List of Ulster Unionist Party Peers
This is a list of sitting Members of the United Kingdom House of Lords who were born, live or lived in Northern Ireland and had links to the Ulster Unionist Party.
This list does not include hereditary peers who have lost their seat in the Lords following the House of Lords Act 1999, or those in the Peerage of Ireland, who have never had an automatic right to a seat in the House of Lords at Westminster.[1]
Note: There is no such thing as the Peerage of Northern Ireland and peers do not represent geographic areas as such.[2] Some do, however, choose titles which reflect geographical localities, e.g. Lord Kilclooney, this is, however, entirely nominal.
Ulster Unionist Peers
Current members
- Reginald Norman Morgan Empey, Baron Empey, former leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
- Dennis Robert David Rogan, Baron Rogan, former chairman of the Ulster Unionist Party
Current members with Ulster Unionist links
- Alan Brooke, 3rd Viscount Brookeborough, (Excepted hereditary peer),[3] the grandson of a former Prime Minister of Northern Ireland and son of an Ulster Unionist MP.
- Robin Dixon, 3rd Baron Glentoran, (Excepted hereditary peer),[3] member of the Conservative Party, son and grandson of Stormont MPs for the Ulster Unionist Party
- Kenneth Wiggins Maginnis, Baron Maginnis of Drumglass, former Ulster Unionist Party MP
- John Taylor, Baron Kilclooney, businessman and former deputy leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
- David Trimble, Baron Trimble, PC, former leader of the Ulster Unionist Party, now Conservative
Deceased members
- Basil Stanlake Brooke, 1st Viscount Brookeborough, Bt, KG, CBE, MC, PC, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
- John Warden Brooke, 2nd Viscount Brookeborough, PC, Stormont MP Ulster Unionist Party
- James Dawson Chichester-Clark, Baron Moyola, PC, DL, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
- Victor Alexander Cooke, Baron Cooke of Islandreagh, former Ulster Unionist Senator in the Parliament of Northern Ireland
- James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon Bt, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
- Daniel Dixon, 2nd Baron Glentoran, Ulster Unionist member of Northern Ireland House of Commons
- Herbert Dixon, 1st Baron Glentoran, Ulster Unionist member of Northern Ireland House of Commons
- Robert Grosvenor, 5th Duke of Westminster, Ulster Unionist member of British House of Commons
- Arthur Brian Deane Faulkner, Baron Faulkner of Downpatrick, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, Chief Executive of Northern Ireland, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
- Edward Enda Haughey, Baron Ballyedmond OBE, businessman and member of Conservative Party, previously UUP
- James Hamilton, 4th Duke of Abercorn - served in the Senate of Northern Ireland and at the House of Lords.
- John Laird, Baron Laird, former chairman of the Ulster-Scots Agency and former Stormont MP for the Ulster Unionist Party
- Brian McConnell, Baron McConnell, Ulster Unionist Stormont MP
- James Henry Molyneaux, Baron Molyneaux of Killead, KBE, PC, former leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
- Hugh O'Neill, 1st Baron Rathcavan, Ulster Unionist Westminster and Stormont MP
- Phelim O'Neill, 2nd Baron Rathcavan, Ulster Unionist Stormont MP, later Alliance Party
- Terence Marne O'Neill, Baron O'Neill of the Maine, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party.
- Leonard Steinberg, Baron Steinberg, businessman and member of the Conservative Party, member of the UUP while living in Northern Ireland
References
- Irish Peers sat in the Irish House of Lords, with the passing of the Act of Union 1800 this House was abolished and twenty-eight Peers in the peerage of Ireland were elected to sit in the United Kingdom House of Lords between 1800 and 1922, when the right was exhausted due to the Government of Ireland Act.
- In the Earl of Antrim's Petition [1967] 1 A.C. 691 it was held that Irish Representative Peers did, in fact, represent Ireland as an entity, thus on the passing of the Government of Ireland Act elections from the Irish Peerage could no longer take place, as the Ireland of the Act of Union 1800 ceased to exist.
- The House of Lords Act 1999 reduced the sitting rights of several hundred inherited members to ninety-two hereditaries described in the Act as excepted hereditary peers
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