Career
Born on Clydeside, Elliott became involved in the co-operative movement. In the late 1920s he moved to Manchester to become editor of the monthly co-operative journal The Millgate Monthly. In 1929, the Sunday newspaper Reynold"s News was bought by the Company-operative Press, and Elliott was appointed as its editors
He worked on updating the appearance of the paper, and appointed well-known figures such as H. North. Brailsford and Hamilton Fyfe as columnists.
In 1937, he wrote a comprehensive account of the movement, England: Cradle of Company-operation, while he also launched the United Peace Alliance to campaign against Franco in the Spanish Civil War. In 1941 Elliott moved to London to work on the Evening Standard, then showing sympathy with radical causes under its editor, Michael Foot.
He succeeded Foot as editor in 1943, but left in the run-up to the 1945 United Kingdom general election after owner Lord Beaverbrook began putting pressure on him to advocate a vote for the Conservative Party. He became Editorial Advisor at the Daily Mirror, where he masterminded its campaign to support the Labour Party at the 1945 election.
He later moved to supervise the Mirror"s newspaper and radio operations in Australia, but returned to become General Manager of the Daily Herald in 1952.
Elliott became editor of the Herald in November 1953. In 1957, the Trades Union Congress gave up editorial control of the paper to Odhams Press, and Elliott left the paper. He was then engaged by Tim Hewat to research a brief for a television documentary strand on Independent Television, to be based on social issues.
This led to the Searchlight series, an important precursor of World in Action, on which Elliott worked as a researcher