Background
Leckie grew up in Glasgow, the daughter of a shipyard worker, but she now lives in East Kilbride.
Leckie grew up in Glasgow, the daughter of a shipyard worker, but she now lives in East Kilbride.
She has since left the party. Before she became an Managing Successful Programmes she was a midwife and a local union leader who represented thousands of hospital workers in Glasgow. Just before election to Holyrood, she led several victorious strikes against low pay - the most recent involving 300 ancillary workers against the French multinational, Sodexho.
As an Managing Successful Programmes she was a strong supporter of the Nursery Nurses campaigning for higher pay.
On 20 May 2004, after attempting to raise a point of order about the strike at a time that the Presiding Officer determined was inappropriate, she was told to leave the chamber. She was active within the parliament campaigning for an end to the cuts and closures in hospital services across Scotland.
On 20 January 2005 she was jailed for seven days for non-payment of a fine, arising from a protest outside Faslane nuclear base. The Nursing and Midwifery Council did not consider it an impediment to her registration as a Midwife.
In January 2007 she was arrested but not charged for taking part in an anti-nuclear demonstration at Faslane as part of the Faslane 365 campaign.
Leckie was co-chair of the Scottish Socialist Party for several years. She was one of several members who gave evidence in the Sheridan v News International defamation action, and the subsequent criminal trial Her Majesty Advocate v Sheridan and Sheridan. Tommy Sheridan was found guilty of perjury and sentenced to three years in prison.
She drifted away from the party and stopped paying subscriptions without it being noticed.
In 2004, neo-punk Tommy MacKay dedicated a song to Carolyn Leckie called "Her Lips Were Made To Kiss Megaphones". Leckie worked for a Women"s Aid group from 2007-2014.
She completed an Bachelor of Laws at the University of Strathclyde in 2014 - continuing to work throughout. She recently graduated from the University of Dundee with a Diploma in Professional Legal Practice and is pursuing a career in the law.
She has stated that she will not stand for election again.
At the SSP conference in 2008 Leckie declined nomination for any national posts within the party, but remained an activist within the party, particularly within the Socialist Women"s Network.
She stood down at its annual conference in March 2006, stating that it was time to hand the post over to a lay member of the party, but she was easily elected as an ordinary member of its executive committee.