Ervine was considered to be one of the most progressive
unionists in Northern Ireland politics. He had been a strong supporter of the
Good Friday Agreement and was one of the few unionist politicians actively to support the Agreement. At a
Labour Party meeting in 2001, then
Northern Ireland Secretary,
John Reid, described him as "one of the most eloquent politicians in Northern Ireland". Some of his political peers, such as
John Reid, made references to him having swallowed a dictionary, in reference to coming more informative and educated. In
Landscapes of Defense, Ervine was seen as one of the few politicians actively engaged with conflict resolution. In the
Northern Ireland Assembly, he was seen as a Unionist sympathetic to the short-term demands of
Sinn Féin, resisting attempts by the
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) to exclude Sinn Féin from office in July 2000 and October 2001. In April 2001, he provoked a direct political attack from the DUP over being the only unionist to vote against a motion condemning the display of lilies commemorating the 1916
Easter Rising at Parliament Buildings. Ervine also expressed support for the right of Sinn Féin members to make speeches in
Irish on the floor of the Assembly. Later, editors and political commentators such as John Laverty noted how he sat next to Sinn Féin's
Martin McGuinness at the funeral of Northern Ireland football legend
George Best in December 2005 as a sign of how Northern Ireland had moved on. == Independent Monitoring Commission ==