Ian Paisley announces resignation

End of an Era


Reports obtained from:

(1) Irish Republican News, (2) Irish News


Tuesday-Wednesday, 4-5 March, 2008


Tuesday-Wednesday, 4-5 March, 2008

Flash: Ian Paisley announces resignation

By Irish Republican News

Rev Ian Paisley has announced he is to resign as leader of the Democratic Unionist Party and First Minister in the northern Executive in May.

He confirmed his decision to go in May after increased pressure from within his party in recent weeks to stand aside.

The elderly First Minister, who will remain as an MP in the Westminster parliament and Assembly member, will quit after a high-profile investment conference in Belfast.

It comes after his son was forced to resign from his Junior Minister position over a financial scandal two weeks ago.

Paisley has dominated Ulster unionism since the 1960s. He will turn 82 next month.

The unionist leader said: "I came to this decision a few weeks ago when I was thinking very much about the conference and what was going to come after the conference.

"I thought that it is a marker, a very big marker and it would be a very appropriate time for me to bow out."

Mr Paisley's career, in which religion and politics always intertwined, has spanned five decades. Regarded for much of his career by nationalists as an intransigent sectarian bigot, he capitalised on his appeal to unionist extremists and ultimately succeeded where his political rivals failed. In the end, and to the chagrin of many of his hardline supporters, he formed a devolved power-sharing executive with Sinn Fein's Martin McGuinness as his Deputy First Minister.

His decision to resign follows discussions by his fellow ministers in the executive. DUP deputy leader and Stormont Finance Minister Peter Robinson is already the early favourite to succeed Mr Paisley, with Economy Minister Nigel Dodds likely to challenge for the leadership.

Announcing his resignation, Mr Paisley would not be drawn on who would succeed him.

"This is not the Church of Rome," he said. "This is not Apostolic succession and I have no right to say who will succeed me.

"The person will succeed me when the mark is on the paper and the ballot is cast.

"Whoever that will be will have my support and encouragement and if he wants to take my advice, he will get that advice if he asks for it, but I will not be sitting like Putin in Russia saying to the president This is the way you have to go."

"When I make a break, it is a break," he added

Copyright © Irish Republican News 2008


Tuesday-Wednesday, 4-5 March, 2008

End of an Era

By Irish Republican News

Peter Robinson is the clear favourite to succeed Ian Paisley following his historic announcement that he will quit as First Minister and leader of the DUP.

Paisley confirmed his decision to go in May after mounting pressure from within his party in recent weeks to stand aside.

Anger at a decision to appoint his son to the Policing Board -- days after a financial scandal forced his son to leave his position as Junior Minister in the northern Executive -- is thought to have finally forced the 81-year-old leader to confirm his departure.

Rev Paisley will remain as an MP and assembly member but step down as First Minister after a high-profile investment conference in Belfast.

Although republicans consider the DUP leader to have been one of the major causes of conflict in Ireland over the decades, Sinn Fein joined rival unionists and the British and Irish governments in commending Mr Paisley's recent conversion to power sharing.

Mr Paisley explained his decision to stand down in a television news interview.

"I came to this decision a few weeks ago when I was thinking very much about the conference and what was going to come after the conference,'' he said.

"I thought that it is a marker, a very big marker, and it would be a very appropriate time for me to bow out."

But it is clear internal party pressures became too much for him not to give notice of his departure. DUP deputy leader and finance minister Peter Robinson appears certain to replace him as party leader and First Minister, but Mr Paisley would not be drawn on his successor.

"This is not the Church of Rome," he said. "This is not Apostolic succession and I have no right to say who will succeed me.

"The person will succeed me when the mark is on the paper and the ballot is cast."

Mr Robinson paid tribute to his long time leader late last night.

"When Dr Paisley entered politics our position within the union was being eroded. Sinn Fein vowed to bring down Stormont. Today they are sitting inside Stormont in a Northern Ireland assembly as a minority party of a unionist majority executive.

"The IRA was armed and engaged in a bloody murder campaign. Today Republicans have been forced to give up their guns and embrace the policing structures of the British state," he said.

Ulster Unionist leader Sir Reg Empey described Mr Paisley's departure as a "brutal and merciless" political coup by the DUP's assembly party.

Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams said Mr Paisley had ended his political career on a positive note and commended his "crucial role" in forging the agreement with Sinn Fein last year which restored the political institutions.

"Whatever people might say, his political career has ended with a good and positive legacy for the people who live on this island," he said.

Former British prime minister Tony Blair praised Paisley's "decisive" contribution to the peace process.

Former SDLP leader John Hume said Ian Paisley said there was an irony in his finest moment being his elevation to First Minister last year.

"For years he said no to what I and the SDLP were doing, through Sunningdale to the Good Friday Agreement. He refused to allow his party to even engage in the talks that led to the Good Friday Agreement," Mr Hume said.

"But he eventually said yes and he must be given credit for that."

British prime minister Gordon Brown said Mr Paisley had made a "huge contribution" to political life.

"Progress on bringing a lasting peace to Northern Ireland would not have been possible without his immense courage and leadership."

Taoiseach Bertie Ahern also praised Mr Paisley for making "big moves".

"When it came down to making the Good Friday Agreement work and to having an inclusive executive in Northern Ireland and to have north-south bodies, he made the big moves," he said.

Political commentator Brian Feeney said the first minister had gone after having "served his purpose".

"Paisley alone could have sealed the deal with Sinn Fein because his 45-year divisive career of ranting, stunts, threats, protests, walk-outs, phantom armies and third forces made it impossible for any other unionist to do so," he said.

"Large numbers in his church and many within the DUP were deeply shocked at the ultimate outsider becoming the ultimate insider. How many, we won't know until the European election in June 2009."

Copyright © Irish Republican News 2008


Tuesday-Wednesday, 4-5 March, 2008

Brief biography

By Irish Republican News

Copyright © Irish Republican News 2008


Tuesday-Wednesday, 4-5 March, 2008

Analysis: Paisley walks

By Brian Feeney, Irish News

Ian Paisley could not have imagined being pushed out of power after just a year in office.

In the end he went because he had served his purpose.

Paisley alone could have sealed the deal with Sinn Fein because his 45-year divisive career of ranting, stunts, threats, protests, walk-outs, phantom armies and third forces made

it impossible for any other unionist to do so.

Had he retired in 2005 after his party's rout of the once all-powerful UUP any other leader of the DUP who had tried to share power with Martin McGuinness would immediately have been denounced as 'selling out'. If Paisley did it, it was OK, but only just.

Large numbers in his Church and many within the DUP were deeply shocked at the ultimate outsider becoming the ultimate insider.

How many, we won't know until the European election in June 2009.

Paisley had so rancorously polluted the political wells in the north since his criminal behaviour in the early 1960s landed him in jail that he paralysed unionism.

That was his intention.

Nationalists assume that he was irrational, blinded with anti-Catholic bigotry which was his driving force.

That's much too simple an explanation for his extraordinary misbehaviour over the decades.

True, his anti-Catholic rhetoric spewed out in his appalling rag of the late 1960s, The Protestant Telegraph, reviled everything Catholics held dear.

However, while anti-Catholicism was his rhetorical weapon, his main target was secular reforming unionism.

He was jailed for his protests outside the Presbyterian General Assembly where his followers yelled 'Lundy' and 'Popehead' at the dignitaries emerging.

Paisley, like many unionists of working-class and farming origins, was convinced the unionist establishment could never be trusted not to sell out to London or Dublin or both.

It goes without saying that no English politician could be trusted.

The future of the 'People of Ulster' -- by which he meant the Protestant people of Ulster - would only be safe in his hands and unless and until that day dawned he would ensure that no other unionist would make a deal.

Any unionist politician who tried was immediately denounced as a traitor and a Lundy - O'Neill, Chichester-Clark, Faulkner, Trimble.

You'll notice the long gap of 25 years between Faulkner and Trimble during which Paisley held the UUP captive. Molyneaux knew that one step towards accommodation would be his downfall.

All through Molyneaux's soporific leadership Paisley held him in a suffocating embrace. As soon as the new UUP leader Trimble made a move away from Paisley's grip, Paisley pounced on him and destroyed him.

Only when he had devoured the UUP in the 2005 British general election and had become the undisputed leader of unionism did Paisley decide to savour the fruits of his victory. He could not have imagined he would be pushed out in a year.

The political arrogance of Ian Og provided the pretext for the heave against him. Paisley's final misjudgment was surely the appointment of Ian Og to the Policing Board. A step too far. In the end Paisley was just another politician driven by personal ambition but the first one in modern times who had the cheek to claim divine sanction for his decisions.

Copyright © Irish News 2008


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