Mike Nesbitt will be the first person to have held the leadership of the UUP twice.
Mike Nesbitt has been ratified as the new leader of the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) during the party’s annual conference on Saturday. He addressed members by livestream as he is recovering from Covid-19. It is Nesbitt’s second time as leader – he served between 2012 and 2017, when he quit after disappointing assembly election results. He is now the first person to have twice held the top job in the UUP. This time he replaced Doug Beattie, who stood down as leader last month, citing “irreconcilable differences” with party officers. Nesbitt is also the party’s health minister in the executive at Stormont, a job he will continue to do. On Saturday, party delegates met to ratify Nesbitt as leader, before he made his first major address on Saturday afternoon. When Beattie unexpectedly resigned as leader in August, Nesbitt was the only candidate to declare an interest when nominations for the leadership opened. He has previously said he wants to see the UUP continuing with “progressive and inclusive outreach”. In his address Nesbitt said that if Stormont collapses again “it is gone for good”. And he warned unionists who support direct rule “to pause and reflect”. He told delegates the acid test for this Stormont mandate is the ability to co-operate. “I know there are unionists who will not support that approach,” he said. “Who would rather see devolution fail? I ask those unionists to pause and reflect. “What if you got your way? What then? “Direct rule from a London government apparently hell bent on delivering austerity plus? What additional influence would the government of Ireland exert on our affairs from Dublin?” The former broadcaster took over at the helm of the UUP in March 2012 when Tom Elliott stood down after just 18 months in the job. Nesbitt is well known for his long and high-profile career as a television news presenter. Born in 1957 in Belfast, he attended Campbell College and ran 400 metre hurdles for an Irish Schools athletics team. He became a sports presenter at the BBC, and he also anchored the flagship Good Morning Ulster radio programme. At UTV, he presented its evening news programme for 10 years and, during that time, co-presented with his wife Lynda Bryans. In 2008, he was appointed Victims’ Commissioner, a role designed to promote the interests of victims of the Troubles. However, he left the commission when he joined the Ulster Unionists in 2010. He ran as a candidate for the Ulster Conservatives and Unionists – New Force in the 2010 Westminster elections, but was defeated by DUP candidate Jim Shannon. Nesbitt was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly in 2011 as a representative for Strangford. As the saying goes, if at first you don’t succeed, try again. Mike Nesbitt has returned for a second shot at improving the UUP’s fortunes, but what will he do differently this time? The party’s prospects are worse than when he first quit seven years ago, and he also plans to double job as a minister and party leader. He isn’t the only member of the executive doing so, but he arguably has a harder task—putting his party back on track after the row that saw Doug Beattie stand down, alongside fixing the health service. As of this afternoon, Mike Nesbitt could have the two toughest jobs in Northern Ireland politics. You can watch Mike Nesbitt’s speech at the UUP conference and follow live coverage on the BBC News NI website from 14:00 BST. She is responding to questions over confidence in her office following references for Michael McMonagle. Officers responded to a report of an assault in Victoria Road in Ballymagorry on Sunday night. The department did not comply with environmental law in its previous ammonia emissions advice to planners. Pensioners call for the restoration of winter fuel payments at a rally at Stormont.
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