Politician from Northern Ireland
David Hugh Browne MBE is a former Northern Irish unionist politician who was leader of the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) on Belfast City Council from 2014 to 2019, and a Belfast City Councillor for the Castle DEA from 1993 to 2019.
Life
Browne was elected to Belfast City Council for the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) in the Castle electoral area at the 1993 elections.[1] He was then elected to the Northern Ireland Forum in Belfast North in 1996, but was unsuccessful when he stood for the same seat at the 1998 Northern Ireland Assembly election.[2]
Browne continued to hold his council seat for over 25 years, along with a variety of other civic posts. He was appointed as High Sheriff of Belfast in 2005[3] and, in 2008, he was elected as Deputy Lord Mayor of Belfast.[4] At the 2011 local elections, the UUP were reduced to three seats on the council, one of which was held by Browne,[5] who was subsequently appointed as an alderman.[3] In 2012, he was appointed as a Belfast Harbour Commissioner.[6] He was reappointed as an Alderman in 2015. As of 2017, he was also on the Duncairn Community Centre Committee, the North Belfast Partnership Board and the Northern Ireland Rural Development Programme.[7]
In November 2017, during a council meeting, Browne reportedly called Sinn Féin colleague Ciaran Beattie a "one armed bandit." The remark was considered to have been made in reference to Beattie losing his left hand during an explosion in The Troubles. Sinn Féin's group leader on the council, Jim McVeigh, called on Browne to apologise in a statement, saying: “The vile comments spoken against my colleague’s disability by the UUP Cllr, Davey Browne, are disgraceful and should be withdrawn immediately.” Browne later apologised for the remark.[8][9]
Browne was defeated at the 2019 City Council elections, as were most of his UUP colleagues.[10]
He endorsed DUP candidates, Dean McCullough and Fred Cobain, ahead of the 2023 local elections, for his former Castle District.[11]
Honours
Browne was awarded an MBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours List of June 2013, cited for "services to Local Government in Northern Ireland."[12]
Personal life
Browne lived in the Skegoneill area of Belfast at the time of his first Council election[13] and still as of 2017.[7]
References