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Maree Todd
Maree Todd
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Maree Todd is a Scottish National Party (SNP) politician who has been the Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for Caithness, Sutherland and Ross since May 2021. She was previously an MSP for the Highlands and Islands from the election in May 2016.[1] She has been Minister for Drugs & Alcohol Policy and Sport since June 2025.[2] She previously served as Minister for Social Care, Mental Wellbeing and Sport between 2023 and 2025, as the Minister for Public Health, Women's Health and Sport from 2021 to 2023, and as the Minister for Children and Young People from 2017 to 2021.

Key Information

Early life and education

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She was educated at Ullapool primary school and high school.[3] She went to Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen, graduating in 1994 with a Bachelor of Science degree in pharmacy.[4]

Pharmacy career

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She previously worked as a hospital pharmacist for NHS Highland.[5] Before being elected as a MSP, she was based at the New Craigs Psychiatric Hospital in Inverness.[5]

Political career

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She was encouraged into politics after campaigning during the Scottish independence referendum that took place in 2014.[3] In October 2015 she was announced as the top candidate on the SNP's regional list for the Highlands and Islands.[6]

Todd was appointed Minister for Childcare and Early Years by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon on 7 November 2017.[7]

Todd is a Species Champion for the Flame shell, through a scheme run by Scottish Environment LINK.[8]

At the May 2021 Scottish Parliament election, Todd was elected as the MSP for the Caithness, Sutherland and Ross constituency. On 19 May 2021, she was appointed to the new government as Minister for Public Health, Women's Health and Sport.[9]

In 2023, she was appointed to the Yousaf government as Minister for Social Care, Mental Wellbeing and Sport.[10]

In 2025, Todd was appointed to the newly renamed role of Minister for Drugs & Alcohol Policy and Sport.[11] In this role she maintained her responsibility for the sport portfolio while taking on the drugs and alcohol brief.[12]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Maree Todd is a politician and who has served as (MSP) for , and Ross since 2021, following her election as a regional list MSP for the in 2016. With two decades of experience as a in NHS Highland, including at New Craigs Hospital in , Todd entered politics drawing on her professional expertise in healthcare delivery and patient care challenges. She has held successive ministerial portfolios in the focused on , social care, and related areas, including Minister for , Women's Health and from 2021 to 2023, Minister for Social Care, and from 2023 to 2025, and her current role as Minister for Drugs and Alcohol Policy and since June 2025, where responsibilities encompass reducing substance-related harm, supporting recovery programs, and promoting . Todd's tenure has involved advancing policies on mental wellbeing, childcare, and drug rehabilitation, informed by her background in pharmacy and prescribing, though some initiatives like the proposed National Care Service encountered legislative opposition leading to its abandonment in 2025. Earlier in her parliamentary career, she contributed to the Health and Sport Committee, scrutinizing NHS performance and sports governance. Raised in the West Highlands and educated at Ullapool High School before studying pharmacy at Robert Gordon University and the University of Strathclyde, Todd resides in Strathpeffer with her family and maintains interests in local infrastructure, such as rail services in the Far North.

Background

Early Life and Education

Maree Todd grew up in the West Highlands of Scotland, attending High School. During her childhood, both of her parents struggled with alcoholism; her father sought recovery through (AA), and her mother initially accompanied him to meetings before recognizing her own condition and pursuing sobriety as well. Her father achieved 40 years of sobriety by 2025, while her mother sustained 38 years of sobriety until her death in 2022. Todd pursued higher education in , beginning studies at the before earning a first-class honours degree in from . She also received training in prescribing science during this period. These qualifications prepared her for entry into the pharmaceutical workforce, focusing on health-related applications.

Pharmacy Career

Maree Todd served as a pharmacist for NHS Highland for 20 years, with her primary role at New Craigs Psychiatric Hospital in . In this capacity, she specialized in psychiatric pharmacology, overseeing medication management for patients with disorders, including optimization of psychotropic drug regimens to enhance therapeutic outcomes and minimize adverse effects. As a qualified prescriber, she held authority to initiate and adjust prescriptions, integrating practices directly into multidisciplinary psychiatric care teams. Todd contributed to evidence-based improvements in services, notably participating in the development of Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network () recommendations on perinatal mental health, which addressed pharmacological interventions for maternal psychiatric conditions. Her work emphasized practical challenges in drug adherence, risks, and service integration within resource-constrained settings, drawing on direct interactions to refine protocols for safer prescribing. This extensive clinical experience in , spanning from the mid-1990s until her to the in 2016, equipped her with firsthand knowledge of systemic gaps in pharmaceutical support for psychiatric care, motivating her shift toward on health-related issues.

Political Entry and Elections

2016 Scottish Parliament Election

Maree Todd was selected by the Scottish National Party (SNP) as a candidate on the regional list for the Highlands and Islands electoral region ahead of the Scottish Parliament election on 5 May 2016. She was elected as a list Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for the region, contributing to the SNP's allocation of seats there following the distribution of constituency results. The Highlands and Islands region returned six SNP MSPs on the list, alongside constituency wins, amid the party's overall haul of 63 seats—down from 69 in 2011 but still forming a plurality that enabled a minority government under First Minister Nicola Sturgeon. The election followed the 2014 independence referendum, in which 55.3% voted against separation, yet the SNP retained robust support by emphasizing governance on devolved issues like and rural services while advocating for future opportunities. Todd's candidacy drew on her two decades as a hospital pharmacist specializing in in , positioning her to address regional challenges in healthcare access and public services. Upon taking office in May 2016, Todd was assigned to the Parliament's and Sport Committee, where she engaged on matters including NHS performance and community health initiatives, leveraging her professional background. This role marked her initial focus on scrutinizing government policies in areas aligned with her expertise, prior to broader parliamentary contributions.

2021 Scottish Parliament Election

In the election on 6 May 2021, Maree Todd, standing as the candidate, won the , and Ross constituency with 15,889 votes. This victory represented a shift for Todd from her prior role as a regional list for the since 2016 to direct representation of the constituency. She defeated the Liberal Democrats' Molly Nolan, who received 13,298 votes, securing a of 2,591 votes. in the constituency stood at 64.8%. Todd's campaign focused on local priorities suited to the rural Highland constituency, including advocacy for improved services in remote areas, support for the fisheries industry facing post-Brexit uncertainties, and the Scottish National Party's commitment to pursuing . These issues resonated with voters in a region characterized by sparse population, geographic isolation, and economic reliance on sectors like and public services. The election outcome enhanced Todd's ability to address constituency-specific concerns, such as access to healthcare and transportation in and , differing from the broader regional mandate of her previous position. This transition underscored the Scottish Parliament's mixed-member proportional system, where list MSPs like Todd could pivot to constituency roles to strengthen localized advocacy.

Government and Legislative Roles

Ministerial Positions (2017-2021)

Maree Todd was appointed Minister for Childcare and Early Years by on 7 November 2017, following the resignation of her predecessor Mark McDonald amid a . In this role, she oversaw the Scottish Government's commitment to expand funded early learning and childcare (ELC) from 600 to 1,140 hours per year for eligible children by 2020, a policy aimed at supporting and parental employment. The expansion involved a multi-year funding agreement with local authorities in April 2018, allocating additional resources to build capacity, though implementation faced challenges including workforce shortages and disputes over funding adequacy. By 2020, partial rollout had increased access, but critics, including Scottish Conservative MSPs, highlighted delays in achieving full provision and quality concerns, with Todd unable to provide precise figures on sector staffing during parliamentary scrutiny in March 2018. The portfolio was renamed Minister for Children and Young People in June 2018, broadening responsibilities to include youth welfare, support, and incorporation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child into domestic law. Under Todd's tenure, the government progressed legislative efforts like the Children and Young People () Act amendments and invested in initiatives such as the Baby Box program for newborn essentials, though empirical evaluations noted uneven delivery across regions due to local authority variations. An Audit review later acknowledged the achievement in scaling provision despite pressures, but identified ongoing risks to sustainability from recruitment difficulties and rising costs exceeding initial projections of £1 billion annually. Opposition sources, including reports from The Herald, criticized the SNP administration for underfunding councils, leading to strained nursery operations and potential compromises in care quality. Todd served in the children and young people role until 19 May 2021, when, following the election, she was appointed Minister for , Women's Health and in the reshuffled cabinet. This position encompassed oversight of strategies, targeted women's health initiatives addressing issues like menstrual health and maternity services, and policies emphasizing equity, including guidelines on participation in women's categories to maintain fairness amid debates over inclusion. Her initial months focused on recovery efforts and equity frameworks, though detailed outcomes from this brief pre-term-end period were limited by the timing of the appointment. The transition reflected the Scottish National Party's emphasis on integrating health portfolios with , building on Todd's pharmaceutical background, but drew scrutiny from outlets like The Scottish Sun for prior perceived gaps in sectoral knowledge during her childcare oversight.

Return to Ministerial Roles (2024-Present)

In 2024, Maree Todd returned to the frontbench as Minister for Social Care, Mental Wellbeing and Sport, assuming oversight of social care integration, services, and sporting initiatives amid broader SNP governmental pressures following leadership transitions and electoral setbacks. Her tenure involved addressing systemic strains in provision, including unannounced inspections prompted by abuse allegations at inpatient units like in , 's largest psychiatric facility for youth, where claims of restraint misuse and neglect surfaced publicly in February 2025 despite her prior site visit in late 2024. The government responded by committing to enhanced oversight via Healthcare Improvement , though critics highlighted delays in formal inspections during the allegation period. Drug-related mortality remained a critical backdrop, with recording 1,017 drug misuse deaths in —a 13% decline from 2023's peak but still the highest per capita rate in , totaling over 6,000 fatalities since the SNP-declared emergency in 2019. Todd's portfolio intersected these issues through mental linkages to substance misuse, though primary responsibility lay elsewhere until her subsequent reshuffle. On 11 June 2025, amid an SNP cabinet reconfiguration under , Todd's role shifted to Minister for Drugs & Alcohol Policy and Sport, absorbing direct accountability for reducing drug harms while retaining sport responsibilities; Tom Arthur succeeded her in social care. In this capacity, she has emphasized accelerated treatment access and cross-government coordination, vowing sustained action against entrenched crisis levels under 18 years of SNP administration.

Policy Areas and Contributions

Drugs and Alcohol Policy

Maree Todd was appointed Minister for Drugs and Alcohol Policy (alongside ) in June 2025, succeeding Christina McKelvie following her death. In this role, Todd has overseen aspects of 's national drugs strategy, emphasizing recovery-oriented approaches informed by her family's history of , where both parents achieved long-term sobriety through after recognizing their dependencies. Despite such personal insights highlighting abstinence-based recovery, under SNP governance has recorded Europe's highest drug misuse death rates per capita, with 1,017 fatalities in 2024—down 13% from 2023 but equivalent to 191 deaths per million population after age adjustment, over three times the rate from 2000. Todd's initiatives include announcing nearly £2 million in additional funding in September 2025 for third-sector organizations to address challenges faced by women affected by substance use, such as tailored support services amid rising harms. She has also coordinated responses to emerging threats like nitazenes—synthetic opioids hundreds of times more potent than fentanyl—linked to over 100 Scottish deaths by mid-2025, through partnerships with Public Health Scotland and the Scottish Drugs Forum for public alerts, enhanced surveillance, and naloxone distribution programs. However, suspected drug deaths surged 33% to 308 in January–March 2025 compared to the prior quarter, underscoring persistent vulnerabilities despite these measures. Critics attribute Scotland's sustained crisis—now the highest in for a seventh year under SNP rule—to an overreliance on tactics like expanded needle exchanges and supervised consumption sites, which empirical reviews indicate mitigate acute risks such as overdoses but fail to curb overall prevalence or long-term fatalities without concomitant emphasis on and . Todd's has resisted full of personal possession, citing legal and practical barriers, yet pushes partial reforms that experts argue exacerbate supply issues by signaling leniency without addressing root causes like weak border controls or inadequate residential rehab capacity. Comparative data from jurisdictions like , which prioritize compulsory treatment and strict , show lower per-capita overdose rates than harm-reduction-heavy models in or post-decriminalization, suggesting causal links between policy stringency and reduced usage via deterrence rather than accommodation. Todd has acknowledged no complacency, vowing sustained action, but outcomes indicate that harm minimization alone has not reversed the decade-long trend of over 10,000 deaths since 2014.

Social Care and Mental Health Reforms

As Minister for Social Care, Mental Wellbeing and Sport from May 2024, Maree Todd oversaw initiatives to address strains in Scotland's adult social care system, including advocacy for enhanced adult support mechanisms. She chaired the Adult Support and Protection National Strategic Forum, which convened on March 12, 2025, to discuss strategic improvements in safeguarding vulnerable adults amid rising demand. Todd's efforts emphasized integrating lived experiences into policy, such as through consultations informing the forum's focus on protection frameworks, though empirical outcomes remain pending evaluation. Todd also advanced Scotland's and Strategy, publishing an interim delivery plan update on June 11, 2025, which outlined progress on workforce action and next steps to reduce stigma and inequality. The strategy, under her tenure, prioritized preventive wellbeing measures, including community-based supports, with fiscal commitments like a £2.5 million multi-year fund for autistic adults launched in 2025 to enhance independence. However, delivery faced challenges from systemic pressures, as Scotland's social care workforce, despite reaching a record 214,750 registered workers in 2024, contended with high turnover rates exceeding 20% annually in some sectors due to low pay averaging below £11 per hour. The aging population exacerbated these strains, with projections indicating a 20% rise in over-75s by 2035, driving demand for social care that outpaces supply; one in 25 Scots currently receives such services, expected to increase sharply without proportional workforce growth. Todd's reforms sought to mitigate this through national oversight, but the proposed National Care Service (NCS) Bill, which would transfer responsibilities from local authorities to a centralized body, highlighted tensions over efficiency. Introduced to standardize care and accountability, the bill allocated nearly £1 million monthly in development costs by mid-2025, yet faced scrutiny for potentially distorting local incentives. Critics argued that over-centralization ignored local councils' comparative advantages in tailoring services, fostering inefficiencies through remote that dilutes and —principles evident in the bill's partial scrapping on January 23, 2025, after revealed insufficient cross-party support. Todd acknowledged the "polar opposite" stakeholder views, conceding that national structures risked overlooking regional variations in workforce capacity and demand, as local authorities already manage 76% of care delivery with budgets strained by demographic shifts. This retreat preserved decentralized elements, aligning with evidence that fragmented but localized systems can better incentivize innovation and cost-control, though Todd maintained commitment to reforms without full centralization.

Public Health, Sport, and Women's Issues

As Minister for Public Health, Women's Health and Sport from May 2021 until her portfolio change in 2023, Maree Todd launched 's first dedicated Plan on August 20, 2021, comprising 66 actions to tackle longstanding health inequalities faced by women and girls, with specific emphases on conditions like , , and menstrual health. The initiative, informed by testimonies from women, sought to enhance healthcare access and outcomes throughout their lifespans, positioning as a potential leader in addressing sex-specific health disparities. A 2023 progress report detailed advancements in data collection and service improvements, though implementation varied across health boards. In prevention, Todd's oversight included efforts to curb substance use, such as the September 4, 2025, announcement of over £2 million in funding for services targeting women impacted by drugs—addressing physiological vulnerabilities like pregnancy-related risks—and programs to prevent uptake among young people. These measures aligned with broader preventive strategies, yet empirical trends reveal a Europe-wide decline in teenage alcohol, , and use among 15- to 16-year-olds, as documented in the 2025 Survey on Alcohol and Other Drugs (ESPAD), continuing a observed since the early 2000s and linked to cultural shifts toward rather than unique national policies. Scotland's participation in this downward trajectory underscores the influence of transnational factors, including reduced social tolerance for intoxication, over isolated interventions. Todd's sport responsibilities, extending into her 2023–2025 role as Minister for Social Care, Mental Wellbeing and and her current position as Minister for Drugs and Alcohol Policy and since June 2025, emphasized expanding participation amid barriers like access and cultural norms. She co-hosted a parliamentary networking event for women in football on April 29, 2025, to promote career advancement and equity in the sector. Parliamentary inquiries under her tenure highlighted biological realities in defining women's categories, with Todd affirming the need for open discussion on contentious issues to safeguard fairness and safety. Such stances contrasted with critiques that broader ideological emphases on policies have occasionally diverted resources from core metrics like participation rates and health outcomes, though Todd's initiatives prioritized empirical sex-based needs. Charities have pressed for accelerated actions, including appointing a dedicated champion to monitor progress beyond initial plans.

Controversies and Criticisms

Health Service Decisions

In 2016, the maternity unit at Caithness General Hospital in Wick was downgraded from consultant-led to midwife-led by NHS Highland, citing safety concerns and insufficient birth volumes to sustain consultant presence, with only sporadic consultant support thereafter. This decision, occurring within Maree Todd's constituency as MSP for Caithness, Sutherland and Ross, led to a sharp decline in local births, from 164 in 2015 to just 15 in 2024, forcing most expectant mothers to travel over 100 miles to Inverness for consultant-led care. Critics, including local campaigners from Caithness Health Action Team, argued the model inflicted empirical harms on rural access, such as heightened risks during labor travel in adverse Highland weather, labeling it "quite frankly, cruel" amid ongoing public petitions and parliamentary debates into 2025. Todd, who visited the unit in 2025 alongside other officials, has not publicly reversed support for the operational shift, despite constituency backlash metrics showing sustained community mobilization. In June 2022, as Minister for Public Health, Women's Health and Sport, Todd faced accusations of overburdening NHS staff by suggesting they escort patients through proposed buffer zones to mitigate protester concerns, a stance critics likened to turning clinicians into "bouncers" amid existing workforce pressures. This arose during consultations on safe access zones, where Todd emphasized patient reassurance via staff intervention as an interim measure before , but opponents highlighted it diverted resources from core clinical duties without addressing scalability. The proposal contributed to broader service strain debates, with no quantified data on implementation impacts released at the time, though it preceded the 2024 Abortion Services (Safe Access Zones) () Bill designating protected premises.

National Care Service Initiative

As Minister for Social Care, Mental Wellbeing and Sport from August 2024, Maree Todd oversaw the progression of the National Care Service (Scotland) Bill, which proposed transferring statutory social care responsibilities from Scotland's 32 local authorities to a centralized national body under Scottish Government control. The initiative aimed to standardize services but encountered sustained resistance from local government bodies, trade unions, and opposition parties, who argued it disregarded regional differences in care needs and demographics, such as urban-rural divides and varying population densities across councils. By November 2024, amid stalled parliamentary stages and withdrawn support from the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (Cosla), Todd announced a pause in advancing the bill's structural reforms, citing insufficient consensus. The project's costs escalated without delivering legislative success, with £28.73 million spent or allocated by September 2024 on consultations, advisory groups, and preparatory work since the policy's inception under prior administrations. On January 23, 2025, Todd confirmed the abandonment of the bill's core centralization elements in a parliamentary statement, attributing delays and ultimate failure partly to Cosla's shifting positions and failure to engage constructively, despite the councils' explicit withdrawal of backing earlier due to fears of eroded local autonomy and unquantified fiscal burdens. This blame allocation drew criticism from opponents, who highlighted the Scottish National Party (SNP) government's insistence on a uniform national model as the root cause, evidenced by repeated demands for revised financial memoranda that never materialized amid opaque budgeting. Critics, including Scottish Conservative MSPs and local authority leaders, labeled the approach as policy overreach, pointing to the creation of interim advisory structures—like a proposed non-statutory National Care Service Advisory Board—as exemplifying inefficiency, with early meetings incurring thousands in setup costs while yielding no binding outcomes and dismissed as an "SNP talking shop" for lacking diverse stakeholder input beyond government allies. Empirical patterns from similar centralization efforts elsewhere, such as the UK's historical nationalization of utilities leading to bureaucratic rigidities and higher administrative overheads before partial devolution improved responsiveness, underscore a causal mechanism: top-down mandates suppress localized problem-solving, amplifying variances in service delivery efficiency as seen in Scotland's fragmented council funding models that, despite flaws, adapt to specific needs like Highland remoteness. The NCS's demise, after years of development, illustrates how imposed uniformity can precipitate resource waste and stakeholder alienation, contrasting with devolved frameworks in nations like Canada, where provincial care systems demonstrate greater fiscal prudence and equity through tailored governance.

Energy and Local Development Disputes

In February 2022, Maree Todd opposed a proposed small modular at the former site in , stating that she could not support it due to its high costs, high risks, and incompatibility with the Scottish National Party's (SNP) longstanding policy against development. She emphasized the need to prioritize renewables for Scotland's future, aligning with the SNP's platform that views nuclear as unsuitable for achieving net-zero goals. This position drew sharp criticism from local Conservative councillor Stuart Mackie, who accused Todd of "peddling misinformation" and failing the nuclear workforce and supply chain businesses in the north, where nuclear expertise has historically provided economic stability. Todd defended the SNP's anti-nuclear stance at a public meeting in March 2022, amid efforts by industry groups urging Scottish policymakers to reconsider opposition to low-carbon nuclear options. Critics, including opponents of SNP , contend that rejecting nuclear—despite its capacity for reliable baseload power—reflects ideological rigidity rather than empirical assessment of needs, particularly in a region like with legacy nuclear infrastructure and potential for job-creating projects. The SNP's preference for intermittent renewables over nuclear has been described in ary debates as "playground politics," potentially compromising Scotland's and local economic opportunities in favor of less dispatchable sources. On local development fronts, Todd advocated against bank branch closures in in 2025, expressing disappointment in Bank of Scotland's decision to shutter two branches in her constituency and meeting with on October 15 to press constituents' concerns over diminished rural access to . These closures exacerbate service erosion in remote Highland communities, mirroring tensions in where rapid renewable expansions—such as wind farms—have sparked local disputes over burdens without commensurate benefits, despite Todd's involvement in broader calls for parliamentary debates on Highland renewables' impacts. Such inconsistencies in SNP approaches, prioritizing green targets over pragmatic local development, have fueled critiques that ideological commitments hinder balanced in energy-dependent regions.

References

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