Jeremy Balfour


Jeremy Ross Balfour is a Scottish Scottish Conservative Party politician who is a Member of Scottish Parliament for the Lothian region, elected in the 2016 Scottish Parliament election.

Early life and career

Balfour was born in Edinburgh, where he attended the independent Edinburgh Academy and then studied at the University of Edinburgh. After working as a solicitor, he studied at London Bible College to become a Baptist minister. He also worked as a lobbyist for the Evangelical Alliance and, in that role, called for Halloween to be banned due to a "growing movement towards the darker side". From 2004 to 2014, Balfour was director of right-wing think tank Scottish Council on Human Bioethics. Balfour distanced himself from the think-tank after it emerged it had produced a report questioning the morality of victims of rape who take the morning-after pill.

Political career

Balfour was elected to City of Edinburgh Council, representing the Corstorphine/Murrayfield ward.
In the 2016 Scottish Parliament election, Balfour stood for the Scottish Parliament as the Conservative candidate for Midlothian North and Musselburgh, where he came third. He was instead elected from the Lothian regional list. Shortly after being elected, Balfour became Scottish Conservative spokesperson for childcare and early years and joined the Equal Opportunities Committee of the Scottish Parliament.
In 2018, Balfour came under pressure to resign as the Scottish Conservative’s welfare spokesperson for suggesting that terminally-ill people who don’t die within three years should be re-assessed for benefits. He refused to apologise for the remarks, but was forced to withdraw the amendment to the Social Security Bill.

Personal life

Balfour has a physical disability which left him with no left arm and a right arm that ends at the elbow from which two elongated fingers protrude. Balfour is the only MSP in the 2016–21 Scottish Parliament who openly identifies as a disabled person.