DUP leadership: Four of leading contenders are contrasting characters

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The top contenders to be the next leader of the DUP are a diverse group, with varied careers, personalities and outlooks.

DUP minister Edwin Poots, 55, who announced his candidacy yesterday, comes from a multigenerational DUP family and was close to former DUP leader Rev Ian Paisley.

His father Charlie was considered one of the founding members of the DUP and was an MLA in the 1970s while Edwin’s son, Luke, has also served as a DUP councillor in Lisburn borough.

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Mr Poots was educated at Wallace High School and Greenmount Agricultural College and farmed before becoming a DUP councillor in Lisburn borough, and then an MLA in 1998. Since then he has served as minister for health, culture, environment and, currently, agriculture.

Edwin PootsEdwin Poots
Edwin Poots

Married to Glynis with a large family, he is a creationist and long-standing member of Hillsborough Free Presbyterian Church.

He courted controversy as health minister in 2011, when he opposed a ban on blood donation from gay men and has opposed gay couples from being allowed to adopt children. He also slammed MPs for relaxing NI’s strict abortion legislation in 2019.

In January he revealed he had cancer on his kidney and stepped down briefly for surgery before taking up his post again.

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He withdrew staff from carrying out Brexit checks at Larne port in February, citing fears of paramilitary attacks linked to the NI Protocol – something the PSNI later said was not credible.

Sir Jeffrey DonaldsonSir Jeffrey Donaldson
Sir Jeffrey Donaldson

While seen as firmly on the fundamentalist wing of the party, even political rivals admit he is easy to get along with.

Lagan Valley Alliance MLA Trevor Lunn said: “We are poles apart politically but I have known him politically for 20 years and he has been a good friend to me.”

Keen supporter Jim Wells MLA reports his colleague is “very keen” to take on the leadership and multiple sources report that he has been building support across the Province for some time.

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Sir Jeffrey Donaldson is a vastly experienced, high-profile politician who has represented the Lagan Valley as MP for 23 years.

Christopher StalfordChristopher Stalford
Christopher Stalford

From a Presbyterian background in Kilkeel, he left the UUP in 2004 in opposition to the Belfast Agreement. A former UDR soldier, he is the DUP’s spokesperson on Troubles legacy issues.

Sir Jeffrey became the youngest MLA in NI when elected in 1985, aged 22.

As well as experience serving on Parliament’s Privy Council and a number of Westminster committees, Sir Jeffrey has been a junior minister at Stormont and a member of the party’s negotiating team – including during the talks that produced the 2016 Stormont House Agreement.

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In the Commons, he spoke out strongly against Westminster legislating to liberalise abortion law, and to legalise same-sex marriage in Northern Ireland while the Stormont Assembly was suspended.

Gavin RobinsonGavin Robinson
Gavin Robinson

Last year he backed a call from the Presbyterian Church to allow Christian business owners an exemption from the legislation requiring them to serve same-sex weddings.

The 58-year-old’s name has not been mentioned as one of the many senior party figures to have signed the letter calling for Arlene Foster to step down, and has not yet revealed if he declined to add his name to that list.

He was knighted in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list of 2016.

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Gavin Robinson is MP for East Belfast and a former lord mayor of Belfast.

A former barrister, he serves on the Defence Select Committee in Westminster. He also serves in the Commons as the party’s spokesman on both defence and home affairs.

He was special advisor to First Minister Peter Robinson until 2015, when he resigned to stand as an MP.

In that battle he won back his leader’s East Belfast seat for the party from Alliance leader Naomi Long.

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