William David Trimble, Baron Trimble, PC (born 15 October 1944) is a Northern Irish politician who served as leader of the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) and the first First Minister of Northern Ireland. He shared the 1998 Nobel Peace Prize with John Hume of the Social Democratic and Labour Party. In 2005 he was defeated in the British general election and resigned the leadership of the UUP soon afterwards. On 6 June 2006 he became a member of the House of Lords.
He is married to his former student, Daphne Orr, and they have four children. He has no children from his first marriage, which was dissolved.
David Trimble became involved with the Vanguard Progressive Unionist Party in the early 1970's and ran unsuccessfully for the party in the 1973 Assembly elections for North Down. In 1974 he acted as legal adviser to the Ulster Workers' Council during the paramilitary-controlled Ulster Workers' Strike, during which loyalist paramilitaries intimidated thousands of utility workers. He was elected to the Northern Ireland Convention in 1975 as a Vanguard Progressive Unionist Party member for South Belfast and for a time he served as the party's joint-deputy leader, along with the Ulster Defence Association's Glenn Barr. The party had been established by William Craig to oppose sharing power with Irish Nationalists, and to prevent closer ties with the Republic of Ireland, however Trimble was one of those to back Craig when the party split over Craig's proposal to allow voluntary power sharing with the SDLP. He also contributed to the Ulster Volunteer Force magazine Combat at this time.
When the Vanguard party collapsed he joined the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) in 1978 and was elected one of the four party secretaries. He ran unsuccessfully for the UUP in the 1981 council elections in the Lisburn area. He was elected to Westminster in a by-election in Upper Bann in 1990. He was one of the few British politicians who urged support for the Bosnians during the civil war in the 1990s. His support for an interventionist foreign policy is demonstrated by his membership of the Henry Jackson Society.
At the general elections of 2005, David Trimble failed in his bid for re-election to Parliament in Westminster when he was defeated by the Democratic Unionist Party's David Simpson. The Ulster Unionist Party retained only one seat in Parliament (out of eighteen in Northern Ireland) after the 2005 General Election, and David Trimble resigned as leader of the party on May 7, 2005.
On April 11, 2006, it was announced that Trimble will take a seat in the House of Lords as a working life peer.*. On May 21 2006 it was announced that he had chosen the geographical designation Lisnagarvey, the original name for his adopted home town of Lisburn. On 2 June he was created Baron Trimble, of Lisnagarvey in the County of Antrim.
1944 births | Northern Irish Presbyterians | Presbyterians | Living people | First Ministers of Northern Ireland | Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom | Nobel Peace Prize winners | Members of the United Kingdom Parliament from Northern Ireland constituencies | Alumni of Queen's University, Belfast | Academics of Queen's University of Belfast | Leaders of the Ulster Unionist Party | Holders of First Class Honours University degrees | Life peers | Orange Order
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