The group had its origins in the earlier
New Ulster Political Research Group (NUPRG), which was set up, on the initiative of UDA chairman
Andy Tyrie, in January 1978 under the chairmanship of
Glenn Barr, largely as a reaction to antagonism that had grown between the UDA and
Ian Paisley after the paramilitary group had supported a failed
strike organised by Paisley the previous year. Barr's old friends
Tommy Lyttle and Harry Chicken both took up seats on the NUPRG whilst South Belfast Brigadier and Tyrie's deputy
John McMichael was appointed secretary of the new body. Tyrie also began to argue for independence and Barr, who had advocated this
Ulster nationalism for some time, gave indications to
Magill magazine that this was the direction in which the NUPRG was going. Their March 1979 report,
Beyond the Religious Divide, argued the case for independence and even provided an outline of the workings of such a state, basing it largely on the US model of a Supreme Court, written constitution and bill of rights and the separation of the executive and judicial arms of government. The document also called for a power-sharing arrangement that would take account of the wishes of the Catholic minority. The group fielded three candidates in the
1981 local elections, with one of them holding the seat that he had won in a
by-election three months before the local elections. However the NUPRG were disbanded soon afterwards and replaced with the
Ulster Loyalist Democratic Party, a group that took
Beyond the Religious Divide as the basis of its ideology. ==Re-establishment==