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Sir Reg sets out his stall

  • Mark Devenport
  • 16 Feb 07, 01:36 PM

The Ulster Unionists have had some fraught times at the Waterfront Hall in Belfast, what with "jumping first" over power sharing and all those heated UUP executive meetings. But this morning's manifesto launch was a rather more relaxed affair.

I found myself sitting next to a number of toddlers, who I suspect were one of the UUP candidates' grandchildren. I never did find out for sure, because despite sustained and persistent questioning the little boy sitting on his mother's lap in the next seat never did confirm his name. Either he's shy, been well drilled not to talk to strangers or is a born politician, used to not answering questions...

Anyway Sir Reg Empey said it was right to have the children there as it's half term and the UUP manifesto is called "for all of us". It is packed full of "bread and butter" policies on everything from free prescriptions to 20 mph speed limits around schools to saving the Irish hare. But if the UUP is so concerned about "bread and butter" politics then why didn't it take portfolios like health and education last time? That's a question I put to Sir Reg for the Inside Politics programme going out tomorrow, and he admits that if they had to do it again they would do it differently.

In his interview Sir Reg criticises the DUP over its ambiguous approach to power sharing - he says it's fundamentally dishonest. And he disagrees with Peter Robinson's idea that keeping the government guessing gives local politicians more leverage over Gordon Brown when it comes to negotiating a peace dividend. He says that the Chancellor is never going to extend tax concessions to NI in the run up to the Scottish elections.

For more you can tune in to the programme at 12.45pm tomorrow or look the Inside Politics page up on the web after its transmission...

By the way there's a change of plan with the 麻豆官网首页入口 NI Webcast. I've got myself double booked and so my colleague Jim Fitzpatrick is going to step into the hot seat on Tuesday....don't worry you'll still get your questions asked and, after all, he's easier on the eye than me

Comments   Post your comment

Welcome to the blogsphere Mark!

I wonder what the Ulster Unionist dissidents who transferred their allegiance to the DUP will do if the DUP sit down in government with Sinn Fein, will they have the courage to take them on face to face or will they keep on running who they will join next?

  • 2.
  • At 11:46 AM on 19 Feb 2007,
  • gary blair wrote:

In reply to the above comment, I have been told by quite a few that they switched allegiance from the UUP to DUP for the first time in 2005 and are determined not to do so again. Interestingly, quite a few also revealed that they will be giving the UKUP their number 1. That may be only a handful but I wonder if it is a microcosm of thinking within Unionism throughout the country? We'll know on 8th March when the votes have all been tallied.

  • 3.
  • At 11:29 PM on 19 Feb 2007,
  • Simon Henning wrote:

When you said "Sir Reg sets out his stall" I presumed he had become a Market Trader. Well, at least he'd be sure of gaining something that way!

  • 4.
  • At 11:10 PM on 23 Feb 2007,
  • Alex wrote:

The UUP is obviously addressing the concerns of young parents in their policies, and the mother of those children who attended the launch obviously felt confident that their presence was welcome, contradicting the idea that UU politics is only for old men!

  • 5.
  • At 02:29 PM on 01 Mar 2007,
  • J Junkin wrote:

The UUP were more than happy to lose many of their party faithful all over NI in their determination to bolster the last 2 assemblies.
Having shown no noticeable interest or made any effort whatsoever in regaining them, isn't it a bit rich for the UUP to call themselves a party FOR ALL OF US?

  • 6.
  • At 11:35 AM on 07 Mar 2007,
  • Gill wrote:

yet again the uup manifesto is barely worth the paper it is written on - another manifesto of empty promises, made up policies and general nonsense that, in real terms, means nothing to anyone. What hope is there of a fresh start a 'new' future when it will be the same old tired politicians with the same old tired opinions. i vote - NONE OF THE ABOVE!

I don't know if Gill read the same UUP manifesto as I did, but I thought it was better than most on "bread and butter issues", certainly the best of the big 4.

Just compare the numerous, numerous policy points in it with the 30+ pages (of a 64 page document) wasted by the DUP attacking Sinn Fein and the Ulster Unionists.

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