Promising beginnings In March 1971 Faulkner was elected leader of the Ulster Unionist Party and thus became prime minister. In his initial innovative approach to government, he gave a non-unionist,
David Bleakley, a former
Northern Ireland Labour Party MP, a position in his cabinet as
Minister for Community Relations. In June 1971, he proposed three new powerful committees at Stormont which would give the opposition salaried chairmanships of two of them.
Initial troubles However, this initiative (radical at the time) was soon overtaken by events. The shooting of two Catholic youths in
Derry by British soldiers prompted the
SDLP, the largest Nationalist party and main opposition to boycott the Stormont parliament. The political climate deteriorated further when, in response to the worsening security situation, and in a move without precedent in the United Kingdom in modern times, Faulkner
introduced internment on 9 August 1971. This was a disaster; instead of lessening the violence, it caused the situation to worsen. David Bleakley resigned in September 1971 over internment and Faulkner appointed Dr
G. B. Newe, a prominent Catholic, as Minister of State in the Cabinet Office. Faulkner's administration staggered on through the rest of 1971, insisting that security was the paramount issue. In January 1972, an incident occurred during a
Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association march in Derry, during which
paratroopers shot and killed thirteen unarmed civilians. A fourteenth civilian was to die later. What history has come to know as
Bloody Sunday was, in essence, the end of Faulkner's government. In March 1972, Faulkner refused to maintain a government without security powers which the British government under
Edward Heath decided to take back. The Stormont parliament was subsequently prorogued (initially for a period of one year) and following the appointment of a
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland,
William Whitelaw,
direct rule was introduced. ==Chief Executive==