Henry Reilly
Henry Reilly is an independent Unionist Councillor on Newry, Mourne and Down District Council.
Reilly grew up on a farm in County Down and worked for the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development.[1] He joined the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), and was first elected to Newry and Mourne District Council at the 1989 local elections.[2] He held his seat in the Mournes in 1993, 1997, 2001 and 2005,[3] serving as Mayor of Newry in 2004/05.[4]
Initially a supporter of UUP leader David Trimble, by 2004, Reilly was publicly calling for him to resign.[5] In 2007, Reilly left the UUP and then went on to join the UK Independence Party (UKIP), becoming its first councillor in Northern Ireland.[6] He was subsequently appointed as Chairman of the Northern Ireland Regional branch of the party. This grew from 80 members to more than 200 after David McNarry defected to the party in 2012; McNarry was elected as the new leader of the party in Northern Ireland, but Reilly kept the title of Chairman.[7]
Under his new party label, Reilly stood in South Down at the 2007 Northern Ireland Assembly election, taking 2.7% of the vote. He stood again in 2011, increasing his first preference vote share to 5.6%, but he still missed out on election.[8] However, he easily held his council seat at the 2011 Northern Ireland local elections,[3] then, following reorganisation of local government, took a seat on the new Newry, Mourne and Down District Council in 2014.[9]
Reilly stood as UKIP's candidate at the 2014 European Parliament election, taking seventh position, with 24,584 first preference votes.[1][10] He also stood at the 2015 UK general election in South Down, coming in fifth place, with 7.1% of the vote.[11]
Reilly was suspended from UKIP in September 2015 for bringing the party into disrepute.[12][13] After a suspension of two months, UKIP's National Executive Committee formally expelled Reilly from the party in November 2015.[14][15]
After briefly sitting as an Independent, Reilly then joined the Traditional Unionist Voice, maintaining his seat on the council for that party. In November 2016, just one year after joining the TUV, he resigned from it. The reason he cited for leaving was having commenced employment with a charity which required him to be politically unaligned. Just three months later, in February 2017, Reilly began publicly supporting the DUP and formally endorsed Jim Wells in the 2017 Northern Ireland Assembly Election.[16]
References
- "Newry councillor Henry Reilly is UKIP's Euro election candidate", BBC News, 13 August 2013
- "Local Government Elections 1985 - 1989: Newry and Mourne", Northern Ireland Elections
- "Newry & Mourne District Council Elections, 1993 - 2011", Northern Ireland elections
- "Sinn Fein fury over new Mayor Archived 12 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine", Newry Democrat, 15 June 2004
- Noel McAdam, "Trimble rivals show new rift", Belfast Telegraph, 5 March 2004
- "UKIP 'would consider an alliance with TUV'", Belfast Newsletter, 23 November 2009
- "UKIP membership soars", Belfast Newsletter, 9 June 2013
- "South Down Archived 18 December 2010 at WebCite", Northern Ireland Elections
- "Newry, Mourne and Down District Council Elections, 2014", Northern Ireland Elections
- BBC News - Vote 2014, Northern Ireland European election count
- "South Down", BBC News
- "Henry Reilly: UKIP confirms suspension of NI councillor". BBC News. Retrieved 30 September 2015.
- "'Henry Reilly suspended for three months' - UKIP". Retrieved 30 September 2015.
- "Councillor Henry Reilly is expelled from UKIP". UTV. Retrieved 3 November 2015.
- "Henry Reilly: UKIP expels NI councillor". BBC News. Retrieved 3 November 2015.
- "Wells boost as Reilly gives him backing". www.thedownrecorder.co.uk.
Civic offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Jackie Patterson |
Mayor of Newry 2004–2005 |
Succeeded by Pat McGinn |