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McCallister sacked as UUP deputy leader over unionist unity speech | McCallister sacked as UUP deputy leader over unionist unity speech |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The South Down MLA, John McCallister, has lost his position as Ulster Unionist deputy leader after making a href="http://uup.org/news/1167/21/Speech-made-by-John-McCallister-MLA-on-the-Covenant-and-civic-unionism" >speech criticising unionist unity. | |
UUP leader, Mike Nesbitt, is understood to have viewed sections of the speech as an attack on his leadership. | UUP leader, Mike Nesbitt, is understood to have viewed sections of the speech as an attack on his leadership. |
In his speech, Mr McCallister expressed the fear that the Ulster Unionists were "sleepwalking into unionist unity". | In his speech, Mr McCallister expressed the fear that the Ulster Unionists were "sleepwalking into unionist unity". |
He said such a move would deprive voters of choice and entrench tribal politics. | He said such a move would deprive voters of choice and entrench tribal politics. |
In the address that he made on Saturday - to mark the centenary of the signing of the Ulster Covenant - Mr McCallister said recent shared commemorations, shared events and shared statements gave the impression that the unity train had left the station. | In the address that he made on Saturday - to mark the centenary of the signing of the Ulster Covenant - Mr McCallister said recent shared commemorations, shared events and shared statements gave the impression that the unity train had left the station. |
Replacement | |
In a BBC interview, the South Down MLA denied this was an attack on Mike Nesbitt's leadership, insisting he was focussing on the perception of a shift towards unity. | In a BBC interview, the South Down MLA denied this was an attack on Mike Nesbitt's leadership, insisting he was focussing on the perception of a shift towards unity. |
However Mr Nesbitt has responded swiftly - by stripping Mr McCallister of his deputy leader's job and reviewing whether the party needs to appoint a replacement. | However Mr Nesbitt has responded swiftly - by stripping Mr McCallister of his deputy leader's job and reviewing whether the party needs to appoint a replacement. |
When the pair contested the UUP leadership in March, Mr Nesbitt beat Mr McCallister by a heavy majority, winning by 536 votes to 129. | |
Three days later, he reappointed the South Down assembly member as UUP deputy leader - a role Mr McCallister had held under the previous UUP leader, Tom Elliot. | |
Mr Nesbitt is former UTV news television presenter who joined the UUP in 2010. | |
Before his move into party politics, he also served for two years as one of four Victims Commissioners. | |
Discipline | |
His first six months as leader of the UUP have seen two high-profile and long standing UUP politicians leave the party. | |
In May, Strangford assembly member David McNarry was expelled by a UUP disciplinary committee. | |
Mr McNarry had been involved in a five-month long dispute with the previous leader, Tom Elliot, over a newspaper interview he had given, detailing discussions between the UUP and DUP about unionist unity. | |
In August, the former Fermanagh South Tyrone MP, Ken Maginnis, quit the party after a row over controversial comments he made about homosexuality. | |
Mr Maginnis had been stripped of the party whip at Westminster two months earlier, after describing homosexuality as "unnatural and deviant" on the BBC's Nolan Show. | |
Resigning, the UUP peer said he had no regrets about making the remarks and claimed Mr Nesbitt's election of as leader had been a "mistake". |
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