- Harry West
Henry William West (
March 27 1917 –February 5 2004 ) was a politician inNorthern Ireland who served as leader of theUlster Unionist Party from 1974 until 1979.West was born in
County Fermanagh and educated atPortora Royal School inEnniskillen . He worked as a farmer, taking an interest in local government, but it was not until 1954 that he entered Stormont as member for the Enniskillen seat, succeeding Thomas Charles Nelson. In 1960 he was appointed Minister of Agriculture in the government of Lord Brookeborough, which he was to retain underTerence O'Neill . However in 1967 he was dismissed for Ministerial impropriety involving the purchase of land he knew was to be purchased by Fermanagh County Council for the development ofEnniskillen/St Angelo Airport [Walker, G, A history of the Ulster Unionist Party (Manchester 2004) p 165] [Mullholland, M, Northern Ireland at the Crossroads (Basingstoke 2000) p 120] .He became one of a number of Stormont MPs critical of leader Terence O'Neill's conciliatory approach towards Nationalists and in 1969 he had the whip withdrawn, along with
William Craig . In 1971 the whip was restored under the new Ulster Unionist leader andPrime Minister of Northern Ireland Brian Faulkner . West became Minister of Agriculture once more and retained that position until the Stormont government was dissolved in 1972.unningdale
West emerged as a fierce critic of the negotiations that would lead to the
Sunningdale Agreement , and led the "anti-White Paper" Unionists in theNorthern Ireland Assembly, 1973 . When in January 1974 theUlster Unionist Council voted against Faulkner's course of action the latter was forced into resignation. West succeeded him as leader of the party and sought to regain much of the support that the party had lost to breakaway and other Unionist groupings. In the February 1974 general election West negotiated theUnited Ulster Unionist Coalition with theVanguard Progressive Unionist Party , led by Craig, and theDemocratic Unionist Party , led byIan Paisley , which would put up a single anti-Sunningdale Unionist candidate in all twelve constituencies on a platform of abolishing the power-sharing executive. West himself stood in Fermanagh and South Tyrone and won, albeit due to a split nationalist vote.The UUUC campaigned fiercely for the abolition of the executive, which came about in May 1974 following a general strike. West continued to seek ways to expand unionism and recruited the ex-Conservative
Member of Parliament Enoch Powell to the party. Powell stood for and won the South Down constituency in the October 1974 general election, but his opposition to the restoration of Stormont and preference for greater integration with the United Kingdom was to cause ruptures within the party. West himself lost his seat in Parliament due to a pact between Nationalists, so having the dubious distinction of being the only MP newly elected in February 1974 who lost his seat in October and never returned to the Commons, but he remained leader of the party. The UUUC lasted another few years and won the overwhelming majority of the seats in the 1975Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention which sought to gain consensus on the future of the province. When the Vanguard Party fell apart over proposals for a voluntary coalition with theSocial Democratic and Labour Party , West negoiated with Craig for the majority faction to merge into the Ulster Unionists.The 1979 general election was relatively disappointing for the Ulster Unionists, as they won only five of the province's twelve constituencies. In June 1979 West stood as one of two candidates in the first elections to the European Parliament. However he was unsuccessful in the
Single Transferable Vote constituency for the entire province and had the personal humiliations of seeing rival DUP leader Ian Paisley top the poll, fellow Ulster Unionist John Taylor win one of the seats and former Ulster Unionist memberJames Kilfedder performing better than West to become runner up. West resigned shortly afterwards.April 1981 by-election in Fermanagh and South Tyrone
He remained active in the Ulster Unionists for some years and was the party's unsuccessful candidate in the bitter April 1981 by-election in Fermanagh and South Tyrone caused by the death of the sitting MP
Frank Maguire , West received 29,046 votes and was defeated byBobby Sands standing on anAnti-H-Block/Armagh Political Prisoner ticket with 30,493 votes, Sands died twenty-six days after his election. West was considered to have fought a lacklustre campaign, and the UUP choseKen Maginnis instead to fight the second by-election; although he did not win he was considered to have fought a more dynamic campaign. Afterwards West remained a member of the Ulster Unionist Council and was highly critical of his successor,James Molyneaux , for his opposition to proposals for power sharing devolution.His nephew is James Cooper, who was chairman of the
Ulster Unionist Party from 2003 to 2005.ee Also
List of United Kingdom MPs with the shortest service References
External links
* [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/politicsobituaries/story/0,1441,1143170,00.html Guardian obituary]
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