Northern Ireland Assembly election, 2003

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Northern Ireland Assembly election, 2003
All 108 seats to the Northern Ireland Assembly
26 November 2003
Government Opposition
Leader Ian Paisley Gerry Adams
Party DUP Sinn Féin
Leader's seat North Antrim Belfast West
Last election 20 seats, 18.5% 18 seats, 16.7%
Seats won 30 24
Seat change +10 +6
Popular vote 177,944 162,758
Percentage 27.8% 26.2%
Northern Ireland

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Northern Ireland


In Northern Ireland

Northern Ireland Assembly

MLA
Committees
List of Acts
Members: 2007 - 2003 - 1998
Elections: 2007 - 2003 - 1998


Northern Ireland Executive

First Minister and deputy First Minister
Departments
Executives: First - Suspended - Second


Northern Ireland Policing Board
Parades Commission

In the United Kingdom

United Kingdom Parliament

Committees: Affairs - Grand
Members: Commons - Lords - Privy Council
Elections: 2005


United Kingdom Government

Northern Ireland Office
Secretary of StateDirect Rule

In the European Union

European Union Parliament

MEP
Members: 2004 - 1999
Elections: 2004 - 1999

Related political parties

Designated Unionist
Democratic Unionist Party
Ulster Unionist Party
Progressive Unionist Party
Conservatives
Traditional Unionist Voice

Designated Nationalist
Sinn Féin
Social Democratic and Labour Party
Fianna Fáil

Designated Other
Alliance Party
Green Party

Related bodies

North/South Ministerial Council
British-Irish Council
British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference
Civic Forum for Northern Ireland

See also

St Andrews Agreement (2006)
Belfast Agreement (1998)

Segregation in Northern Ireland
Elections in Northern Ireland

Constituencies
Political parties


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The second elections to the Northern Ireland Assembly, which at the time of the elections had been suspended for just over a year, were held on Thursday, November 26, 2003. Six members were elected by Single Transferable Vote from each of Northern Ireland's eighteen Westminster Parliamentary constituencies, giving a total of 108 MLAs, or Members of the Legislative Assembly. The elections were contested by 18 parties, and a number of independent candidates.

The elections were originally planned for May 2003,[1] but were delayed by the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland.[2]

Contents

[edit] Political Parties

On the unionist side, the Democratic Unionist Party gained ten seats, primarily at the expense of smaller Unionist parties, to become the largest party both in seats and votes. Despite slipping to third place in first preference votes the Ulster Unionist Party actually increased their vote slightly and had a net loss of only one seat. Shortly after the election three Ulster Unionist MLAs, Jeffrey Donaldson, Nora Beare and Arlene Foster, defected to the Democratic Unionists.

On the nationalist side, Sinn Féin saw a big increase in their vote, gaining six seats at the net expense of the Social Democratic and Labour Party.

The minor parties all saw a significant fall in their support. The Alliance Party managed to hold all six of its seats despite their vote almost halving, the Women's Coalition, United Unionist Coalition and Northern Ireland Unionist Party were all wiped out, and the Progressive Unionist Party and UK Unionist Party had just one seat each.

The biggest surprise of the election came in West Tyrone with the election of the independent Dr. Kieran Deeny, campaigning on the single issue of hospital provision in Omagh.

[edit] Note

Several sitting MLAs stood under a different label to the one they had used in 1998. Some had failed to be selected by their parties to stand and so stood as independents, whilst others had changed parties during the course of the assembly. Most of these realignments occurred within the unionist parties, with several defections between existing parties and two new parties being formed - the United Unionist Coalition (formed by the three MLAs elected as independent unionists, though one later joined the Democratic Unionist Party) and the Northern Ireland Unionist Party (formed by four of the five MLAs elected as the UK Unionist Party, though one later left them, joined the Democratic Unionists for a period but contested the election as an independent unionist). Neither the United Unionist Assembly Party nor the Northern Ireland Unionists won any seats in the 2003 election.

[edit] Results

Image:Northernirelandassembly asof Jun 2003.PNG

Party Leader Seats +/- % of seats Number % of vote
DUP Ian Paisley 30 +10 27.8 177,944 25.7
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 24 +6 22.2 162,758 23.5
Ulster Unionist David Trimble 27 -1 25 156,931 22.7
Social Democratic and Labour Mark Durkan 18 -6 16.7 117,547 17.0
Alliance David Ford 6 0 5.6 25,372 3.7
Independent N/A 1 +1 0.9 20,234 2.9
Progressive Unionist David Ervine 1 -1 0.9 8,032 1.2
NI Women's Coalition Monica McWilliams 0 -2 5,785 0.8
UK Unionist Robert McCartney 1 -4 0.9 5,700 0.8
United Unionist Council Denis Watson 0 N/A 2,705 0.4
Green Party John Barry 0 0 2,688 0.4
Socialist Environmental Goretti Horgan 0 N/A 2,394 0.4
Workers' Party Seán Garland 0 0 1,881 0.3
Conservative Michael Howard 0 0 1,604 0.2
NI Unionist Cedric Wilson 0 N/A 1,350 0.2
Socialist Party Peter Hadden 0 N/A 343 0.0
Rainbow Dream Ticket Rainbow George 0 N/A 124 0.0
Ulster Third Way David Kerr 0 N/A 16 0.0
 Total 108 0 100.0 692,028 100.0
All parties with over 1,000 votes shown.
SOURCE: ARK website[1]

[edit] See also

[edit] References