Archive for October, 2007

Beggs hits back at DUP/SF United Front against Opposition

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

Responding to attacks from Sinn Fein and the DUP in the press today surrounding on-going Ulster Unionist discussions on a form of opposition, East Antrim MLA and Finance spokesman Roy Beggs said in a statement,

”Nothing stands still in politics. Ulster Unionists are pleased that the local ministers are taking local decisions. We have taken our ministerial seats and have honoured our election commitment to join the executive.

But we must always strive to improve local accountability. Ulster Unionist will be reviewing our options in light of the decisions that are made by the Executive and the behaviour of other ministers. Opposition is a real option that must be considered in the future. In addition, there is an Assembly review process underway so changes are likely to happen.

Who would have thought the DUP and Sinn Fein would be working so closely together that their leaders are commonly known as “the Chuckle Brothers”. Who would have thought that a Sinn Fein Minister would be able to regularly read out the answer to DUP supplementary answers to which he should be unaware of?

Who would have thought that an SDLP minister, disappointed with the lack of progress by the UDA in ending their illegal activity would have been subject to such abuse by the DUP?

Would it not be even healthier if the electorate had a clear choice in the future with a government and official opposition parties? It would be possible to agree new arrangements whereby the electoral could have a choice between the chuckle brothers who look after their narrow party self interests and those who are content to work together for the betterment of all of NI. With political maturity the option of voluntary coalition would be possible. I am content that at present that the UUP should remain in the executive but we must review this situation in light of the behaviour of both the DUP and SF.

We should be dealing with real political issues. For example how will the recently announced budget effect the under funding in Children’s Services within the NHS. Children services in NI are 30% under funding compared to the rest of the UK. A recent report highlighted that our local Homefirst funding for Children’s services was the lowest of any health region within NI.

Why has the funding for OFMDM continued to increase at a higher rate than health? Is it because the Chuckle Brothers Ian and Martin now control OFMDFM. Would we not be better letting all our children get a better start to life by diverting the increased funding to children’s services? That’s what real politics should be about.”

Gardiner says Minister has promised to look at Environmentally Friendly Options in Rural Housing

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

Ulster Unionist Planning Spokesman, Sam Gardiner MLA, has said he was glad the Environment Minister Arlene Foster had agreed that a revised rural-planning policy to replace PPS 14 would take account of environmentally friendly housing.

“The Minister was responding to a question I asked after her statement on PPS 14 to the Assembly on 25 Oct. She assured the Assembly that she would look at economic development in the countryside and environmentally friendly housing in any replacement for PPS 14.”

“I have been pressing for some time for a rational set of new guidelines to replace the overly stringent PPS 14. These should include the needs of the rural economy, the social cohesion of rural communities, and a sustainable rural environment in environmentally friendly schemes.”

“Even though the Minister has taken over PPS 14 from the Department of Regional Development this will be short lived. All parties have said it must be dismantled and that will happen. We must keep the pressure on to make this happen sooner rather than later – certainly well before any review of the Planning structures in 2010. I am not happy with the delays in some of the Executive’s timescales for action.”

Coulter urges more help for Farmers

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007


Rev Dr Robert Coulter, the Ulster Unionist Party Assembly member for North Antrim and UUP Stormont Commissioner, has warned that the constituency’s farming community needs urgent action from the Exectuive if it is not to face the same financial ruin that happened to Northern Ireland’s linen industry.

Assemblyman Dr Coulter added: “Whilst as a community, we greatly welcome the Executive budget proposals for spending more than five billion pounds on hospitals, schools and roads across the Province over the next three years as well as the challenge of creating 6,500 jobs, the Executive must ensure our at times hard-pressed farming community gets its fair share of the investment.

“Agriculture is one of the main industries in this predominantly rural constituency and our farming community was already strained to breaking point because of the Foot and Mouth crisis.
“North Antrim’s farming families provide a massive contribution to the social, economic and environmental life of the constituency.

“Those families have had to face the various economic millstones heaped on them by the European Union. They want to see urgent action in terms of cash aid, not pathetic words of sympathy or empty promises.

“The agricultural community forms not just a major part of the commercial backbone of North Antrim, but also of this entire Province. We must not allow the fight to save this important industry to become a party political or sectarian football. I would appeal to the entire North Antrim community to unite behind the constituency’s farmers.

“The livelihoods of many thousands of people in the farming industry are at risk right across the Province. However, it is not only those directly involved in farming who stand to lose if the Ulster agricultural industry goes under financially.

“The vast consumer market in Northern Ireland will also suffer. They represent the hundreds of thousands of people in the Province who buy farm produce, such as milk, beef, bacon, eggs, poultry products, and vegetables.

“Various sectors of the Province’s farming community have suffered drastically for more than a decade. The beef, poultry, pig and land-based farmers have all faced financial ruin in recent years. The time has come for a community-wide campaign to save our farming industry, whatever the sector. This united campaign must spread across every city, town, village and hamlet in our Province.

“The people of Northern Ireland can help considerably by ensuring when they buy their groceries from the shops and supermarkets, that they only purchase commodities produced by our local farmers. In this fight to save our local farming industry, each of us has a role to play. Let us all move forward together as a community and ensure that the Ulster farming industry survives well into the new millennium,” said Assemblyman Dr Coulter.

Coulter warns of Health Budget Shortfall

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007


Rev Dr Robert Coulter, the Ulster Unionist Party Assembly member for North Antrim and UUP Stormont Commissioner, has warned the community could suffer because not enough money has been earmarked for health in the recently unveiled Programme for Government spending proposals.

Assemblyman Dr Coulter, who is also UUP Health Spokesman, made his remarks after chairing a health discussion panel at this year’s party conference in Belfast.

He added: “At first reading the full Programme for Government package runs to some £5.6 billion on schools, roads and hospitals – but the contribution for the health department is lower than the other departments in needs terms.

“The Ulster Unionist Party is disappointed with the proposed spending on health. It needed to be much higher given the fact people in Northern Ireland are living much longer.

“We required a radical budget for health; one which had quality as a central theme. Instead, the people of the Province have been allocated a budget which won’t do what those people require.

“The health budget for Northern Ireland is being seriously underfunded. We are between 25 per cent and 30 per cent lower than our counterparts in Great Britain.

“In practical terms, the draft budget will do nothing to drive down the waiting lists. Some £450 million has been allocated to health, when in reality, around £750 million is required because people live longer.

“The cash allocated to health in the Programme for Government is only dabbling with the health service. Being behind in health spending is one of the great injustices of Northern Ireland politics and makes our people second class citizens within the United Kingdom.

“As people live longer, we need to recognise that older people would like to be cared for at home – not in hospitals.

“The Programme for Government also needs to recognise that Northern Ireland will not be able to look after the most vulnerable groups in our society, especially the elderly, by cutting back on nurses.

“At one time, Northern Ireland had some of the worst waiting times in Western Europe. The Programme for Government budget should have addressed the urgent issue of investing in health. You can’t have wealth without health,” said Assemblyman Dr Coulter.

Norbrook Jobs Boost welcomed by Kennedy

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

Ulster Unionist Deputy Leader and MLA for Newry and Armagh Danny Kennedy today welcomed the announcement by Norbrook to invest £83 Million in developing new products which could create up to 300 new jobs for the Newry and Armagh area.

In a statement Mr Kennedy said,

“This investment is great news and I commend Lord Ballyedmond for his continued entrepreneurial spirit and his desire to see Norbrook develop further as a world leader in veterinary and agricultural medicine provision.

Researching and developing are key to any company’s growth and expansion and Norbrook clearly have intentions to both grow and expand.

The £83 Million investment, will, I understand create up to 300 new jobs. This is a great boost to the area and proof, if it were needed, that Norbrook continues to be a major part of the economic fabric of the Newry and Armagh area.”

Sir Reg Empey - UUP Conference Report

Monday, October 29th, 2007

Commenting after one of the UUP’s most successful and united conferences in recent years, Sir Reg Empey said….

“Bearing in mind that we had called delegates to an EGM the previous evening, I was delighted that so many of them—along with many others—attended our annual conference the following day. I was also struck by the sheer good nature and high spirits of everyone there. The conference is an opportunity for our grassroots to get together and what I saw on the day was a grassroots which was determined to get this party back on its feet and back in business.”

There was standing room only for Sir Reg’s keynote speech and a warm and enthusiastic ovation for his commitment to “re-shape and re-fashion our great party and return it to its role as the primary voice of Unionism.”

Later in the day a packed hall welcomed Social Development Minister Margaret Ritchie as guest speaker; and applauded her view that the SDLP and UUP should improve their contacts with each other.

As he left the conference after an early evening reception, Sir Reg commented….

“I think that was one of the most successful weekends that the UUP has had for a very long time. We have dedicated ourselves to the changes needed for the way ahead and proved, both to ourselves and the outside world, that we are still here and deadly serious about the role that only the UUP can play in Northern Ireland.”

UUP man invites New Community of Northern Ireland with Shared Bond of Sacrifice to take part in Remembrance Sunday Events

Monday, October 29th, 2007

Kenny Donaldson, Ulster Unionist Party Officer responsible for Youth Development has today invited our new migrants from Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe to take part in Remembrance Sunday services at cenotaphs and memorials around the country.

In a statement Mr Donaldson said that many migrants had a shared bond of sacrifice during the world wars and other conflicts with the people of Northern Ireland and it would be lovely to see them take part.

“The new migrants from Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe suffered huge casualties during the two world wars and other related conflicts. They, like us in the United Kingdom sacrificed lives and fought for what they believed in.

“We have a shared bond, a shared experience of mourning and of remembrance and I think it would be very appropriate to see new members of our community in Northern Ireland taking part in remembrance Sunday events at memorials and cenotaphs across Northern Ireland.”

Kenny went on to re-issue an invitation to the nationalist community within Northern Ireland and further afield to come forward and join with others in commemorating the supreme sacrifice paid by those who have gone before us.

Kenny highlighted that the wearing of a Poppy was one universal way in which people could show their recognition for those who laid down their lives for the causes of democracy, freedom and liberty.

Kenny added: “Irrespective of perceived or real political or religious affiliation, men and women from both of our main religious and political traditions from Northern Ireland and throughout Ireland fought side by side in many Wars and Conflicts, combating fascism.

“These men and women fought for the causes of democracy, freedom and liberty,” he concluded.

UUP Trade & Tourism Spokesman takes Robinson to task over Outrageous Spin of Budget

Monday, October 29th, 2007

Cllr Mark Cosgrove, the UUP Spokesperson on Trade and Tourism has released the following statement on the outrageous spin and bluster of Mr Robinsons budget announcements.

“Freezing” the Regional rate for 3 years comes after Direct Rule ministers outrageously put it up by 18% only last year.At the time Mr Robinson rightly condemned the Government for their unaccountable madness at the time but he has now “pocketed” the millions raised from the hard working people of this province and has the cheek to spin it as a “freeze”. It is day light robbery.

The same applies to freezing Industrial Rates for 3 years at 30%. It is only in the last 3 years that our hard pressed manufacturing sector paid any rates and again in opposition the DUP made it clear that they were opposed to this move. Whilst keeping it at 30% represents a moral victory for the Northern Ireland Manufacturers Group in general and the politician who actually gained cross party consensus for that campaign, my colleague Basil McCrea, it is still the economics of the mad house to have Invest NI running round the world at a cost of hundreds of millions trying to entice Foreign Direct Investment and at the same time creating additional taxation burdens for the companies who are already here.

But of course outside of not telling the voters that they had created the new DUP/Sinn Fein coalition government the biggest con job ever was that concerning the imposition of water rates. They are coming, they were always coming and no amount of dressing up and spin will change that fact.

It is clear that at just over 1% that the Health Budget is seriously under funded and the Health professionals at the UUP conference were disgusted at their allocation and in particular at the disgraceful comments of Iris Robinson. The cynic in me cannot help but wonder whether this was politically motivated after the Margaret Ritchie argument but the fact remains that whilst announcing a lot of goodies for other departments most of which are Sinn Fein/DUP run, the department which employs the most people and is by the far the publics highest priority gets seriously under funded. Are Roads and free travel for our pensioners really more important than helping those citizens in their time of greatest need.

Mr Robinson is beginning to find that the harsh realities of being in perpetual opposition and being in government are two very different jobs and that if you are a minority government you must govern with consensus. By all accounts, including that of his own back bench MLAs, the only consensus that exists in the Robinson household is that of wealth creation and claiming for over £400,000 per annum out of the public purse. How many nurses would that employ?

Tax on Agricultural Land in Northern Ireland Not On, says UUP

Monday, October 29th, 2007

Tom Elliot, UUP agriculture spokesman has responded to the Department of Finance’s revelation that they are considering the imposition of a tax on agricultural land in Northern Ireland. The proposals came to light following SDLP member Declan O’Loan receiving a response to a written question he had submitted to the Department on the issue.

Mr Elliott commented,

“Such proposals must be stopped in their tracks immediately. Farming is already taxed enough as it is and in days when farmers already see very little return for their outgoings, an additional rates tax on the farming community could have catastrophic effects.

“The tax would also not be practical to administer, and would cause difficulties for all involved. Such a tax is not found elsewhere in the UK and Northern Ireland should be no different. If more money is needed for the Government of Northern Ireland, it should be found elsewhere, the farming community should not be used as an easy target.”

Speech by Sir Reg Empey to UUP Annual Conference

Monday, October 29th, 2007

My thanks to all of you for coming today; and my thanks, too, to those of you who came along to the EGM last night.

The grassroots are the backbone of the Ulster Unionist Party and I know that it hasn’t always been easy being a member of this party over the last ten years.

Membership is voluntary and it takes a certain type of person to raise the funds, knock the doors, keep the branches going and supply the footsoldiers at election after election. I thank them, and I thank you ladies and gentlemen, for keeping this party alive during the very darkest days.

I must pay tribute as well to our public representatives, at Westminster, Europe, Assembly and local council level. Again, because of reduced numbers, a large burden has been placed on their collective shoulders. I am grateful to them for their loyalty and commitment.

In particular, we owe a debt of gratitude to Sylvia Hermon who, along with her colleagues in the Lords, has continued to fly the flag for Ulster Unionism in Parliament against considerable personal and political odds.

And let me not forget our employees: those in HQ, in the Assembly and in our constituency offices. They tend to be forgotten on occasion, but they are often the unsung heroes of our party.

The UUP has weathered many storms since 1905. We created Northern Ireland and we have sustained Northern Ireland. We have never blinked first and we have never allowed the cause of the Union to go undefended.

My ambition, as Leader, is to ensure that our grassroots, our representatives and our staff, are bound together in a re-energized, re-invigorated party, which will see our collective efforts and renewed commitment rewarded with political success and electoral recovery.

DEL:

I am here today wearing two hats: that of Party Leader and that of Minister for Employment and Learning.

Given the subject matter of the excellent panel discussion we have just had, let me address my Departmental brief first and begin by asking you two questions:

Which part of the United Kingdom has had one of the fastest rates of output growth, manufacturing production growth, increase in exports and employment since 1990?

Which part of the United Kingdom now has an unemployment rate well below the national average and also well below that of such major European economies as France, Germany and Italy?

The answer, I am delighted to say, is Northern Ireland.

But that doesn’t mean that we don’t have problems.

Our average living standards remain about 80 per cent of the UK average and are not projected to change by much. An economic think tank recently pointed out that public spending actually contributed 70.5 % of the entire output of the Northern Ireland economy.

Of great concern, too, is the fact that, whereas in most Western economies 2-3 per cent of GDP is devoted to research and development activities, here, in Northern Ireland, the rate is barely 1 per cent.

That is a brief account of where we are at in economic terms. But I am pleased to say that my own Department (Employment and Learning) lies at the heart of the strategy directed at improving the longer term prospects both for the Northern Ireland economy and for all of our citizens.

The wealth and health of all, indeed.

As Minister I do want to see skills upgraded at all levels, because international experience indicates that it is on the quality of the workforce that regions and nations compete in the world’s market place.

Back in May I launched an investigation into the causes of the so-called brain drain. Too many talented people, particularly at age 18 or 21, leave our shores and too few return to bring us the benefits of their wider experience.

Since any society is best tested by the way in which it treats the most vulnerable, I have initiated an independent investigation into the way in which my Department handles the transition of young people with disabilities out of special schooling and into the work force.

Recognising the imperative to improve our game with regard to science and technology my Department will be grasping the opportunities created by the Innovation Fund which originated with the idea of the then Chancellor Gordon Brown back in November 2006.

I will continue to make it a personal as well as a political priority to deal with the scandal and, indeed, the human tragedy, that as many as one-quarter of adults in Northern Ireland do not have adequate ability in reading and counting.

The American politician Robert McNamara said, way back in the 1960s, “…some people look at the world and ask why? Other people look at what the world could be, and ask, why not?”

What I am aiming for is not easy; but it is important. I believe we can shift the emphasis of careers education, so that our young people and their parents may begin to value jobs and professions which very directly contribute to wealth creation.

I refuse to write-off vast tracts of our towns and cities and of our society; we can and should rebuild the culture which valued education and learning; the culture which characterised this city in its days of industrial greatness.

The Northern Ireland economy has plenty of critics. But I reject those Irish republicans and left wing English commentators in particular, who argue that we are some sort of failed entity kept alive only by the generosity of the London Exchequer.

The reality is that a terrorist campaign and political instability prevented Northern Ireland from performing as well as I know that it can perform.

Yet, that said, it does no good to pretend we are world class when we are not! Still, Harold Wilson and (more recently) Peter Hain were wrong to imply we were some sort of spongers.

All that we are asking for is a business tax regime which gives us a chance to compete (and this isn’t just about Corporation Tax alone, but fuel duties relative to the Republic—and recent events have emphasized again the tragic consequences associated with cross-border smuggling).

Incidentally, whilst I have been a longstanding supporter of co-operation between Northern Ireland and the Republic when it is truly to our mutual benefit—and also subject to democratic accountability—we will not gain prosperity by losing our political or economic identity.

In 1999 the Ulster Unionist Party opposed the introduction of a single industrial development agency; the arguments against it remain overwhelming.

I would also say that if you wish the local economy to become more dynamic and entrepreneurial, then it is perverse to load ever more taxes on families and property owners. Our message to Treasury, to adapt Churchill’s wartime rallying cry, is “give us the fiscal tools and we will finish the job”.

There is, as we are well aware, a significant connection between the political environment of a country and its economic conditions and prospects.

By making Northern Ireland more stable, we are contributing to making more prosperity possible.

So it is a good sign in many ways that so many people are visiting our shores as tourists or as migrant workers.

An abundance of international surveys show that global business prefers peaceful locations, as well as countries with uncorrupt and transparent systems of government.

This is just one more reason why our new Executive and Assembly needs to make every effort to ensure that, like Caesar’s wife, it is truly beyond reproach as to the manner of its decision making. Government, here, at every level, must be clean, transparent and uncorrupted by the activities of former terrorists.

The Party:

The Ulster Unionist Party has committed itself to a political and policy process which allows Northern Ireland to complete the transition to “normal” politics.

As a Minister I want to play a part in making Northern Ireland a regional leader in the knowledge-based economy of the 21st century.

As Party Leader I want the Ulster Unionist Party to engage with like-minded allies in Great Britain to promote a pan-UK vision which endorses the over-arching benefits of a United Kingdom as the best framework in which to nurture the benefits available from devolution.

But that promotion shouldn’t be confined within the borders of the United Kingdom alone. The Ulster Unionist Party is the only mainstream pro-Union party with representation in the European Parliament.

I would be keen for this party to co-operate with others in that Parliament to ensure that the fundamental and historic rights of the United Kingdom and its constituent parts are protected and promoted. We are not opposed to a Europe of nations. But we are opposed to a European nation state which undermines the constitutional integrity and political identity of the United Kingdom.

A form or spirit of devolution which encourages “ourselves alone”, or is exploited by proponents of Scottish, Welsh or little-Ulster nationalism, is a form of devolution which will undo the constitutional integrity of the United Kingdom.

The Ulster Unionist Party is, first and foremost, a party of the Union and a champion of the United Kingdom. On that basis, we seek to build a Northern Ireland which will be valued as an economic asset to the United Kingdom as a whole; and valued as an upholder of the Union which has been of such huge benefit to all of the people in the United Kingdom.

Now then, let me turn to other matters.

For some time now the DUP has been demanding the credit for every positive development in Northern Ireland. You name it and they claim the praise for it. You point to it and they will say that it’s their doing.

The efforts of the Ulster Unionist Party—along with those of other parties, governments and individuals—have been airbrushed out of the shiny new history prepared by the DUP.

Ladies and gentlemen, I am sick to the back teeth of the DUP’s orgy of self-praise and self-promotion.

A cheap tin badge with “getting it right” stamped on it, isn’t half as valuable as having had the courage and the foresight to getting it started in the first place!

Boasting about a “fair deal” or a “better deal” doesn’t take the same degree of political skill as being able to say that you delivered the deal in the first place!

And, let’s face it, the sight of Peter Robinson leapfrogging from the front bench to the back bench in order to put the boot into Margaret Ritchie, makes a total mockery of the claim that the DUP had put accountability at the heart of the system.

Insisting that you have “smashed” Sinn Fein and put it in its place, looks like a joke when the reality is that the new deal consisted of a carve-up of office and a ganging-up against the smaller parties.

Indeed, I was surprised that the forthcoming legislative programme didn’t contain an UN-Civil Partnership Bill to formalise the new relationship between the DUP and Sinn Fein.

The truth of the matter is simple: Had we accepted the DUP’s advice, predictions and judgment calls in 1997/98, there wouldn’t be an Assembly today.

They got it wrong on just about everything. Sinn Fein would never accept a return to Stormont; or a partitionist settlement; or recognise the legitimacy of the police and justice system. Wrong, wrong and wrong again.

And, as I mentioned Sinn Fein, let us remember that they have been forced to accept the reality that their former “ballot box and armalite” strategy was not going to work. And let us also remember that it was pressure from this party—often acting alone—which forced them to confront that reality.

But however much we may knock the DUP and raise questions about their opportunism, hypocrisy and u-turns: nor however much we say that we took the risks and did the heavy lifting; we cannot deny the fact that they have gained ground at our expense.

But let me say this to you, ladies and gentlemen; and say it to you clearly and unambiguously:

We, the Ulster Unionist Party, helped the DUP into their current position.

Our internal war was a gift to them.

Our public spats were a gift to them.

Our seeming inability to run a coherent campaign was a gift to them.

Ladies and gentlemen—Those days are over.

At our EGM last night we took the first major step to sorting out our internal and organisational inadequacies.

No-one should underestimate the importance of these reforms. Every aspect of how we do our business has been held up to scrutiny and where it has been found wanting, we are changing it.

We are better placed now than we have been for a generation to present ourselves to the electorate as a party once again deserving of support.

Northern Ireland has changed over this past decade and it has changed for the better.

The Ulster Unionist Party has been a key factor in promoting and securing that change.

But as ever, there is more to be done.

We have to prove to the electorate, the media and even ourselves that we, as a party, have also changed and changed for the better.

We have to ensure that this party is, once again, returned to the very heart of political, electoral and civic life in Northern Ireland.

We have to focus on the sort of policies which will appeal to those who don’t vote; as well as to those who will be coming onto the register for the first time.

And yes—we have to win back those voters who left us for the DUP or Alliance.

That doesn’t mean trying to outflank the DUP on the right or Alliance on the left. It means replanting our banner and our values upon the very centre ground and setting out the vision we have for a Northern Ireland at peace with itself.

Events of the past few days have proved that the shadow of the gunman still hovers across our fledgling institutions. There is still far too much paramilitary, crypto-paramilitary and criminal activity for us to pretend that we are yet a truly peaceful society.

We are on the road to normality, but haven’t yet reached that destination. The job we began in the mid-1990s—that of getting all of the organisations to decommission and embrace politics—is still ongoing. As ever, though, we will continue to exert every influence we can. There can never ever be an “acceptable level of violence.”

I accept that the IRA has changed in the last few years. But rather than believing that it has gone away entirely, I suspect that it may actually be in a form of suspended animation—a hibernation, if you like. But the “potential” of the IRA still exists; and it will exist for so long as the IRA itself exists.

The IRA needs to disappear all together. Disband. Dismantle all of its structures. That, and that alone, would be the clearest possible sign to unionism that we really are living in a new political dispensation.

The “Argument” over the Executive Minutes, the Causeway Saga and the ongoing hoo-ha over a stadium at the Maze, suggests that there is a very important case to be made for the electorate to have a real and credible alternative at election time to the Sinn Fein-DUP coalition.

And I am delighted, by the way, to welcome Margaret Ritchie, Minister for Social Development, to our conference later today.

Unlike the DUP we have never wanted office for the mere sake of it.

Unlike Sinn Fein we do not want office to sustain the pretence that we can pursue a unilateral agenda.

We have always wanted a form of devolution which is genuinely better than Direct Rule. Mandatory coalition is an alternative to direct rule—but it is no more than that.

Genuinely better means that there has to be proper scrutiny and accountability. And it also means that the electorate has to have a real choice between an outgoing administration and an alternative incoming one.

Ladies and gentlemen, let me assure you on one thing: This party will not shy away from taking any decision, inside or outside the Assembly, which we believe is ultimately in the best interests of the electorate and of democracy.

Northern Ireland has changed. It will continue to change.

The Ulster Unionist Party has to show that it recognises those changes and show, too, that we have adapted ourselves to new realities.

I believe that there is a huge market out there for an Ulster Unionist Party which proves that it is an effective party with relevant policies.

I believe that there is a huge market out there for an Ulster Unionist Party which has a clear identity, purpose and vision.

I believe that there is a huge market out there for an Ulster Unionist Party which champions the values of an inclusive, caring, thoughtful socio-economic agenda.

I believe that there is a huge market out there for an Ulster Unionist Party which rejects the cynicism, opportunism and self-importance of the DUP.

Let’s face it; the DUP’s idea of choice is Ian Paisley as leader or Ian Paisley Jnr as leader!

There is an overwhelmingly powerful argument to be made in favour of the Union. Whether it be in terms of education, employment opportunities, welfare provision, housing, business, individual freedoms, the economy—the list goes on and on.

Northern Ireland and every one of its inhabitants benefits from the Union. We are citizens of one of the most important countries in the world. We have a range and scale of opportunities and possibilities which would not exist in any other constitutional alternative.

The Ulster Unionist Party is the only party in Northern Ireland which is an unambiguous and unashamed promoter of the Union as a whole; as opposed to the parts that happen to suit us.

The Ulster Unionist Party will continue to champion the Union and the United Kingdom; and within this new devolutionary settlement we will promote policies which enhance our relationship rather than distance us.

We are not Irish Nationalists. And we are not little-Ulster nationalists, either!

This party is ready for a fight-back and a recovery.

You, ladies and gentlemen, are ready for that fight-back.

I am ready for that fight-back.

So, when we leave this conference today, let one simple, united message go out:

The Ulster Unionist Party is back,

Back in business

And here to stay.

Thank you.