Norman Porter
Norman Porter was a loyalist politician in Northern Ireland.
A lay preacher, an Orangeman, an Apprentice Boy and a member of the Royal Black Institution,[1] Porter became the leader of the National Union of Protestants in Northern Ireland in 1948.[2] Ian Paisley was treasurer of the group, but left after Porter refused to join his new Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster. The Union disintegrated soon after.[3] In 1953, Porter became the Director of the Evangelical Protestant Society. He also edited the Ulster Protestant newspaper,[2] which he produced with William McConnell Wilton.[4]
At the Northern Ireland general election, 1953, Porter was elected as an Independent Unionist MP for Belfast Clifton, standing with the slogan "For God and Ulster".[5] He defeated Samuel Hall-Thompson, who uniquely among Ministers was not a member of the Orange Order and who had faced criticism from loyalists for appearing to compromise with the Roman Catholic Church while Minister of Education.[6]
Porter attended the first meeting of the Ulster Protestant Action group in 1956, but he immediately withdrew.[3] He lost his seat at the 1958 general election to Robin Kinahan.[2] Porter was again defeated in the seat in a 1959 by-election.[7]
Porter was an opponent of Catholicism. In a 1964 speech reported in the Belfast Newsletter, he stated: "When you become too friendly with those of different religious persuasion, you find it increasingly hard and difficult to oppose their beliefs – this leads to compromise."[8]
In 1969, he stood in Belfast Duncairn, where sitting Ulster Unionist Party MP William Fitzsimmons' daughter had married a Roman Catholic, and Fitzsimmons had subsequently resigned from the Orange Order. Porter presented himself as a candidate whose opposition to Catholicism was in no doubt, but proved unsuccessful in the poll.[6]
Porter's son, also Norman Porter, has written several books on politics in Northern Ireland.[1]
References
- ^ a b Paul Bew, "Good Friday man?", Times Online
- ^ a b c Michael Farrell, Northern Ireland: The Orange State
- ^ a b Clifford Smyth, Ian Paisley: Voice of Protestant Ulster, p.6
- ^ Clifford Smyth, Ian Paisley: Voice of Protestant Ulster, p.5
- ^ Graham S. Walker, A History of the Ulster Unionist Party: Protest, Pragmatism and Pessimism
- ^ a b Northern Ireland Parliamentary Election Results: Boroughs: Belfast
- ^ Northern Ireland Parliamentary Elections Results: Biographies
- ^ John Daniel Cash, Identity, Ideology and Conflict: The Structuration of Politics in Northern Ireland