List of members of the 1st Northern Ireland Assembly

This is a list of the 108 members of the first Northern Ireland Assembly, the unicameral devolved legislature of Northern Ireland established by the Good Friday Agreement. Members (fully Members of the Legislative Assembly, MLAs) elected in June 1998 are listed,[1] as well as those subsequently co-opted to replace those who had resigned or deceased.[2] MLAs are grouped by party, and changes in party affiliation are noted.[2]

1st Northern Ireland Assembly
Forum 2nd Assembly
Overview
Legislative bodyAssembly
JurisdictionNorthern Ireland
Meeting placeParliament Buildings,
Stormont
Term1 July 1998 – 14 October 2002
Election1998 assembly election
GovernmentExecutive of the 1st Assembly
Members108
SpeakerLord Alderdice
First MinisterDavid Trimble
Reg Empey
until 6 November 2001
David Trimble
until 1 July 2001
Deputy First MinisterMark Durkan
Seamus Mallon
until 6 November 2001
Sessions
1st1 July 1998 – 9 March 1999
2nd15 July 1999 – 8 February 2000
3rd5 June 2000 – 4 July 2000
4th11 September 2000 – 4 July 2001
5th10 September 2001 – 3 July 2002
6th9 September 2002 – 14 October 2002

Party strengths

Party DesignationJun 1998
election
Oct 2002
end
Ulster Unionist Party Unionist2827
Social Democratic and Labour Party Nationalist2423
Democratic Unionist Party Unionist2020
Sinn Féin Nationalist1818
 Alliance Party Other65
 UK Unionist Party Unionist51
 Progressive Unionist Party Unionist22
  Northern Ireland Women's Coalition Other 2 2
United Unionist Coalition Unionist - 3
Northern Ireland Unionist Party Unionist - 3
 Independent Nationalist01
  Independent Unionist 3 2
 Speaker None01
Totals by designation Unionist5858
Nationalist4242
Other65
None 0 1
Total 108
● = Northern Ireland Executive

Graphical representation

This is not the official seating plan.

Members by party

Social Democratic and Labour Party (24)

Alex Attwood
P. J. Bradley
Joe Byrne
John Dallat
Arthur Doherty (later resigned and replaced by Michael Coyle)
Mark Durkan
Sean Farren
John Fee
Tommy Gallagher
Carmel Hanna
Denis Haughey
Joe Hendron
John Hume (later resigned and replaced by Annie Courtney)
Patricia Lewsley
Donovan McClelland
Alasdair McDonnell
Eddie McGrady
Eugene McMenamin
Alban Maginness
Seamus Mallon
Danny O'Connor
Eamon O'Neill
Bríd Rodgers
John Tierney

Ulster Unionist Party (28)

Ian Adamson
Pauline Armitage
Billy Armstrong
Roy Beggs, Jr.
Billy Bell
Tom Benson (died 2000, replaced by Tom Hamilton)
Esmond Birnie
Joan Carson
Fred Cobain
Robert Coulter
Ivan Davis
Reg Empey
Sam Foster
John Gorman
Derek Hussey
Danny Kennedy
James Leslie
David McClarty
Alan McFarland
Michael McGimpsey
Dermot Nesbitt
Ken Robinson
George Savage
Duncan Shipley-Dalton
John Taylor
David Trimble
Peter Weir (later joined Democratic Unionist Party)
Jim Wilson

Democratic Unionist Party (20)

Paul Berry
Gregory Campbell
Mervyn Carrick
Wilson Clyde
Nigel Dodds
Oliver Gibson
William Hay
David Hilditch
Gardiner Kane
William McCrea
Maurice Morrow
Ian Paisley
Ian Paisley Jr
Edwin Poots
Iris Robinson
Mark Robinson
Peter Robinson
Jim Shannon
Jim Wells
Sammy Wilson

Sinn Féin (18)

Gerry Adams
Bairbre de Brún
Pat Doherty
Michelle Gildernew
Gerry Kelly
John Kelly
Barry McElduff
Martin McGuinness
Gerry McHugh
Mitchel McLaughlin
Pat McNamee
Alex Maskey
Francie Molloy
Conor Murphy
Mick Murphy
Mary Nelis
Dara O'Hagan
Sue Ramsey

Alliance Party of Northern Ireland (6)

John Alderdice
Eileen Bell
Seamus Close
David Ford
Kieran McCarthy
Seán Neeson

UK Unionist Party (5)

Norman Boyd (later joined Northern Ireland Unionist Party)
Roger Hutchinson (later joined Northern Ireland Unionist Party, then left and later joined the Democratic Unionist Party)
Robert McCartney
Patrick Roche (later joined Northern Ireland Unionist Party)
Cedric Wilson (later joined Northern Ireland Unionist Party)

Progressive Unionist Party (2)

David Ervine
Billy Hutchinson

Northern Ireland Women's Coalition (2)

Monica McWilliams
Jane Morrice

Independent Unionist (3)

Fraser Agnew (later joined United Unionist Assembly Party)
Boyd Douglas (later joined United Unionist Assembly Party)
Denis Watson (later joined United Unionist Assembly Party)

References

  1. "Northern Ireland Elections: Candidates in the 1998 NI Assembly Election". www.ark.ac.uk. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  2. Northern Ireland Assembly Information Office. "The Northern Ireland Assembly - Chronology (1998–2003)". archive.niassembly.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 April 2017.

See also

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