Bob McCartney had stood in the constituency for the
Ulster Unionist Party in 1983, when he had come third with 20.3% of the vote. In 1987 he fell out with the party when he refused to withdraw and give Kilfedder a free run on a joint platform of opposition to the
Anglo-Irish Agreement, instead running as a "Real Unionist". McCartney now announced his intention to stand in the election, as a UK Unionist. Despite their differences, he gained the tacit backing of the
Democratic Unionist Party, who had won only 9.8% of the vote in 1992 and chose not to stand their own candidate. The Ulster Unionist Party had not run a candidate in North Down since Bob McCartney in 1983, but they believed they were best placed to take Kilfedder's
personal vote. They chose to run
Alan McFarland, a former Army officer and then Parliamentary secretary to some of their MPs, in preference to
Reg Empey, one of their most prominent members. The Alliance Party selected
Oliver Napier, their former party leader, hoping his experience and notability would regain some of the votes which they had lost in the 1992 election. The Conservative Party had suffered a dramatic loss of votes in the local elections, and their candidate in the 1992 election had moved away, but they chose Stuart Sexton, a member from Croydon in South London. Four other candidates stood.
Alan Chambers, a local councillor, ran as an independent Unionist. The
Natural Law Party stood James Anderson, their leader in Northern Ireland, Michael Brooks who had previously stood as an "Ulster Protestant" candidate in the
1987 Irish general election in
Donegal North-East, stood on a platform to "Free Para
Lee Clegg Now", and Christopher Carter stood as
Ulster's Independent Voice. The big story of the campaign was from
The Guardian, who announced that if McCartney was elected, he would apply for the
Labour Party whip, an unusual move for a unionist, who were more usually associated with the Conservatives. ==Result==