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."[9]
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.[7] He emigrated to Australia in 1970, but returned to Northern Ireland in 1982, settling in Portstewart.[1]
Porter's son, also Norman Porter, has written several books on politics in Northern Ireland.[2]
References
^ abcBryson, Anna. "Porter, Norman". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Royal Irish Academy. Retrieved 5 January 2024.