Anthony David McRae (born 7 April 1957 in Tumut, New South Wales) was an ALP member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly from 2001 to 2008, representing the electorate of Riverton.
In 1991 McRae was a consultant with Murdoch University colleagues on greenhouse gas/energy efficiency, including an analysis of energy use at Argyle diamond mine and Warmun community and in 1995 McRae was appointed the first National Director of Research & Information at the National Native Title Tribunal (1995-2000).
Other notable portfolio achievements include completing the expansion of the Dampier-Bunbury Gas pipeline reserve through the controversial Perth-Bunbury corridor; leading negotiations with landholders and conservationists on the State's $350m natural resource management plan; leading the opposition against the Australian Nationalist Movement fire bombings of Chinese restaurants in 2004; being one of the first Australian political delegation leaders to visit Indonesia following Timor-Leste's independence.
McRae was one of a number of ministers who resigned in 2007 following CCC investigations into lobbyists and business-Government relations.
The WA CCC Parliamentary Commissioner noted in his report on the matter that McRae had "neither requested nor received" any benefit from his dealings with the lobbyists.