2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election explained

Election Name:2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2007 Northern Ireland Assembly election
Previous Mps:3rd Northern Ireland Assembly
Previous Year:2007
Elected Mps:MLAs elected
Next Year:2016
Seats For Election:All 108 seats to the Northern Ireland Assembly
Election Date:5 May 2011
Turnout:55.7% (6.6)
Leader1:Peter Robinson
Party1:Democratic Unionist Party
Leader Since1:31 May 2008
Leaders Seat1:Belfast East
Last Election1:36 seats, 30.1%
Seats1:38
Seat Change1:2
Popular Vote1:198,436
Percentage1:30.0%
Swing1:0.1%
Party2:Sinn Féin
Leader Since2:8 May 2007
Leaders Seat2:Mid Ulster
Last Election2:28 seats, 26.2%
Seats2:29
Seat Change2:1
Popular Vote2:178,224
Percentage2:26.9%
Swing2:0.7%
Leader3:Tom Elliott
Party3:Ulster Unionist Party
Leaders Seat3:Fermanagh and South Tyrone
Last Election3:18 seats, 14.9%
Seats3:16
Seat Change3:2
Popular Vote3:87,531
Percentage3:13.2%
Swing3:1.7%
Leader4:Margaret Ritchie
Leader Since4:7 February 2010
Party4:Social Democratic and Labour Party
Leaders Seat4:South Down
Last Election4:16 seats, 15.2%
Seats4:14
Seat Change4:2
Popular Vote4:94,286
Percentage4:14.2%
Swing4:1.0%
Leader5:David Ford
Leader Since5:6 October 2001
Party5:Alliance Party of Northern Ireland
Leaders Seat5:South Antrim
Last Election5:7 seats, 5.2%
Seats5:8
Seat Change5:1
Popular Vote5:50,875
Percentage5:7.7%
Swing5:2.5%
Leader6:Jim Allister
Leader Since6:7 December 2007
Party6:Traditional Unionist Voice
Leaders Seat6:North Antrim
Last Election6:Not established
Seats6:1
Seat Change6:1
Popular Vote6:16,480
Percentage6:2.5%
Swing6:New party
Leader7:Steven Agnew
Leader Since7:10 January 2011
Party7:Green Party Northern Ireland
Leaders Seat7:North Down
Last Election7:1 seat, 1.7%
Seats7:1
Seat Change7: 0
Popular Vote7:6,031
Percentage7:0.9%
Swing7: 0.8%
First Minister and
deputy First Minister
Posttitle:First Minister and
deputy First Minister
after election
Before Election:Peter Robinson (DUP) &
Martin McGuinness (SF)
After Election:Peter Robinson (DUP) &
Martin McGuinness (SF)

The 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election took place on Thursday, 5 May, following the dissolution of the Northern Ireland Assembly at midnight on 24 March 2011. It was the fourth election to take place since the devolved assembly was established in 1998.

It was held on the same day as elections for Northern Ireland's 26 local councils, the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly elections, a number of local elections in England and the United Kingdom Alternative Vote referendum. As in the past, the 2011 election to the Assembly was conducted using the single transferable vote (STV) system of proportional representation. The 108 seats were contested in 18 constituencies by 218 candidates, including 15 independents and the nominees of 14 separate political parties.

1,210,009 individuals were registered to vote in the 2011 Assembly election (representing an increase of 9.2% compared to the 2007 Assembly election).[1] [2] Turnout in the 2011 Assembly election was 55.7%, a decline of almost seven percentage points from the previous Assembly election and down over 14 percentage points from the first election to the Assembly in 1998.

As in the 2007 election, the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) and Sinn Féin (SF) remained the two largest parties in the Assembly, with the DUP winning 38 and Sinn Féin winning 29 of the Assembly's 108 seats. The Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) won 16 seats, the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) 14 and the Alliance 8, while one seat each was won by the Green Party, Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV) and an independent candidate.

Following the results of the election, Peter Robinson of the DUP and Martin McGuinness of Sinn Féin were nominated and subsequently re-elected as First Minister and deputy First Minister on 12 May 2011. The sole change to the Northern Ireland Executive was that the UUP lost a ministerial post to the Alliance.

Overview

The election was the first since the devolution of policing and justice powers to the assembly. In contrast to previous elections, it was relatively uncontroversial. The turnout was one of the lowest ever in a Northern Ireland election.Sinn Féin and the Democratic Unionist Party both continued to make gains, although the DUP vote share was slightly down. The election was a disaster for the Ulster Unionist Party, which came behind the Social Democratic and Labour Party in terms of first preference vote, although the UUP won more seats. The Ulster Unionist vote collapsed in Belfast, where it was eclipsed by the Alliance Party's, and in a number of other constituencies considered safe such as North Down.[3] The election was also poor for the SDLP, which lost two seats. The Alliance Party performed well, gaining a second seat in East Belfast (which a former Progressive Unionist Party member lost and the PUP failed to regain), while increasing the Alliance vote share significantly. Traditional Unionist Voice secured a single seat in North Antrim; its vote share was down from the May 2010 elections to the UK Parliament. Despite their first preference vote halving, the Green Party held their sole seat in North Down while the People before Profit Alliance narrowly failed to take the final seat in the Foyle constituency. The only member elected as an independent in 2007 (in West Tyrone) retired, leaving a single independent in the new Assembly (after three independents first elected on other tickets had retired or lost re-election), compared to five at the end of the previous one.

Results

As in the previous Assembly, the DUP's voting strength was reduced by one with the re-election on 12 May of Willie Hay (DUP, Foyle) to the non-partisan office of Speaker.[4] [5]

Ten seats on the Northern Ireland Executive were filled by the new Assembly on 16 May according to party strength under the d'Hondt method of proportional representation.

In addition, in separate votes on 12 and 16 May, the Assembly as a whole re-elected party leaders David Ford (Alliance), Peter Robinson (DUP) and Martin McGuinness (Sinn Féin) to their seats on the Executive as, respectively, Minister of Justice and First Minister and deputy First Minister. Thus the Executive's total membership, as in the past, is 13.[6] [7]

Numbers as reported by Wednesday, 11 May 2011.

Constituency results

Distribution of seats by constituency

Party affiliation of the six Assembly members returned by each constituency.[8] [9] [10] The first column indicates the party of the Member of the House of Commons (MP) returned by the corresponding parliamentary constituency in the general election of 6 May 2010 (under the "first past the post" method).[11]

(The constituencies are arranged here in rough geographical order around Lough Neagh from Antrim to Londonderry. To see them in alphabetical order, click the small square icon after "Constituency"; to restore this geographical order, click the icon after "No." at the left.)

No.2010 MPConstituencyCandi-
dates
Total
seats
Green
Sinn
Féin
SDLP
Alli-
ance
UUP
DUP
TUV
Ind.
Seat
gained
by
Seat
lost
by
1DUPNorth Antrim116-1--131-TUVSDLP
2DUPEast Antrim136-1-113--SFUUP
3DUPSouth Antrim106-1-113--DUPSDLP
4DUPBelfast North116-21--3--DUPUUP
5

SF

Belfast West146-51-------
6SDLPBelfast South146-12111----
7APNIBelfast East176---213--APNIPUP
8Ind.North Down1361--113--DUPUUP
9DUPStrangford116---123--UUPDUP
10DUPLagan Valley116---114--DUPSF
11DUPUpper Bann126-11-22----
12SDLPSouth Down116-22-11----
13

SF

Newry and Armagh116-31-11----
14

SF

Fermanagh & South Tyrone116-3--12--SFSDLP
15

SF

West Tyrone116-31-11--

SDLP

UUP

Ind

DUP

16

SF

Mid Ulster136-31-11----
17SDLPFoyle126-23--1----
18DUPEast Londonderry126-11--3-1IndUUP
18218108129148163811
 ---+2–2+1-+2+1–4
 -1081271671636-5-
 ---–1--–2--+4–1 Prog. U.
 2561081281671836-11 Prog. U.
 108-241862730-11 Prog. U.1 UKUP
 108-182462820-42 Prog. U.5 UKUP, 2 NIWC

Share of first-preference votes

Percentage of each constituency's first-preference votes.[12] Four highest percentages in each constituency shaded; absolute majorities underlined. The constituencies are arranged in the geographic order described for the table above; click the icon next to "Constituency" to see them in alphabetical order.

No.2015
MP
MP's %
of 2015
vote
ConstituencyGreen
Sinn
Féin
SDLP
Alli-
ance
UUP
DUP
TUV
Ind.
Others.
Total
votes
Eligible
elector-
ate
Turn-
out
%
1 DUP46.4%North Antrim15.39.14.611.747.611.640,31374,76054.8%
2 DUP45.9%East Antrim2.38.24.615.516.946.24.61.829,02361,61747.8%
3 DUP33.9%South Antrim14.510.614.217.838.33.41.332,16465,23150.1%
4 DUP40.0%Belfast North31.912.06.38.237.11.03.533,47068,11950.3%
5 SF71.1%Belfast West66.113.21.14.27.57.60.434,64761,52057.9%
6 SDLP41.0%Belfast South2.812.523.919.813.624.33.232,30862,48452.4%
7 All.37.2%Belfast East1.83.20.826.39.744.12.26.65.432,34761,26353.6%
8 Ind.63.3%North Down7.91.02.718.610.444.22.213.028,09862,17045.9%
9 DUP45.9%Strangford3.08.514.420.448.82.82.029,66862,17848.5%
10 DUP49.8%Lagan Valley1.73.46.112.420.453.12.935,48767,53253.1%
11 DUP33.8%Upper Bann27.211.46.524.627.12.40.642,36277,90555.3%
12 SDLP48.5%South Down2.730.935.82.110.612.55.641,72673,24058.1%
13 SF42.0%Newry & Armagh40.823.51.618.713.11.80.20.246,51477,54461.3%
14 SF45.5%Fermanagh & S. Tyrone40.39.61.819.324.42.62.147,99970,98569.0%
15 SF48.4%West Tyrone50.28.62.210.323.15.739,30362,97064.0%
16 SF52.0%Mid Ulster49.214.70.910.316.74.90.62.742,73866,60265.3%
17 SDLP44.7%Foyle34.035.30.918.48.03.438,84768,66356.6%
18 DUP34.6%East Londonderry21.114.95.58.436.94.58.634,72265,22654.1%
18 0.926.914.27.713.230.02.52.22.3 661,7361,210,00955.6%
–0.8+0.8–1.0+2.5–1.7–0.1+2.5–1.6–0.5–28,577+102,105–7.2%
1.7 26.215.25.214.930.13.82.8690,3131,107,904 62.9%
0.4 23.517.03.722.725.75.62.8692,0261,097,526 63.1%
0.1 17.622.06.521.318.110.93.5823,5651,178,556 69.9%

Votes cast for minor parties and independents

Out of the 22 candidates from the seven parties which won no seats in 2011, the four candidates who won more than 1,000 first-preference votes (and more than 4% of the total first preferences) in their respective constituencies were:

  1. Eamonn McCann of the People Before Profit Alliance in Foyle: 3,120 (8.0%),
  2. Henry Reilly of the UK Independence Party in South Down: 2,332 (5.6%),
  3. Gerry Carroll of People Before Profit in Belfast West: 1,661 (4.8%), and
  4. Brian Ervine of the Progressive Unionist Party in Belfast East: 1,493 (4.6%)[13]

Three-fifths, or 8,606 (60%), of the 14,338 first preferences cast for the seven minor parties went to these four candidates.

Of the 15 independent candidates, running in 9 separate constituencies, the 8 who won more than 1,000 first-preference votes (and over 2.5% of the first-preference total) were:

  1. David McClarty, MLA, formerly Ulster Unionist, re-elected in East Londonderry: 3,003 (8.6%),
  2. Alan McFarland, MLA, formerly Ulster Unionist, defeated in North Down: 1,879 (6.7%),
  3. Alan Chambers, also losing in North Down: 1,765 (6.3%),
  4. Dawn Purvis, MLA, formerly Progressive Unionist, defeated in Belfast East (see above): 1,702 (5.3%),
  5. Paul McFadden in Foyle: 1,280 (3.3%),
  6. Raymond McCord in Belfast North: 1,176 (3.5%),
  7. Paddy McGowan in West Tyrone: 1,145 (2.9%), and
  8. Eugene McMenamin, also in West Tyrone: 1,096 (2.8%)

A majority (8,395 or 54%) of the 15,535 first-preference votes cast for independents went to the first four of these candidates, three of whom had been elected by other parties in 2007. David McClarty was the only successful independent candidate.

Seats changing hands

Turnover in members since 2007

Thirty-one members of the previous Assembly during all of part of its term (2007–2011) did not offer themselves for re-election in May 2011. Another eight who did seek re-election were unsuccessful.

Members who left during the previous Assembly's term

Several of the 14 members who retired early from the Northern Ireland Assembly did so either after being elected or re-elected to the British House of Commons on 6 May 2010 (as MPs), or else in anticipation of being elected to the Dáil Éireann (lower house of the Irish parliament) on 25 February 2011 (as a TD). [Three retired or retiring members are [[Privy Council of the United Kingdom|Privy Counsellors of the United Kingdom]] (PC).]

NameTitle in
2011
PartyAssembly
constituency
Left AssemblySuccessorSuccessor
returned?
[deceased]DUPEast Antrimyes
UUPSouth Antrimyes
Sinn FéinEast Londonderrydid not run (SF hold)
DUPStrangfordyes
SDLPBelfast SouthConall McDevittyes
MP, PCDUPLagan Valleyyes
MPDUPNorth Antrimyes
MPDUPUpper Bannyes
MPDUPSouth Antrimyes
MPAllianceBelfast Eastyes
MPDUPStrangforddid not run (UUP gain)
MP, PCDUPBelfast Northyes
MPSDLPFoylenot elected (SDLP hold)
TDSinn FéinBelfast Westyes

Changes in membership at the election

These are the 25 changes in membership that occurred between the third Assembly's dissolution in March 2011 and the fourth Assembly's election in May. Seventeen sitting members did not present themselves for re-election and another eight were defeated at the polls. One re-elected member had been elected with a different affiliation in 2007.

The numbers indicate the percentage of votes each member received in the first round of counting under the Single Transferable Vote in the 2011 election, and the round which decided his or her election or defeat.

In some constituencies (Foyle, West Tyrone and Fermanagh & South Tyrone), it is not possible to couple a single outgoing member by party with a single successor. The pairs of outgoing and incoming members in those seats are presented in arbitrary order.

Changes in membership without a change in party

Most of these changes occurred due to a member's retirement, although one defeated member of the SDLP, in Foyle, was succeeded by another member of the SDLP.

Outgoing member(s)Party1st
pref.
Round
ConstituencyNew member(s)Party1st
pref.
Round
(retiring)Ulster UnionistMid UlsterUUP10.3%6
(retiring)SDLPSouth DownSDLP9.0%9

[replaced [[Mark Durkan]], MP]
Mary Bradley (retiring)
SDLP6.8%
 
4
 
Foyle
Colum Eastwood
SDLP12.8%
7.6%
4
7
(retiring)
Baron Browne of Belmont
Democratic UnionistBelfast EastDUP8.3%11
(retiring)Ulster UnionistNorth AntrimUUP6.2% 9
(retiring)
Lord Empey
Ulster UnionistBelfast EastUUP6.8%11
(retiring)
[replaced [[Francie Brolly]]]
Sinn Féin (suspended)East LondonderrySinn Féin13.5%6
(retiring)Sinn FéinWest TyroneSinn Féin12.9% 4
(retiring)AllianceEast AntrimAlliance10.0%9
, PC (retiring)
Lord Bannside
Democratic UnionistNorth AntrimDUP8.1%8
(retiring)Ulster UnionistUpper BannUUP7.9%7
(retiring)Green Party in Northern IrelandNorth DownGreen7.9%11

Seats changing hands between the parties

Note that the party changes in Lagan Valley, Strangford and East Antrim cancelled each other out.

Outgoing member(s)Party1st
pref
Round
Constituency
New member(s)
Party1st
pref
Round

Kieran Deeny (retiring)
Democratic Unionist
Independent
0
West Tyrone
Joe Byrne
UUP
SDLP
5
SDLP0South AntrimDUP4
Ulster Unionist7Belfast NorthDUP6

Gerry McHugh (retiring)
SDLP
Ind. (elected as SF)
Fermanagh &
South Tyrone

Phil Flanagan
Sinn Féin6
Ind. (elected as UUP)7 East LondonderryIndependent 7
Ind. (elected as UUP)9 North DownDUP2
SDLP9North AntrimTrad. U. Voice9
Ind. (elected as Prog. U.)11 Belfast EastAlliance7
(retiring)Sinn FéinLagan ValleyDUP7
(retiring)
[replaced [[Jim Shannon]]]
Democratic UnionistStrangfordUUP6
(retiring)Ulster UnionistEast AntrimSinn Féin 10

Member returning with a different affiliation

David McClarty, originally elected from East Londonderry as an Ulster Unionist, although not re-nominated by the UUP in 2011, stood successfully for re-election as an independent. This reduced the UUP's strength from 2007, while keeping independent strength in the Assembly at one (as Kieran Deeny, the retiring independent member, was not succeeded in West Tyrone by another independent). McClarty decided not to re-join the UUP after his re-election.

Speaker

The presiding officer of the Northern Ireland's Assembly (like those for Scotland and Wales, but unlike those for the United Kingdom or the Republic of Ireland) does not remain impartial during the election period. The sitting Speaker, in this instance William Hay (DUP, Foyle), must revert to his or her party colours and campaign for a seat on its manifesto. Once re-elected as an MLA (as Hay was), he or she becomes eligible for re-election as Speaker to resume unbiased authority over the Assembly.[16] The regional media reported that Sinn Féin's Francie Molloy, an outgoing Deputy Speaker, had hoped to win election as Speaker when the 2011 Assembly first met;[17] in the event, following inter-party negotiations, Hay was re-elected and Molloy was nominated by his party for, and elected to, a newly created position of Principal Deputy Speaker with a presumed right of succession.

Electoral administration

Eligibility and proof of identity

European Union (EU) and Commonwealth citizens aged 18 or over on election day were entitled to vote. The deadline for voters to register to vote in 5 May elections was midnight on 14 April 2011. All voters had to present one piece of photographic identification in order to cast a vote at the polling station: accepted forms of ID were an Electoral Identity Card, a photographic Northern Ireland or Great Britain driving licence, a European Union member state passport, a Translink 60+ SmartPass, a Translink Senior SmartPass, a Translink Blind Person's SmartPass or a Translink War Disabled SmartPass.[18] Voters who didn't have an accepted type of photographic ID had until 22 April 2011 to apply for an Electoral Identity Card from the Electoral Office. A judicial review brought by candidates in the simultaneous local government elections, challenging the non-acceptance of EU national identity cards as a proof of identity, failed on 4 May 2011.[19]

Speed of counting of votes

In the days following the 2011 Assembly election concerns were raised by politicians and others about the time it took for ballots to be verified and counted. The first result came in at 7:00 p.m. on Friday 6 May, nine hours after counting began and 21 hours after polls closed.[20] The announcement of the final results for some constituencies came two days after the polls closed. In contrast, the first result for elections held in Scotland on the same day as the Assembly election came in at 12:54 a.m., just under three hours after counting began, and the final result came in at 5:21 p.m. on the same day (Friday 6 May). In response to the criticisms about the speed of counting, Northern Ireland's Chief Electoral Officer, Graham Shields, defended the process, saying that it was "about accuracy, not about speed", adding that "This is a complicated process and people have to accept that. We will take as long as it takes to get it right."[21]

See also

External links

Official sites

News reports

Party web sites, manifestoes and election broadcasts

The party election broadcasts (PEBs) in this table are at the BBC News site. Almost every individual party web site below also shows a copy of or a link to at least one of the party's own election broadcasts.

Campaign or party web siteManifesto1st broadcast2nd broadcast3rd broadcast
BBC NewsList of all election addresses in the order they were broadcast
Alliance PartyManifestoWednesday 13 AprilTuesday 26 April
British National PartyManifestoMonday 11 April
Democratic Unionist PartyManifestoMonday 4 April Tuesday 19 April Tuesday 3 May
Green PartyManifestoWednesday 20 April
People Before Profit AllianceTuesday 19 April
Progressive Unionist PartyManifesto
Sinn FéinManifestoTuesday 5 April Monday 18 AprilMonday 2 May
Social Dem. & Labour PartyManifestoWednesday 6 AprilFriday 15 AprilThursday 28 April
Socialist Party[Belfast:] E S WMonday 18 April
Traditional Unionist VoiceManifestoWednesday 20 April
Ulster Unionist PartyManifestoThursday 7 April Thursday 14 April Wednesday 27 April
UK Independence PartyManifestoFriday 8 April
Workers' PartyMan. SummaryWednesday 20 April

Party leaders' debates

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Electoral Office for Northern Ireland: Eligible Electorate Statistics. 7 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110721204915/http://www.eoni.org.uk/ni_assembly_election_-_eligible_electorate.pdf . 21 July 2011 . dead .
  2. Web site: Electoral Office for Northern Ireland: Registered Voter Statistics. 7 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110721204925/http://www.eoni.org.uk/votes_polled_summary-2.pdf . 21 July 2011 . dead .
  3. News: Henry McDonald . Ulster Unionists head for fourth place . The Guardian . 6 May 2011 . 3 June 2011 . London . 9 November 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131109013145/http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2011/may/06/northern-ireland-assembly-ulster-unionists-fourth . live .
  4. http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/politics/election-2011/allister-outraged-as-speaker-retakes-post-with-help-of-sinn-fein-15155274.html "Allister outraged as Speaker retakes post with help of Sinn Fein"
  5. http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/local-national/uk/sinn-feins-francie-molloy-likely-to-be-stormont-speaker-in-2014-15155275.html "Sinn Fein's Francie Molloy likely to be Stormont Speaker in 2014"
  6. "New Executive ministers to be appointed on Monday ", BBC News, 16 May 2011
  7. http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2011/0517/1224297120364.html "Stormont Assembly votes in new team of Ministers"
  8. Web site: Latest 2011 Election results. UTV. 12 May 2011. dead. https://archive.today/20130419043645/http://www.u.tv/election2011/results.aspx. 19 April 2013.
  9. News: Election 2011 - Northern Ireland - Constituencies. BBC. 12 May 2011. 12 April 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130412011646/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/special/election2011/constituency/html/northern_ireland.stm. live.
  10. http://www.eoni.org.uk/index/elections/elections-2011/ni-assembly-election-2011-results.htm NI Assembly Election 2011 Results
  11. http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/issues/politics/election/2010west/rw2010.htm Westminster General Election (NI) Thursday 6 May 2010
  12. Compiled by looking up each constituency at this site: "Full Northern Ireland Results", BBC News, 11 May 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2011
  13. Four weeks after the election, in which he was the Progressive Unionists' only candidate, Brian Ervine announced that he would resign as party leader. "PUP leader Brian Ervine to stand down", BBC News, 2 June 2011. Retrieved 6 June 2011
  14. http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/politics/election-2011/mcclarty-withdraw-sinn-fein-lsquoscumrsquo-remark-or-itrsquos-no-deal-tom-15154182.html "McClarty: withdraw Sinn Fein ‘scum’ remark or it's no deal, Tom"
  15. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-13365324 "David McClarty says he will remain an independent MLA"
  16. News: Lord Alderdice calls for Stormont Speaker rules change . BBC . 25 January 2010 . 27 January 2011 . 28 February 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110228090727/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12574875 . live .
  17. News: First day of new assembly term . BBC . 12 May 2011 . 17 May 2011 . 18 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110518211741/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-13382983 . live .
  18. Web site: Electoral Office for Northern Ireland: Electoral Identity Card. 5 January 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110721204601/http://www.eoni.org.uk/information_leaflet_-_electoral_identity_card-13.pdf . 21 July 2011.
  19. Web site: UTV news report . 21 May 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120928230805/http://www.u.tv/News/Legal-challenge-over-voting-ID-fails/bc078757-99e8-48df-8c0e-e8b57ba78911 . 28 September 2012 .
  20. News: NI Stormont Assembly election results: day two as it happened . BBC News . 7 May 2011 . 12 May 2011 . 10 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110510035058/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/northern_ireland_politics/9478423.stm . live .
  21. News: Electoral chief defends staff over results delays . BBC . 6 May 2011 . 12 May 2011 . 10 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110510063521/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-13319182 . live .