About Robert McCartney (Northern Irish politician)
Robert Law McCartney, QC (born 24 April 1936) is a Northern Irish barrister and a former leader of the UK Unionist Party.
He was initially a member of the Ulster Unionist Party but was expelled in June 1987 when he refused to withdraw from the general election of that year.
He stood against the incumbent Popular Unionist Party MP Sir James Kilfedder in North Down as a "Real Unionist" but failed to win the seat.
In the 1995 by-election in North Down after the death of Kilfedder he was elected as a "UK Unionist" defeating the Ulster Unionist Party candidate.
He subsequently established the United Kingdom Unionist Party to contest elections to the Northern Ireland Forum and the related talks which started
in 1996.
The other party representatives to the Forum were Dr Conor Cruise O'Brien and Cedric Wilson, a former low-level DUP member in the 1980s.
McCartney denounced them, saying all four were "famous in their own living rooms" and that their supporters could "fit into a telephone box".
In 2008 both Wilson and Boyd attended meetings of Jim Allister's Traditional Unionist Voice.
In 1999, McCartney ran for the party in elections to the European Parliament, winning 2.9% of the first preference vote.
He lost his Westminster seat in the 2001 election to the UUP candidate Lady Sylvia Hermon.
He was committed to a policy of integration for Northern Ireland, whereby legislative devolution for Northern Ireland would no longer be Westminster's abiding policy, there would be no Stormont legislative assembly and the province would be a fully participating part of the United Kingdom; at the same time, the three main British political parties would fully organise in Northern Ireland.
He was the president of the Campaign for Equal Citizenship in 1986, and led it in its four years of prominence after the 1985 Anglo-Irish Agreement.
McCartney resigned as head of the Campaign for Equal Citizenship in 1988 over a dispute with its executive.These integrationist policies, once popular in some sections of Unionism, receded with the introduction of devolution to Scotland and Wales, and the creation of a functioning Northern Ireland Assembly.
However it is the case that other parts of the United Kingdom with devolved assemblies are fully covered by the three main British political parties, but not Northern Ireland.
McCartney also strongly opposed the St Andrews Agreement and in 2007 stood on an anti-agreement ticket in six different constituencies.
He lost his own seat in North Down, polling 1,806 first preference votes (5.9% of the total, and less than half the quota required to be elected).
He also obtained 360 votes (1.2%) in Belfast North, 388 votes (0.8%) in Fermanagh and South Tyrone, 853 votes (2.0%) in Lagan Valley, 893 votes (2.3%) in South Antrim and 220 votes (0.5%) in West TyroneHe claims to have retired from politics following the loss of his seat in the 2007 Assembly Election to Brian Wilson of the Green Party.
However, he still occasionally makes media appearances and writes newspaper articles.