Unionist disunity and the UUP
John McCallister was sacked by Mike Nesbitt
So was Mike Nesbitt wrong to take part in joint unionist commemorations of the Covenant centenary and joint unionist lobbying in favour of Saturday's big parade?
Or was his erstwhile deputy, John McCallister, misguided in using a speech to Young Unionists to launch an assault on the whole "unionist unity" project?
Supporters of Mr Nesbitt would no doubt argue that if he had refused to attend a joint meeting at Orange Order headquarters or a joint dinner at the Belfast Titanic Centre then he could have been accused of petty factionalism.
However, supporters of Mr McCallister may view the shared events and shared statements as the culmination of a shift in attitude towards the DUP.
First there was Mr Nesbitt's refusal to guarantee that the UUP would run its own nominee in the forthcoming Mid Ulster by-election, leaving open the possibility of a unity candidate.
Then there was the Stormont vote on an exclusion motion brought against the Social Development Minister Nelson McCausland.
When it came to a vote most UUP MLAs backed the DUP minister but both Basil McCrea and John McCallister sat on their hands.
'Profound betrayal'In his controversial speech, Mr McCallister said it was ironic and disappointing that "reasonable observers are concluding that the UUP is sleep-walking into 'unionist unity'".
He went on to argue that the prospect of 'unionist unity' represented ''a profound betrayal and rejection of the values of the Covenant".
Mr McCallister has argued against 'unionist unity'
And he claimed that greater unionist unity would only lead to a mirror image within nationalism, entrenching tribal politics.
Speaking to me on Inside Politics on Sunday, the South Down MLA insisted his speech hadn't been intended as an assault on Mr Nesbitt's leadership.
But Mr Nesbitt wasn't convinced, moving against Mr McCallister after receiving "many complaints" about his deputy's catchy "sleepwalking" metaphor.
Mr McCallister says he's disappointed about losing his deputy leader's job, claiming his call for an end to sectarianism and tribal politics is squarely in line with Mr Nesbitt's recent annual conference speech.
'Wry amusement'The latest falling out will prompt debate about how long liberal unionist MLAs such as Mr McCallister and his close friend Basil McCrea can stay within the UUP tent.
Meanwhile the DUP must be looking on with wry amusement.
First the UUP disciplines David McNarry for being too enthusiastic in public about cooperation with the DUP. Now they discipline John McCallister for being too negative about unionist unity.
Addressing the joint unionist Covenant dinner, Peter Robinson said perhaps too much water had flowed under the bridge for a single unionist party to be formed in his generation.
Maybe so, but for now the current appears to still be flowing very much in the DUP's direction.
~RS~q~RS~~RS~z~RS~35~RS~)




Man dead in suspected terror attack
Striking a chord
Page turner
Law of the land
Shock tactic
A novel idea?
Comment number 7.
BorderTrekker2nd October 2012 - 21:54
Commemorate: "to give respect to a great person or event". Ulster Covenant: "great" only in terms of numbers who signed. Its wording : misleading, inflammatory and irresponsible, paving the way for illegal gun-running on a massive scale and the political instability we suffered most of the 20th century and still affects us in the 21st. Why should I respect politicians who revere such a document??
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Comment number 6.
Ashmount2nd October 2012 - 21:24
@Irish1Jon Couldn't agree more. When you add the 46% of people who didn't vote in 2010 to the 18% eligible voters who didn't even register it is clear that the Assembly has not got a majority mandate. But even if everyone voted nothing would chance. We can't vote for an alternative government. Its time we had a proper Opposition where the people can choose a government on bread and butter issues.
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Comment number 5.
alan2nd October 2012 - 16:36
Can Roman Catholics join the DUP and/or the UUP or are they banned, like the Orange Order?
Also why do people march in Northern Ireland when it seems to cause so many problems?
Alan
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Comment number 4.
Malcolm Gilmore2nd October 2012 - 14:53
This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
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Comment number 3.
pbclrock2nd October 2012 - 12:44
Yet another hopeless report from an Englishman who doesn't have a clue about this country!
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Comments 5 of 7