Michael James Marra is a Scottish Labour politician who has been a Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for North East Scotland since May 2021.
Michael Marra was born in Dundee in 1979. He joined the Labour Party as a teenager.
Marra was educated at St John's High School, the University of Glasgow and the London School of Economics.
Before becoming an MSP, Marra worked for Oxfam and the Leverhulme Research Centre for Forensic Science at the University of Dundee.
Michael Marra was elected as a councillor in Dundee's Lochee ward in 2017. He stood down at the 2022 Scottish Parliament election.
Marra previously worked for Scottish Labour Leader Iain Gray as an advisor prior to and during the 2011 Scottish Parliamentary election.
In the 2015 United Kingdom general election, he contested Dundee West but lost to Chris Law from the SNP.
In November 2020, Marra was confirmed as a candidate on Labour's regional list for the North East, coinciding with his sister Jenny Marra announcing that she would not seek re-election to the Scottish Parliament.
On 8 May 2021 Marra was elected as a Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for North East Scotland. He had been appointed as Education and Skills spokesperson in Scottish Labour's campaign cabinet just before the 2021 Scottish Parliament elections. He was retained as Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills after the election.
He has described himself as being part of Labour's "soft left".
In 2021 Michael Marra won the Holyrood magazine âÂÂOne For The Watchingâ award, a newcomer award judged by a panel made up of senior MSPs, journalists, and ScotlandâÂÂs two top pollsters.
In April 2023 it was announced he would take on the role of Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Finance
Marra backed the UK GovernmentâÂÂs decision to introduce means-testing for the Winter Fuel Payment, voting in the Scottish Parliament against calls to reverse the decision.
He is a member of the Fabian Society's executive committee.
Since 2021, Marra has been campaigning for Alzheimer's disease in footballers to be classed as an industrial disease. A study carried out for the Football Association and the Professional Footballersâ Association in 2019 discovered that there was a five-fold increase in AlzheimerâÂÂs disease among the former players.
Marra had said: âÂÂThe Scottish Government must recognise that these injuries are a form of industrial disease and allow these players to access the support they need, and deserve.âÂÂ
Michael Marra is married and has three children. His sister is the former Scottish Labour MSP Jenny Marra, and his uncle is the Dundonian folk singer Michael Marra, who died in 2012.
He is a lifelong Dundee United supporter.