Frank Millar is a Northern Irish journalist and former unionist politician.

Frank Millar Jr
Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly
for Belfast South
In office
1984–1986
Preceded byEdgar Graham
Succeeded byAssembly abolished
Personal details
BornBelfast, Northern Ireland
Political partyUlster Unionist

Background

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The son of Frank Millar, also a unionist politician, he was known as "Frank Millar Jr" during his early political career. He joined the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), and remained a member when his father left the organisation to sit as an independent Unionist.

Millar was the Press Officer of the UUP during the early 1980s.[1] He stood unsuccessfully for 1982 Northern Ireland Assembly in South Antrim.[2] However, he was elected to that body in 1984 in an uncontested by-election in Belfast South caused by the IRA murder of Edgar Graham.[3]

In 1983, Millar became the General Secretary of the UUP.[1] At the 1987 UK general election, he stood in Belfast West, receiving 18.7% of the votes cast.[4] The same year, he worked with UUP MP Harold McCusker and the DUP's Peter Robinson to produce a report on power sharing, following a positive report on the topic by the Ulster Political Research Group. The Task Force Report gave serious consideration to the idea, and called for a strategic unionist rethink in the wake of the Anglo-Irish Agreement. It was rejected by their respective leaders, Ian Paisley and James Molyneaux. Millar then resigned from his party post.[5]

Millar subsequently became a journalist and has long been the London Editor of the Irish Times. In 1998, he was named the Irish Print Journalist of the Year. In 2004, he wrote a biography of UUP leader David Trimble, entitled David Trimble: The Price of Peace.[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b Graham S. Walker, A History of the Ulster Unionist Party: Protest, Pragmatism And Pessimism
  2. ^ South Antrim 1973-1982, Northern Ireland Elections
  3. ^ South Belfast 1973-1984, Northern Ireland Elections
  4. ^ "UK Parliamentary Election results: 1983-97: Northern Irish Boroughs". Archived from the original on 2 November 2007. Retrieved 21 September 2007.
  5. ^ Brendan O'Leary and John McGarry, The Northern Ireland Conflict: Consociational Engagements
  6. ^ "David Trimble by Frank Millar Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine", Global-Investor Bookshop
Northern Ireland Assembly (1982)
Preceded by MPA for South Belfast
1983–1986
Assembly abolished
Political offices
Preceded by General Secretary of the Ulster Unionist Party
1983–1987
Succeeded by