United Ulster Unionist Party Explained

United Ulster Unionist Party
Leader:Ernest Baird
Leader1 Name:Reg Empey
Leader1 Title:Deputy Leader
Founded:1975
Dissolved:May 1984
Split:Ulster Vanguard
Ideology:Ulster loyalism
Anti-Power Sharing
Return of devolution
National:UUUC (1975-77)
State:Northern Ireland

The United Ulster Unionist Party (UUUP) was a unionist political party which existed in Northern Ireland between 1975 and 1984.

It emerged from a division in the Vanguard Unionist Progressive Party in the late 1970s. Vanguard had traditionally opposed the concept of compulsory power sharing with nationalists enshrined in the Sunningdale Agreement, but after the failure of Sunningdale, the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention was set up to provide a forum with the aim of finding a new settlement for Northern Ireland. During the proceedings the leader of Vanguard, William Craig, proposed a voluntary coalition with the nationalist Social Democratic and Labour Party. Many in Vanguard found this anathema, including the party's deputy leader Ernest Baird, Mid Ulster MP John Dunlop and East Belfast Convention member (and future Ulster Unionist Party leader) Reg Empey. They left Vanguard and formed the United Ulster Unionist Movement. Initially Baird denied that this was a party since the original aim was to create a single Unionist party. When this aim proved unattainable the UUUM relaunched as the United Ulster Unionist Party led by Baird with Empey as Deputy Leader.[1]

Many critics highlighted the irony of the name, given that the UUUP was a breakaway from Vanguard, itself a breakaway from the Ulster Unionist Party and there were many other Unionist parties in existence.

The UUUP did not prosper long. In the 1979 general election Dunlop held his seat but only due to an agreement with other unionist parties to not divide the unionist vote where a nationalist might get elected.[2] Elsewhere Baird stood in Fermanagh and South Tyrone, dividing the unionist vote but polling poorly.[3] It has been argued that it was Baird's candidacy that ensured a victory for Frank Maguire in the seat.[4]

The decline was evident even before the local government elections of 1981 as 4 of the 12 UUUP councillors elected in 1977 had defected to other Unionist parties (2 to UUP, 1 to DUP and 1 to the Ulster Popular Unionist Party). The party had a miserable showing in the 1981 elections with its overall vote share declining from 2.8% in 1977 to 0.7% in 1981. It only won 5 council seats (a decline of 7 seats) and even then one of these was purely due to a quirk of the electoral system, as the party only polled 105 votes (1.6%) in Lisburn 'E' against 1,909 (30.0%) for the DUP and 1,830 (28.7%) for the UUP. However they benefited from the other two Unionist parties only putting up one candidate each and benefitted from hefty transfers to win an unlikely seat.[5]

In 1982 a new Northern Ireland Assembly was established to provide a degree of scrutiny over the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland. The UUUP got a derisory vote, with even Dunlop getting barely 3% of the vote in his Mid Ulster constituency.[2] The party soon folded. Dunlop remained as MP for Mid Ulster until the 1983 general election but did not contest his seat. The formal end came in May 1984 when Baird dissolved the party and left it to individual members to choose which Unionist party to join in its wake.

Election results: 1979

Constituency Candidate Votes % Position
10,607 17.0 4
29,249 44.7 1

Notes and References

  1. W.D. Flackes & Sydnet Elliott, Northern Ireland: A Political Directory 1968-1993, Belfast, 1994, p. 347
  2. Web site: Mid Ulster 1973-82. www.ark.ac.uk. 2020-09-08. 2018-06-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20180623075559/http://www.ark.ac.uk/elections/cmu.htm. live.
  3. Web site: Fermanagh and South Tyrone 1973-1982. www.ark.ac.uk. 2020-09-08. 2020-07-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20200729131924/https://www.ark.ac.uk/elections/cfst.htm. live.
  4. David Boothroyd, The History of British Political Parties, 2001, p. 331
  5. Web site: Local Government Elections 1981. www.ark.ac.uk. 2020-09-08. 2021-03-16. https://web.archive.org/web/20210316144350/https://www.ark.ac.uk/elections/flg81.htm. live.