Alan McFarland

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Alan McFarland
File:A14c.png
Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly
for North Down
In office
25 June 1998 – 2011
Preceded by New Creation
Succeeded by Gordon Dunne
Personal details
Born (1949-08-09) 9 August 1949 (age 74)
Plumbridge, Northern Ireland
Nationality British
Political party Independent
formerly UUP

Major Robert Alan McFarland, MLA (born 9 August 1949 in Plumbridge, County Tyrone[1]) was an Independent Unionist politician and MLA for North Down in Northern Ireland. He lost his Assembly seat in the 2011 election.

He attended Rockport School near Holywood and Campbell College in east Belfast. After a short career in banking he was admitted to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and was commissioned into the Royal Tank Regiment in 1974. He is also a member of Mensa.[citation needed]

He retired from the Army in 1992 with the rank of major and became a Parliamentary Assistant to James Molyneaux MP and the Rev. Martin Smyth MP. In 1995, he was selected by the Ulster Unionists to contest the North Down by-election over the favourite for the nomination, Sir Reg Empey, but was beaten in the election by Robert McCartney. He was again beaten by McCartney in the 1997 general election, but by a narrower margin.

In 1996, he was elected to the Northern Ireland Forum for Political Dialogue for North Down and was involved in the talks process that resulted in the Belfast Agreement of 1998. He was one of three UUP members returned to the Assembly for North Down in the first elections to the body in 1998 and he retained his seat in the November 2003 election and March 2007 election.

He was, until reconstitution in 2006, one of the UUP representatives on the Northern Ireland Policing Board.

Following the resignation of David Trimble as UUP leader in 2005 he stood as a candidate in the contest to succeed him and was narrowly beaten by Sir Reg Empey.[2] Sir Reg appointed McFarland as the party's chief negotiator following the election, in which role McFarland served through the period before restoration of devolution in Northern Ireland.

In 2007, following the restoration of devolution the details of a row between McFarland and Empey were leaked to the press. It is believed that McFarland turned down the nomination to be Minister of Health when he discovered that Empey planned to take the UUP's other ministerial portfolio himself, insisting that the party leader should concentrate on rebuilding the party from outside the Northern Ireland Executive. Empey did not back down from his stance and appointed Michael McGimpsey to the Department of Health instead.[3]

Resignation

McFarland announced his resignation from the Ulster Unionist Party on 30 March 2010,[4] five days after the resignation by North Down MP Lady Sylvia Hermon (also formerly UUP),[5] citing his disagreement with the UUP electoral pact with the Conservative Party. He made his intentions clear to continue to sit as an independent in the Assembly.

References

External links

Northern Ireland Assembly
Preceded by
New creation
MLA for North Down
1998 - 2011
Succeeded by
Gordon Dunne