Walter Millar is a Northern Irish unionist politician.
Walter Millar | |
---|---|
Member of Cookstown District Council | |
In office 15 May 1985 – 19 May 1993 | |
Preceded by | Seat created |
Succeeded by | William Cuddy |
Constituency | Drum Manor |
Personal details | |
Born | Newmills, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland |
Political party | TUV (2007 - 2019) DUP (before 1993) |
Other political affiliations | UKUP (2007) Ulster Independence (1993 - 1996) |
Early years
editMillar grew up on a farm in Newmills, County Tyrone. He became the founding secretary of the Newmills Apprentice Boys in 1982.[1]
Early career
editHe was elected to Cookstown District Council for the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) at the 1985 local elections, and held his seat in 1989.[2] For part of this period, he served as vice-chairman of the council.[1]
Millar resigned from the DUP in the mid-1990s, joining the Ulster Independence Movement.[3] He stood for his new party in Mid Ulster at the 1996 elections to the Northern Ireland Forum, but his list only took 263 votes, and he was not elected.[4] He also failed to be elected from his fourth place on the party's regional list.[5]
Career
editMillar was also a leading figure in the Tyrone Orange Order, and rose to become Deputy Grand Master to Joel Patton. Like Patton, he was a leading figure in the Spirit of Drumcree group, and the two were compelled to leave the Order in 1998.[6]
Opposing the St Andrews Agreement, Millar joined the UK Unionist Party, and stood in Mid Ulster again at the 2007 Northern Ireland Assembly election.[7] In one of the party's better results, he took 2.7% of the votes cast.[8] The party disbanded soon afterwards, and Millar became the founding Mid Ulster Chairman of Traditional Unionist Voice. He stood in the Westminster constituency of Mid Ulster at the 2010 general election, holding his deposit, taking fifth place and 7.3% of the votes cast.[9] The following year, he stood in the equivalent constituency at the Assembly election, and received 4.7% of the vote.[10] He also stood for the TUV in Cookstown at the 2011 local elections, but came bottom of the poll, with 461 votes.[11]
The TUV decided to support an Independent Unionist unity candidate, Nigel Lutton, at the 2013 Mid Ulster by-election and Millar was among those who signed Lutton's nomination papers.[12]
References
edit- ^ a b "Election 2010 : Northern Ireland candidates (TUV)", BBC News
- ^ "Local Government Elections 1985 -1989: Cookstown, Northern Ireland Elections
- ^ George Harding, "Comments bear little significance", Belfast Newsletter, 16 May 2007
- ^ "1996 Forum Elections: Candidates in Mid Ulster", Northern Ireland Elections
- ^ "The 1996 Forum Elections: Regional List of Candidates", Northern Ireland Elections
- ^ Eric P. Kaufmann, The Orange Order, pp.168-199
- ^ "Billy Kennedy's election predictions start today Archived 6 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine", Belfast Newsletter, 5 March 2007
- ^ "Mid Ulster", Northern Ireland Elections
- ^ "Election 2010: Mid Ulster", BBC News
- ^ "Your Constituency - Mid Ulster", UTV
- ^ "Cookstown District Council Elections 1993-2011", Northern Ireland Elections
- ^ "Mid Ulster TUV Chair Signs Lutton's Nomination Papers | - Traditional Unionist Voice". Archived from the original on 24 April 2013. Retrieved 22 February 2013.