On 7 January 1998 Adams travelled with McMichael to
London where the two held a hastily arranged meeting with
Northern Ireland Secretary Mo Mowlam. The recent killing of
Loyalist Volunteer Force leader
Billy Wright, who had a lot of support amongst elements of the UDA made the ceasefire shaky. As a result of the meeting Mowlam was convinced to go onto the UDA wings of the
Maze prison in an attempt to regain support for the peace process. Disarray had set in however and by this point the UDA had two wings, those loyal to the ceasefire and the McMichael-Adams UDP leadership and those such as
Stephen McKeag who were continuing to kill despite the ceasefire, with John White falling somewhere between both wings due to his close relationship with
Johnny Adair. Nonetheless Adams campaigned heavily on behalf of the UDP for the
1998 Assembly elections and described himself as "dejected and rejected" when the party failed to win any seats. Even an unidentified figure known only as "the Craftsman", who was at the time the
Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF)'s second-in-command, stated that "I was gutted for wee Davy. Not only was he a gentleman but he had a good political brain. He could have kept the UDA on the straight and narrow if he had won an Assembly seat". Adams had been the party's sole candidate in the
South Belfast constituency. As the UDA ceasefire fell apart and the UDP passed from existence, Adams left politics and instead headed up a number of community projects in his native Lisburn. His last election was the
2001 local government vote in which Adams was unsuccessful in defending his council seat, albeit as an
independent. By this point Adams, along with Gary McMichael, had disavowed any connection to the UDA and the pair were targeted for intimidation as a consequence, with his car vandalised and hate mail sent to his home. Adams worked for GOAL, an international aid agency. He retired in 2018. In 2025 Adams announced he would vote in a border poll for a new shared Ireland. ==References==