His political career began in 1973 when he was elected to
Fermanagh District Council. He was also a councillor on
Dungannon and South Tyrone Borough Council representing Dungannon Town. He served as a MLA of the
Northern Ireland Assembly from 1998, until losing his seat in 2017. In July 2000 he became minister for social development in the
Northern Ireland Executive. It was announced on 11 April 2006 that Morrow would be one of the first three members of the DUP to be created
life peers, giving the party its first representation in the
House of Lords. He was created
Baron Morrow, of Clogher Valley in the County of Tyrone, on 7 June 2006 and was formally introduced to the House of Lords on 27 June. Other DUP peers appointed as "working" life peers alongside Morrow were
Wallace Browne, former
lord mayor of Belfast, and
Eileen Paisley, a former vice-president of the DUP and wife of the late leader of the DUP,
Ian Paisley. At the same time, it was announced that
David Trimble, former
MP and former leader of the
Ulster Unionists, was also being appointed as a working life peer.
Sex Bill After hearing testimony about children and adults forced to work in brothels, farms and factories, including that of a Romanian woman who had been kidnapped in London and forced to work as a prostitute in Ireland, he put forward a bill to the Northern Ireland Assembly: the Human Trafficking and Exploitation Act, passed in 2015, which made Northern Ireland the first and only place in the UK where the act of buying sex is a crime. The act of selling sex, by contrast, was decriminalised. The law was opposed by campaigners who wished to see the total
decriminalisation of sex work. An application for
judicial review failed on the death of the campaigner who had proposed it. ==Personal life==