David Ford is a politician who is a member of the
Northern Ireland Assembly
and has been leader of the
Alliance Party of Northern
Ireland since 2001.
He was
born on 24 February, 1951 to mixed Northern Irish
and Welsh
parents and
grew up in Orpington
, Kent
, England
.
Ford was
educated at Warren Road Primary School, Orpington and Dulwich College
, London
.
He spent
summer holidays on his uncle's farm in Gortin
, County
Tyrone, and moved to Northern Ireland
permanently in 1969 when he went to study Economics at the Queen's
University of Belfast
. There he joined the Queen's Alliance. After
University, he took a year out to work as a volunteer at the
ecumenical
Corrymeela Community
in
Ballycastle,
County Antrim, before starting work as a
social worker in 1973.
Ford stood
unsuccessfully for Antrim Borough Council
in 1989, and entered politics full-time when be
became general secretary of the Alliance Party. In that
rôle, he was best known as a strong supporter of then leader
John Alderdice and an advocate of
better political organisation and
community politics. He was elected to
Antrim Borough Council in 1993, 1997 and - after leaving the
Council in 2001 to concentrate on Assembly business - again in
2005. In 1996, he stood unsuccessfully for election to the
Northern Ireland Forum in
South Antrim, but was a key
member of Alliance's team to the talks which led to the
Good Friday Agreement. In 1997, he
obtained 12% of the vote in the British General Election in
South Antrim, and in
1998 was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly in the same
constituency. He fought South Antrim again in the
2000 by-election and the
2001 and
2005 general
elections.
In 2001,
Séan Neeson resigned from
the Party leadership following poor election results, and David
Ford won the leadership election on
6
October by 86 votes to 45, ahead of
Eileen Bell. Ford was identified with the more
consciously Liberal, internationalist wing of Alliance, while Bell
was a more traditionalist, bridge-building, candidate. Notably,
Ford was, at the time, the only Alliance MLA to be also a member of
the
Liberal Democrats
Ford outlined his internationalist view point in his speech at the
leadership selection when he said:
I am keen to co-operate with other non-sectarian groups
in Northern Ireland, including political parties that will stand
against the tribal divide.
Our links to the South are not as good as they should
be, either with the PDs or with Fine Gael, where we have many
natural allies.
We must also recognise that Northern Ireland is not unique in the
world.
Our stand is not different in substance from those who work for
peace and reconciliation in Cyprus, Palestine or Bosnia. We should
learn from friends abroad. To suggest that 'our wee province' is
unique is to do a disservice. There is little more objectionable
than the sight of the political begging bowl being dragged out by
sectional politicians.
Ford gave Alliance a stability which it had lacked since the
departure of John Alderdice, but the Party had declined seriously
in the late 1990s and all Ford could do was stabilise the
situation. Within a month of taking over the leadership, however,
Ford had a chance to establish Alliance's relevancy in the
post-
Good Friday Agreement
environment - on
6 November,
2001, the
Northern Ireland Executive was to
be re-established. However, due to defections within his own
Ulster Unionist Party,
First Minister
David Trimble, had insufficient
support within the
Unionist bloc in
the Assembly to be re-elected to his post. Ford and two of his five
colleagues re-designated as Unionist, for just 22 minutes, in order
to secure Trimble's position, and thereby enabled the devolved
institutions to operate for another year. However, Alliance failed
to make any political gains from their move, and the
UUP and
Sinn
Féin failed to reach agreement on the
decommissioning issue, ensuring that the
institutions collapsed again in October 2002.
In the
Northern Ireland
Assembly Elections of 2003, Ford's seat in the Assembly was
perceived to be under severe threat from Sinn Féin's
Martin Meehan, with many
commentators expecting him to lose it. However, Ford's expertise in
nuts and bolts electioneering stood him in good stead. Although
Alliance's vote almost halved, Ford's own vote in
South Antrim increased from 8.6%
to 9.1%. Meehan's vote increased dramatically, from 7.3% to 11.5%,
and he started the election count ahead. However Ford had much
greater transfer appeal and finished 180 votes ahead of Meehan at
the end of a dramatic three-way fight for the last two seats, with
the SDLP's
Thomas Burns just 14 votes
ahead of Ford. Despite the dramatic fall in vote, Alliance, almost
miraculously, held on to its six seats in the Assembly, which
remained suspended.
In 2004, Ford made good his leadership election pledge to work with
other parties, as Alliance joined with the
Workers' Party, Northern Ireland
Conservatives and elements
of the
Northern
Ireland Women's Coalition to support Independent Candidate
John Gilliland in the European
Elections, achieving the best result for the centre ground for 25
years.
Ford's greatest triumph came in the
2007 Northern Ireland
Assembly election, when the party achieved its highest vote
share since Alderdice's departure and picked up a seat in what was
an otherwise poor election for the moderates. Despite media
predictions once again of his demise, Ford himself was elected
third in South Antrim, with over 13% of the poll. Ford's ability to
lead the party to build further on this outcome will be the true
test of his party leadership.
David Ford is married to Anne, has four grown up children and lives
in rural County Antrim. He is an elder in the
Presbyterian Church in
Ireland
See also
References
- http://www.ark.ac.uk/elections/03sa.htm
- http://www.gilliland1.org
External links