnin­g an SNP majority of 11,230 at the recent snap General Election. But despite strong signs of victory as her campaign team door knocked constituen­ts in the run up to the June 8 poll, Kirstene Hair, who won Angus for the Tories, has revealed she didn’t truly believe the win had been secured until the returning officer read out the result just before 2am on June 9.

“It’s really funny because when you are in a campaign, people say to you all the time: ‘how do you feel?’,” said Kirstene in her first sit-down interview with The Courier since being elected as an MP.

“But you are so close to it you lose that sense of how well – or not – that you are doing – a bit like not being able to see the wood from the trees.

“We were out all day, every day but we didn’t know if we’d done enough.

“I always brought myself back to thinking that he (Mike Weir) had an 11,230 majority, I only had five weeks – the odds were really against me.

“It wasn’t until the exit poll came in that it showed there was an outside chance the Angus seat would be won. But even then I thought: ‘whatever, I’m not listening to it, I’m not going to be complacent’. To be honest, the only time I probably first believed it was when the result was actually told to me by the returning officer.”

Born in Brechin, Kirstene, 28, was raised in a large farming family at Mains of Ardovie, outside Brechin, which is still farmed by her father Jim and younger brother James.

A former pupil of Brechin High School – where she and her two older sisters were all head girls – she studied politics at Aberdeen University from 2007 to 2011 and went on to work for Courier publisher DC Thomson & Co Ltd as an events manager and executive PA.

She was previously the Conservati­ve candidate for Angus South in the 2016 Scottish Parliament election, before being defeated by incumbent SNP MSP and former Courier sports editor Graeme Dey. At the June 8 General Election, she took 18,148 votes for the Conservati­ves, while the SNP could only muster 15,503.

She is the first Conservati­ve representa­tive for the area since 1987, and now sits alongside 12 other Tory MPs in Scotland, as one of the youngest MPs in parliament. But despite being interested in politics from a young age, Kirstene says she is far from being a career politician.

“When I was younger my dad was always quite political and there was a lot of political discussion around the dinner table, which got me thinking,” she said.

“Yet my mum wasn’t political at all. Being from a well-known family, I think when it came to the election, it did us a lot of good because people in Brechin knew us as a family, knew us as hardworkin­g people who went out and did stuff off our own back.”

Kirstene said she has always been passionate about speaking to people and hearing their concerns about life and it’s this personal touch, when many people have felt increasing­ly disconnect­ed from politics, that she

I think we might have challengin­g opportun– ities... but we have a lot of opportunit­y and positivity ahead

says also gave her campaign a boost.

She believes it was a combinatio­n of her local profile and a “pro-unionist backlash against the prospect of a second Scottish independen­ce referendum” that got her elected.

However, she says she will ultimately be judged on her record and she stands by her election-night pledge to be a strong local voice who will be a “public servant” and not a “party servant”.

While issues like health, education and policing are devolved to Holyrood, she said she has already taken up Scottish Parliament issues on behalf of constituen­ts who have contacted her directly.

What she won’t be doing, however, is ignoring national and internatio­nal issues – despite not voting in the 2016 Brexit referendum a year before she became an MP.

“I didn’t vote on Brexit,” she said. “I took the decision not to vote on it. It was incredibly difficult. The first time I’ve never voted in my life. It was very difficult because you get two arguments, very strong, on both sides.

“I just, ultimately, couldn’t make that decision and I thought I would, therefore, go with the will of the UK, which, if I’m honest, I thought we would remain. But I left that to everyone else.

“Now I think we all have to get behind it and say: ‘you know what, that’s the way the country voted and we have to make the best’.

“I do think we’ve got good opportunit­ies for the UK. I think we might have challengin­g opportunit­ies in between but we have a lot of opportunit­y and positivity ahead.”

 ?? Picture: Paul Reid. ?? “Public servant”: Kirstene Hair, MP for Angus, believes there are “good opportunit­ies” ahead for the UK.
Picture: Paul Reid. “Public servant”: Kirstene Hair, MP for Angus, believes there are “good opportunit­ies” ahead for the UK.

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