Bradford first became involved with
unionism in 1971 when he joined the
Orange Order. From here he became more involved in the political side of the movement and stood as a candidate for the
Vanguard Progressive Unionist Party in the
1973 Northern Ireland Assembly election in
South Antrim, although he was not elected. Bradford was first elected as Member of Parliament for South Belfast in the
February 1974 British general election, this time under the banner of the
United Ulster Unionist Council (an alliance between the Vanguard, the
Democratic Unionist Party and the anti-
Brian Faulkner section of the
Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) under
Harry West), defeating the sitting MP
Rafton Pounder, a pro-Faulkner Ulster Unionist. Bradford was described in media following his election as a "hardline loyalist". His campaign had been openly supported by the
far-right National Front, and at a National Front rally in September 1974,
Martin Webster read out a letter of solidarity from Bradford. Bradford was opposed to
power-sharing with the
Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) as set out in the
Sunningdale Agreement, describing the proposal as "sheer madness". Bradford greatly increased his majority in the
October election, after Pounder dropped out, and largely maintained this increased majority in
1979. Between 1974 and 1978 he sat for the Vanguard Party until in February 1978 he joined the UUP (then often called the Official Unionist Party), along with Vanguard leader
Bill Craig and most of the membership. He was re-elected in 1979 for the UUP. In January 1980 Bradford called for IRA members captured by British security forces to be summarily executed as "saboteurs and spies". He was described as a religious and political hardliner, identifying with
British Israelism. In one of his speeches he said the causes of the problems in Northern Ireland were down to the
Roman Catholic Church,
Marxism, and
ecumenical confusion. ==Death==