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Ulster Unionist Party

Ulster Unionist Party
Abbreviation UUP
Leader Mike Nesbitt
President May Steele
Chairman The Lord Empey
Founded 3 March 1905
Preceded by Irish Unionist Alliance
Headquarters Strandtown Hall
2-4 Belmont Road
Belfast
Northern Ireland
Youth wing Young Unionists
Ideology British unionism
Conservatism
Liberalism
Progressivism
Euroscepticism
Political position Centre-right
European affiliation Alliance of Conservatives and Reformists in Europe
International affiliation None
European Parliament group European Conservatives and Reformists
Colours Red, white and blue
House of Commons
(NI Seats)
2 / 18
House of Lords
2 / 805
EU Parliament
(NI seats)
1 / 3
NI Assembly
16 / 108
NI Local Councils
90 / 462
Website
www.uup.org

The Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) is one of the two main unionist political parties in Northern Ireland. Having gathered support in the north of Ireland during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the party governed Northern Ireland between 1921 and 1972. It was supported by most unionist voters throughout the conflict known as the Troubles, during which time it was often referred to as the Official Unionist Party (OUP).

It is currently the third party in Northern Ireland, having been overtaken since 2003 by the Democratic Unionist Party and by Sinn Féin. At the 2015 general election, the party won two seats in the House of Commons, Fermanagh and South Tyrone and South Antrim.

In 2016, the UUP, the SDLP and the Alliance Party decided not to accept the seats on the Northern Ireland Executive they would have been entitled too and to form an official opposition to the executive. This marked the first time since 1921 that a devolved government in Northern Ireland did not include the UUP. The party is led by Mike Nesbitt.

The Ulster Unionist Party traces its formal existence back to the foundation of the Ulster Unionist Council in 1905. Before that, however, there had been a less formally organised Irish Unionist Alliance (IUA) since the late 19th century, usually dominated by unionists from Ulster. Modern organised unionism properly emerged after William Ewart Gladstone's introduction in 1886 of the first of three Home Rule Bills in response to demands by the Irish Parliamentary Party. The IUA was an alliance of Irish Conservatives and Liberal Unionists, the latter having split from the Liberal Party over the issue of home rule. It was the merger of these two parties in 1912 that gave rise to the current name of the Conservative and Unionist Party, to which the UUP was formally linked (to varying degrees) until 1985.


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