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The invisible man: Who is Labour's new MSP Davy Russell?

Kirsten Campbell
BBC Scotland political correspondent
PA Media Davy Russell in suit jacket and blue checked shirt smiles in a head and shoulders shotPA Media
Labour MSP Davy Russell was branded the invisible man by campaign opponents

Davy Russell's by-election win for Labour is a victory for a candidate dismissed as "the invisible man" by opponents.

The 63-year-old becomes MSP for Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse in his first time standing in an election.

One of the features of the campaign was Russell's reluctance to do live broadcast interviews.

He didn't take up the opportunity to appear on BBC Radio Scotland, when other candidates did.

And when he declined to appear in a TV debate, opponents and political commentators questioned whether he was hiding.

But Labour seemed to be taking the words of Abraham Lincoln to heart. "Tis better to be silent and be thought a fool, than to speak and remove all doubt."

PA Media Davy Russell in a suit and red rosette with Anas Sarwar and a crowd behind him holding up placardsPA Media
Labour Leader Anas Sarwar championed Russell as a community candidate

In modern times, when gaffes can go viral on social media and reach a much wider audience than the original interview, the party decided to be cautious.

Labour fielded their man as a local candidate, through and through.

Russell still lives his constituency in Quarter, South Lanarkshire - the small former mining village where he was born and raised.

"I've lived here my whole life. I'm a dad and a granddad," he said in his election pitch.

"And like many of you, I care deeply about the future of our community."

Russell went to school in Hamilton and earned a civil engineering certificate from Motherwell Technical College.

After a career as an apprentice, fixing roads, he advanced to become a senior manager at Glasgow City Council - looking after roads, transport and waste services.

He is also a charity trustee, raises money for a hospice and has served as deputy lord lieutenant, representing the King at local events.

PA Media Davy Russell in a blue shirt alongside a woman with red hair in a long coat with a Labrador dog walking on a residential streetPA Media
Russell pounds the streets during the campaign with Deputy PM Angela Rayner

While his opponents branded him as "invisible" in the media, Labour was focused on more traditional campaign methods.

The party was knocking on doors and talking directly to voters about how Russell was a local man, who would be a community champion.

His campaign priority was fixing the NHS and bringing down waiting lists.

He spoke out against the Scottish government's plans to downgrade the neonatal unit at University Hospital Wishaw.

He also said he would work hard to revitalise local towns and villages, with investments in high streets, roads and community leisure facilities.

Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar denied that Russell disliked the media, he was clear on what mattered.

"In Davy Russell we had a candidate and now an MSP who cares about his community and understands his community and is a champion for his community," he told BBC News.

"That is ultimately what people have voted for."