UUP In 1973, McNarry stood unsuccessfully as a pro-White Paper Unionist candidate in the election to the
Northern Ireland Assembly, and unsuccessfully again, this time for the
United Ulster Unionist Council, in the
Constitutional Convention election of 1975. He was an unsuccessful candidate for the
Ulster Unionist Party in the
1982 Northern Ireland Assembly election, when he stood in
North Down. He was elected to
Ards Borough Council in
1997, representing the
Ards West District. He did not stand for re-election at the
2001 local elections. McNarry was his party's candidate for
Strangford at the
2001 general election, following the incumbent MP,
John Taylor, retiring.
Iris Robinson of the
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) was the eventual winner of the seat. He was elected to the
Northern Ireland Assembly at the
2003 Assembly election as an Ulster Unionist member for
Strangford. Prior to his election to the assembly, he was an adviser to
First Minister of Northern Ireland,
David Trimble. He stood for the
party leadership in 2005 along with
Alan McFarland and Lord
Reg Empey which Empey went on to win. Following the contest, he was appointed as the UUP education spokesman. He is a former chairman of the
Ulster Young Unionist Council. He was re-elected to the Assembly at the
2007 and
2011 elections. McNarry resigned from the UUP Assembly group on 27 January 2012 after being sacked by party leader
Tom Elliott as the Vice Chair of the Assembly Education Committee. During an investigation by a UUP Disciplinary Committee, McNarry was suspended. The new leader
Mike Nesbitt commented publicly that he was unlikely to offer McNarry the UUP
whip on completion of the suspension. A
Northern Ireland Office (NIO) memo released in 2012 described him as "a dangerous nuisance".
UKIP McNarry left the UUP and joined UKIP in October 2012, becoming UKIP's first MLA and first ever Member of a devolved Assembly in the United Kingdom. In 2013, McNarry was elected unopposed as the UKIP Leader in Northern Ireland. In the May
2014 local government elections, under McNarry's stewardship, UKIP gained two new local councillors in the region, taking the total number of UKIP councillors in Northern Ireland up to four. The party also received 24,584 (3.9%) first preference votes in the
2014 European election in Northern Ireland and although they failed to win a seat, this was a significant electoral performance. At the September 2014 UKIP national conference in Doncaster, McNarry delivered a keynote speech which was warmly received by delegates. He received praise from commentators who referred to the speech as a "statesman-like" address. In the speech, he noted that UKIP was the only UK-wide party to have elected representation in each of the four parts of the UK. Under McNarry's stewardship, councillors from the DUP, TUV, and a former UUP Belfast Lord Mayor,
Bob Stoker, defected to the party. In the
2015 United Kingdom general election, UKIP failed to have a candidate elected, but in terms of votes finished as the highest performing of the non-Executive parties in Northern Ireland, receiving 18,324 (2.6%) votes whilst only fielding candidates in ten of the available eighteen seats. Prior to the
2016 Northern Ireland Assembly election, McNarry announced his intention to retire from front-line politics. He did not seek re-election to his Strangford seat, but he did represent the party as its Spokesman in the media during the election campaign. In the election, UKIP fielded 13 candidates and drew 10,109 (1.5%) votes. In 2016, McNarry said that "foreigners" should be deported from the UK for not paying parking tickets. McNarry was asked by radio presenter
Stephen Nolan to clarify UKIP's position. Nolan asked, "If a foreigner gets a parking ticket, they will be deported?" Mr McNarry replied: "Yes." Nolan then said, "So a Polish doctor working really hard in our health service overstays his 30 minute parking, gets a parking ticket. He will be deported?" Mr McNarry replied, "It's a crime, yes." In November 2016, McNarry's term of Office as UKIP Leader in Northern Ireland formally ended when the party elected its new national leader. McNarry remains a supporter of UKIP – but is no longer actively involved in party politics. He sits as a board member of the Ulster-Scots Agency. He is also active as a political commentator in the local media. ==References==