The Right Honourable Peter Robinson MLA |
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First Minister of Northern Ireland | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 3 February 2010 |
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Deputy | Martin McGuinness John O'Dowd (Acting) |
Preceded by | Arlene Foster (Acting) |
In office 5 June 2008 – 11 January 2010 |
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Deputy | Martin McGuinness |
Preceded by | Ian Paisley |
Succeeded by | Arlene Foster (Acting) |
Leader of the Democratic Unionist Party | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 31 May 2008 |
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Preceded by | Ian Paisley |
Minister of Finance and Personnel | |
In office 8 May 2007 – 5 June 2008 |
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First Minister | Ian Paisley |
Preceded by | Sean Farren |
Succeeded by | Nigel Dodds |
Minister for Regional Development | |
In office 24 October 2001 – 11 October 2002 |
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First Minister | Reg Empey (Acting) David Trimble |
Preceded by | Gregory Campbell |
Succeeded by | Conor Murphy |
In office 29 November 1999 – 27 July 2000 |
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First Minister | David Trimble |
Preceded by | Position established |
Succeeded by | Gregory Campbell |
Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for Belfast East |
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Incumbent | |
Assumed office 25 June 1998 |
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Preceded by | Constituency Created |
Member of Parliament for Belfast East |
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In office 3 May 1979 – 6 May 2010 |
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Preceded by | William Craig |
Succeeded by | Naomi Long |
Personal details | |
Born | 29 December 1948 Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom |
Political party | Democratic Unionist Party |
Spouse(s) | Iris Collins (1970–present) |
Children | 2 sons 1 daughter |
Alma mater | Belfast Metropolitan College |
Profession | Estate agent |
Religion | Pentecostalism |
Website | Official website |
Peter David Robinson (born 29 December 1948) is the current First Minister of Northern Ireland and leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). He has been actively involved in Northern Irish politics since 1970 when he became a founding member of Ian Paisley's Democratic Unionist Party.
Robinson served as Paisley’s Parliamentary Assistant at Westminster prior to assuming the role of the General Secretary of the DUP in 1975, a position of which he held until 1979 and which afforded him the opportunity to exert unprecedented influence within the fledgling unionist party.
In 1977, Robinson was elected as a councillor to the Castlereagh Borough Council in Dundonald, Belfast and in 1979 he became the youngest serving Member of Parliament (MP) when he was narrowly elected as MP for Belfast East. He held this seat until being defeated in May 2010, making him the longest-serving MP for any Belfast constituency since the 1800 Act of Union.
In 1980, Robinson was elected as the Deputy Leader of the DUP. Following the re-establishment of devolved government in Northern Ireland as a result of the Good Friday Agreement, Robinson was elected in 1998 as Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) for the constituency of Belfast East. Robinson subsequently served as Minister for Regional Development and Minister for Finance and Personnel. Robinson was elected unopposed as the new leader of the DUP on 15 April 2008 and was elected as First Minister of Northern Ireland on 5 June 2008.[1][2]
In January 2010, following a scandal involving his wife Iris Robinson, Robinson temporarily stood down from his position as First Minister and selected Arlene Foster to fulfill the role, under the terms of the Northern Ireland Act 2006.[3] Following an investigation, which cleared Robinson of allegations made by the BBC in relation to the Iris Robinson scandal, he resumed his duties as First Minister and subsequently completed the devolution of policing and justice powers to the Stormont Executive on 5 February 2010.[4][5]
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Peter David Robinson was born on 29 December 1948 in Belfast, Northern Ireland, the son of Sheila and David McCrea Robinson.
Peter Robinson was educated at Annadale Grammar School, now Wellington College Belfast in Belfast, and studied English and Mathematics at Castlereagh College, now known part of the Belfast Metropolitan College.
Although Robinson’s family had no background in unionist politics, Robinson developed an interest in Northern Irish politics as a teenager, resulting in the publication of various political pamphlets, including ‘The North Answers Back’, which drew the young aspiring politician to the attention of Ian Paisley. Robinson initially gained employment as an estate agent for Alex Murdoch & Deane in Belfast but decided to accept a decrease in salary to become the DUP’s first general secretary in 1975.
Robinson was General Secretary of the DUP between 1975 and 1979. He first stood in the election to the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention on 1 May 1975 in Belfast, East. Although he started in fifth place, he failed to get elected being overtaken by his running mate Eileen Paisley.[6]
Robinson was elected as a councillor for Castlereagh Borough Council for the Castlereagh C area in the local government elections on 18 May 1977.[7] He resigned from the council on 2 July 2007.[8]
Robinson was selected as DUP candidate for Belfast East during the 1979 general election, a seat which previously had a big Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) majority.[6] He won the seat with a 19.9%[6] swing to the DUP and a majority of 64,[6] with Alliance Party leader Oliver Napier 928[6] votes behind, unseating the MP former Vanguard Progressive Unionist Party leader and UUP candidate William Craig on 3 May 1979.
He was re-elected to the House of Commons in 1983, 1986 (along with UUP and DUP MPs he resigned his seat in protest at the Anglo Irish Agreement on 17 December 1985 and was re-elected in the by-election the next year), 1987, 1992, 2001 and 2005. In the 2010 UK general election he lost Belfast East to Naomi Long of the Alliance party.[9]
Robinson did not sit on any committees in the United Kingdom Parliament, although he served on the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee from 1997 to 13 July 2005.[10]
In the general election on 7 June 2001, Robinson’s wife, Iris, joined him in Parliament as MP for Strangford. The Robinsons were the first husband and wife ever to represent Northern Ireland in Parliament.
Robinson was the longest-serving Member of Parliament for any Belfast constituency since the Act of Union in 1800.
Robinson's electoral success was marked when he was elected Deputy Leader of the DUP in 1980. He was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly for Belfast East on 20 October 1982 where he served as Chairman of the Environment Committee until it was dissolved in 1986.[6]
Robinson resigned briefly as DUP Deputy Leader in 1987 when the Task Force Report, written jointly with Ulster Unionists, Harold McCusker MP and Frank Millar and calling for a strategic unionist rethink in the wake of the Anglo-Irish Agreement was rejected by their respective leaders, Ian Paisley and James Molyneaux.
He was elected to the Northern Ireland Forum on 30 May 1996 and served in it until it completed its work in 1998.[11] On 25 June 1998, he was elected MLA for Belfast East in the Northern Ireland Assembly election.[12] He was subsequently re-elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly in 2003 and again in 2007.
Robinson was Minister for Regional Development, which has overall responsibility for the Department for Regional Development (DRD), between 29 November 1999 to 27 July 2000 and 24 October 2001 to 11 October 2002. He was responsible for the introduction of free fares on public transport for the elderly and helped formulate the 25 year Regional Development Strategy for Northern Ireland and devised the 10 year Regional Transport Strategy.
Robinson was Minister of Finance and Personnel from 8 May 2007 to June 2008.[13]
On 4 March 2008, Ian Paisley announced that he would step down as Leader of the DUP and First Minister in May 2008.[14] On 14 April 2008, Robinson was nominated unanimously by the DUP MLAs as leader designate with Nigel Dodds as deputy leader designate of the DUP and on 17 April 2008 they were both ratified by the DUP's 120-member executive committee.[15][16] He formally became leader on 31 May 2008.
As Leader of the DUP, Robinson was ratified by the Northern Ireland Assembly as First Minister with Sinn Féin's Martin McGuinness as deputy First Minister (diarchy) on 5 June 2008.[17]
On 11 January 2010 Robinson announced that he was stepping down from the position of First Minister for a period of six weeks to clear his name over his financial dealings in the midst of the Iris Robinson scandal. Arlene Foster was designated to discharge the duties of First Minister until his return.[18] Mr Robinson is facing a claim that he knew his wife obtained £50,000 from two developers for her teenage lover but did not tell the proper authorities. His wife received "acute psychiatric treatment" following a BBC Spotlight documentary about the scandal. On 11 January 2010 Robinson confirmed that he had asked both the House of Commons and the Northern Ireland Assembly to carry out an inquiry into his conduct.
On 7 August 1986, in protest at the Anglo-Irish Agreement, Robinson led a group of 500 loyalists into the village of Clontibret in County Monaghan in the Republic of Ireland. The loyalists attacked the unmanned Garda station in the village and daubbed loyalist slogans on the walls. They then held a quasi-military parade along the main street and attacked two Gardaí. More Gardaí arrived shortly after and fired shots in the air, scattering the loyalist crowd. Robinson was arrested and held at Monaghan Garda station. He pleaded guilty to unlawful assembly and was fined IR£17500 in a Drogheda court to escape a prison sentence. As a result, Robinson briefly resigned from the DUP deputy leadership.[19] There was also violence both before and after a court appearance in Dundalk, including Ian Paisley being attacked with stones and petrol bombs after Jim Wells and other Robinson supporters waved flags and sang Loyalist songs.[20] At his trial the judge described him as "a senior extremist politician".[21][22]
In November 1986, he spoke at the Ulster Hall demonstration which launched Ulster Resistance, an organisation which subsequently collaborated with the Ulster Defence Association and Ulster Volunteer Force to import arms from South Africa, resulting in Robinson leaving the organisation.[22][23] Robinson was photographed wearing the loyalist paramilitary military uniform at an Ulster Resistance demonstration.
At a rally in Enniskillen, Peter Robinson announced; "'Thousands have already joined the movement and the task of shaping them into an effective force is continuing. The Resistance has indicated that drilling and training has already started. The officers of the nine divisions have taken up their duties'.[24]
On 30 October 2008 in his first extensive interview as First Minister interview for Hearts and Minds for BBC Northern Ireland, Peter Robinson publicly stated that homosexuality was against Christian theology.
Robinson said: “It wasn’t Iris Robinson who determined that homosexuality was an abomination, it was The Almighty. This is the Scriptures. It is a strange world indeed where somebody on the one hand talks about equality, but won’t allow Christians to have the equality, the right to speak, the right to express their views.” [25]
The comments angered LGBT Christian groups throughout the UK .
On 28 May 2009 the Planning Service of Northern Ireland granted Robinson planning permission for six houses to be built in his rear garden on the Gransha Road[26] in the Dundonald area of east Belfast.[27]
On 30 March 2010, the BBC reported that Robinson had purchased a piece of land from a developer for £5, enabling him to sell part of his back garden for nearly £460,000.[28] Robinson later claimed that the BBC were leading a smear campaign against him.[29]
On 8 January 2010 the BBC Northern Ireland programme Spotlight[30] reported on how his wife, Iris, had obtained £50,000 for Kirk McCambley, 19 at the time, while she was sexually involved with him.[31] On the day before the Spotlight programme, Peter Robinson had made an emotional statement to the Press Association, BBC, UTV and RTÉ in regard to the relationship and mentioned that there were no financial wrongdoings.[32] However, the programme showed that when Robinson found out about the financial aspects of his wife's relationship he insisted that the money she had lobbied for and subsequently lent and gifted from two property developers to her lover be returned in full. However, he did not tell the proper authorities what he knew about the transactions between the four, despite being obliged by the Northern Ireland Executive ministerial code of conduct to act in the public interest at all times. Later that day Robinson's solicitors said he was thoroughly satisfied that he has at all times acted properly and fulfilled all requirements, and would robustly challenge any allegation to the contrary.[31]
On 11 January 2010 Robinson announced that he was stepping down from the position of First Minister for a period of six weeks. Arlene Foster was nominated as his replacement for this period.[18] Robinson lost his seat in Westminster at the 2010 General Election.
Robinson married Iris Collins on 26 July 1970; they have three children, Jonathan, Gareth and Rebekah. His wife has joined him as a councillor, a MLA and a MP. Their son, Gareth Robinson is also member of Castlereagh (borough). They were the first husband and wife ever to represent Northern Ireland constituencies in Parliament. His daughter, Rebekah, served as his private secretary for his Advice Centre in the East Belfast constituency. Hazel Kerr serves as the office's main secretary.
Robinson's character on the BBC's Folks on the Hill television programme is portrayed as aggressive and constantly trying to get away from the Ian Paisley-Martin McGuinness so-called "Chuckle Brothers" image when he works with Martin McGuinness.[33] However it does not appear that he will escape a shared nickname as "Brothers Grimm" is catching on.[34]
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