United Unionist Coalition
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (April 2008) |
Northern Ireland |
This article is part of the series: |
|
In Northern Ireland |
---|
MLA First Minister and deputy First Minister |
In the United Kingdom |
Committees: Affairs - Grand |
In the European Union |
Related political parties |
Designated Unionist Designated Nationalist |
Related bodies |
North/South Ministerial Council |
See also |
St Andrews Agreement (2006) Segregation in Northern Ireland |
Other countries · Atlas Politics Portal |
The United Unionist Coalition, also known as the United Unionist Assembly Party, was formed by a collection of unionist members of the Northern Ireland Assembly who were elected as "independent unionists" in 1998. Once sitting they decided to form themselves into an official grouping inside the assembly and chose the title "United Unionist Assembly Party". As such they are more a coalition of political expediency rather than a coherent political party. Also, as a consequence they have not contested elections as a party though some local government candidates have used the label.
They are formally registered with the Electoral Commission as the "United Unionist Coalition", a name which recalls the anti-Sunningdale Agreement coalition of Unionist parties in the 1970s, the United Ulster Unionist Council.
One of the independent Unionists, Denis Watson, subsequently joined the Democratic Unionist Party, although he remains the party's registered leader.[1] In the 2003 Assembly elections no independent Unionists were elected at all.
The party currently has two elected councillors: Fraser Agnew on Newtownabbey Borough Council and Boyd Douglas on Limavady Borough Council. The party has since gained seven new councillors, 6 in Ballymena and another one in Limavady by defections.