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{{Infobox Politician | name=Gerry Adams MP MLA
:''"Ian Paisley" may also refer to ]''
| image=Gerry Adams reading into mic.jpg
{{Infobox Politician | name=The Rev. and Rt Hon. Dr. Ian Paisley MP MLA
| imagesize=200px
| image=Replace_this_image1.svg
| width=144px | width=144px
| term_start=1970 | term_start=]
| term_end= | term_end=present
| predecessor= | predecessor=]
| successor=] | successor=]
| birth_date={{birth date and age|1926|4|6}} | birth_date={{birth date and age|1948|10|6}}
| birth_place=], ] | birth_place=]
| constituency=] | constituency=]
| party=] | party=]
| office=] | office=]
| spouse=] | spouse=Collette McArdle
| website=
| religion=]
| website=http://www.ianpaisley.org
| caption=
}} }}
<!---Start of article--->
'''Gerry Adams''' (born ] ]), styled '''] and ] Gerry Adams ] ]''' and also known as '''] Ian Paisley''', is a senior ] and church leader in ]. As the leader of the most successful party in the ] to the ], he is due to take up office as the ] on ], ].


'''Gerard Adams''' (] '''Gearóid Mac Ádhaimh'''<ref> &mdash; Sinn Féin press release, ] 2004.</ref>; born ], ]) is an ] ] politician and ] ] ] for ]. He is President of ], which became the largest nationalist, republican or pro-] political party in ] in the ].
He is a founding member of and current ] of the ] while also Leader of the ] (DUP). Paisley has been Member of Parliament for the constituency of ] since 1970, and is also a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for the same constituency.


Adams is a spokesman for the ''Irish republican movement'' or the "Provisional movement" which encompasses ] and the ] (IRA), an proscribed organisation in the ] and the ]. He is widely regarded as playing a pivotal role in getting the IRA to give up its "war" against the UK in return for devolved government for Northern Ireland. Senior political, security and media figures, including the ] in the ] assert that, from the 1970s until mid-2005, Adams is alleged to have been a member of the IRA's governing ].<ref name="ira"> by Angelique Chrisafis, '']'', ] ]</ref> He has also been accused of being the IRA commander in ] during the 1970s. Adams has denied that he has ever been a member of the IRA.
Paisley has been an outspoken critic of the ] faith and has also campaigned against the legalisation of homosexuality. In 2005 Paisley's political party became the largest ] party in Northern Ireland, displacing his long-term rivals, the ] (UUP). Paisley is also a prolific author, lecturer and speaker.


From the late 1980s, Adams was an important figure in the ], initially following contact by the then ] (SDLP) leader ] and subsequently with the ] and ] governments and then other parties. In 2005, the IRA indicated that its war was over and, barring hard line elements, the republican movement is now exclusively committed to democratic politics. Under Adams, Sinn Féin changed its traditional policy of abstentionism towards ] in 1986 and later to take seats in the ], although the party retains a policy of abstentionism towards Westminster. For three years, it participated in the ] executive committee (cabinet) in ], where it shared powers with the ] and the SDLP. (The ] appointed two ministers but did not sit in the committee in protest at the presence of Sinn Féin.)
==Background==
Ian Paisley was born and brought up in the town of ], ], where his father James Kyle Paisley was an ] pastor. His ] mother Isabella Paisley was instrumental in his ] conversion at the age of six. After completing his education at the Model School in Ballymena, he went to work on a farm in ], County Tyrone. During this time he felt that he received a vocation to enter the Christian ministry. He undertook theological training at the ] ] School of Evangelism (eventually renamed the ] which was later replaced by the ]), and later, for a year, at the ] Theological Hall in ].


== Background ==
====Founding of the Free Presbyterian Church ====
Gerry Adams was born in West ] into a ] ] family, consisting of 10 children who survived infancy, 5 boys, 5 girls and their parents, ] and Annie Hannaway.
In 1946 he was ordained at a ceremony in the independent Ravenhill Evangelical Mission Church on the Ravenhill Road, Belfast. Four ministers from four different denominations performed various roles in the service but some have questioned whether they had ecclesiastical authority from their churches to participate. In the early 1950s permission for Ian Paisley to use Lissara Presbyterian church in ], County Down for a Gospel Mission was revoked by the local presbytery. In conjunction with the Lissara Kirk session Ian Paisley helped to establish the ] at ], ]. Following a vote in his own church he joined the Free Presbyterian Church and was subsequently elected the second moderator of the new denomination, a post he has held for several decades.


Gerry Sr. and Annie came from strong republican backgrounds. Adams's grandfather, also Gerry Adams, had been a member of the ] (IRB) during the ]. Two of Adams's uncles, Dominic and Patrick Adams, had been interned by the governments in Belfast and Dublin. Although it is reported that his uncle Dominic was a one-time ], J. Bowyer Bell, in his widely respected book, ''The Secret Army: The IRA 1916'' (Irish Academy Press), states that Dominic Adams was a senior figure in the IRA of the mid-1940s. Gerry Sr. joined the ] aged sixteen; in 1942 he participated in an IRA ambush on a ] (RUC) patrol but was himself shot, arrested and sentenced to eight years imprisonment.
Paisley eventually set up his own newspaper, the ''Protestant Telegraph,'' a strongly ] paper, as a mechanism for further spreading his message. A website, the , fills that role today. He has authored numerous books and pamphlets on religious and political subjects including a commentary on the ].


Adams's maternal great-grandfather, Michael Hannaway, was a member of the ] during their dynamiting campaign in England in the 1860s and 1870s. Michael's son, Billy, was election agent for ] in 1918 in West Belfast but refused to follow de Valera into democratic and constitutional politics upon the formation of ]. Annie Hannaway was a member of ], the women's branch of the IRA. Three of her brothers (Alfie, Liam and Tommy) were known IRA members.
Paisley's use of the title 'Dr.' derives from an honorary ] degree awarded by ], a ] college in ]. ] (1911 &ndash; 1997) was a close personal friend and, with Paisley, a leader in Christian fundamentalism. Paisley continues to maintain a friendly relationship with the institution and has often spoken at the University's annual Bible Conference.


Yet as a result of the IRA being outlawed north and south of the border, and the many difficulties faced by its members - trouble finding work, lengthy terms in jail, lack of support among the larger Irish community - hardcore republicans were isolated and shunned even with their own community:
====Membership of the Loyal Orders====
''"West Belfast republicanism was dominated by three families: the Adamses, the Hannaways, and the Burnses. They were all intermarried, the consequence of the imprisonment of their male members. When figures like Gerry Adams Sr. emerged after having served their jail terms, they found girls of a marriageable age either already spoken for or reluctant to marry into the IRA. Inevitably they drifted into relationships with the sisters of their IRA comrades.... The IRA in places like West Belfast... grew heavily dependent on a small, often interrelated network of extended families... the result was that republican involvement tended to be an inherited rather than acquired activity... would pass on to their children their political views as well as a special, exclusive sense of shared suffering".''


Adams attended ] on the Falls Road where he was taught by the De La Salle ]. He then attended ] after passing the ] exam in 1960. He left St. Mary's with six ], and became a ]tender, but became increasingly involved in the Irish republican movement, joining Sinn Féin and ] in 1964.
Paisley is a former member of the ]. He addresses the annual gathering of the ] every ].


When ] asked Adams whether he was a Christian he said: 'I like the sense of there being a God, and I do take succour now from the collective comfort of being at a Mass or another religious event where you can be anonymous and individual – just a sense of community at prayer and of paying attention to that spiritual dimension which is in all of us; and I also take some succour in a private, solitary way from being able to reflect on those things.'<ref></ref>
====Democratic Unionist Party====
The ] was established in 1971 by Ian Paisley and ]. It is currently the largest party in Northern Ireland and the fourth largest party in the United Kingdom in terms of representation at Westminster. DUP supporters are not always members of the Free Presbyterian Church.


== Early republican career ==
In 1956, Paisley was among those invited to a special meeting at the ]'s offices in Glengall Street, Belfast. Many ] who were to become major figures in the 1960s and 1970 also attended, and the meeting's declared purpose was to organise the defence of Protestant areas against anticipated ] (IRA) activity, as the old ] had done after partition in 1920.<ref>This move followed the election win by Sinn Féin of over 150,000 votes in the 1955 elections- the strongest expression of anti-partitionist feeling in some years. The fears were well founded as the IRA was preparing for a new campaign starting in December 1956, which would have included attacks on ] (RUC) stations in Belfast were it not for that section of the plan being discovered. See article ]</ref> The new body decided to call itself ] (UPA), and the first year of its existence was taken up with the discussion of vigilante patrols, street barricades, and drawing up lists of IRA suspects in both Belfast and in rural areas.<ref>See ], Long Shadows Cast Before, Edinburgh, 1978, pp.130-131.</ref>
In the late 1960s, a civil rights campaign developed in Northern Ireland. Adams, it is reported, was an active supporter. Instead of leading to change, the civil rights movement was met with protests from Loyalist counter demonstrators. This culminated in August 1969, when Northern Ireland cities like Belfast and ] erupted in major rioting and British troops were called in at the request of the Government of Northern Ireland (see ]). Against this backdrop, the IRA and its political counterpart in Sinn Féin, emerged.


Adams was active in Sinn Féin at this time; it is reported that he was also a key figure in the Belfast IRA. In August 1971, ] without trial was introduced in Northern Ireland under the ]. Adams was interned after this on ]. In late June and early July, 1972, the IRA negotiated a short-lived truce with the British and an IRA delegation met with ]. The delegation included ] (Chief of Staff), ], ], ], ] and Gerry Adams. The IRA insisted Adams be included in the meeting and he was released from internment to participate. He was re-arrested in July 1973 and interned at ] (Maze) internment camp. After taking part in an IRA-organised escape attempt he was sentenced to a period of imprisonment, which was also served at the Maze.
Even though no IRA threat materialised in Belfast, and despite it becoming clear that the IRA's activities during the ] were to be limited to the border areas, Ulster Protestant Action remained in being, (the UPA was to later become the ] in 1966). Factory and workplace branches were formed under the UPA, including one by Paisley in Belfast's ] area under his direct control. The concern of the UPA increasingly came to focus on the defence of 'Bible Protestantism' and Protestant interests where jobs and housing were concerned. As Paisley came to dominate Ulster Protestant Action, he received his first convictions for public order offences. In June 1959, a major riot occurred on the ] in Belfast following a rally he had spoken at.<ref>See Ian S. Wood, 'The IRA's Border Campaign' p.123 in Anderson, Malcolm and Eberhard Bort, ed. 'Irish Border: History, Politics, Culture'. Liverpool University Press. 1999</ref>


In 1983, he became the first Sinn Féin MP elected to the ] since the 1950s. Following his election (as MP for ]) the ] government lifted a ban on him travelling to ]. In line with Sinn Féin policy, he refused to sit in the House of Commons.
In the 1960s he campaigned against ] ]'s ''rapprochement'' with the ] and his meetings with ] of the Republic, ], a veteran of Easter 1916 and the anti-Treaty IRA. He opposed efforts by O'Neill to deliver civil rights to the minority ] community in Northern Ireland, which included the abolition of ]ing of local electoral areas for the election of urban and county councils. In 1964 his demand that the ] remove an ] from ]'s Belfast offices led to two days of rioting, after this was followed through (see ] &ndash; the public display of any symbol which could cause a breach of the peace was illegal until Westminster repealed the Flags Act in 1987). <ref>Statutory Instrument 1987 No. 463 (N.I. 7) </ref>. Paisley's approach led him in turn to oppose O'Neill's successors as Prime Minister, Major ] (later called Lord Moyola) and ].


On ] ], Adams was seriously wounded in an assassination attempt when several ] (UFF) gunmen fired about twenty shots into the car in which he was travelling. After the shooting, under-cover plain clothes police officers seized three suspects who were later convicted and sentenced.<ref>{{cite web | title = 1984: Sinn Fein leader shot in street attack | author = | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/14/newsid_2543000/2543503.stm | publisher = '']'' | date = | accessdate = 2007-03-22}}</ref> One of the three was ]. Adams claimed that the ] had prior knowledge of the attack and allowed it to go ahead.<ref>{{cite web | title = Adams wants 1984 shooting probe | author = Kevin Maguire | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/6179789.stm | publisher = '']'' | date = ], ] | accessdate = 2007-03-22}}</ref>
In 1969, he was jailed along with ] for organising an illegal counter-demonstration against a ] march in ]. He was released during a general amnesty for people convicted of political offences. <ref>PRISON SENTENCES ON PAISLEY AND BUNTING, The Times. ] ] </ref>


=== Alleged IRA Membership ===
British Government papers released in 2002, show that in 1971 Paisley attempted to reach a compromise with the nationalist ] (SDLP).<ref>See BBC News article Tuesday, ] ] 'Ian Paisley sought 'deal' with SDLP' available </ref> The attempt was made via then British Cabinet Secretary, Sir ]. The papers show that Paisley had indicated he could "reach an accommodation with leaders of the Catholic minority, which would provide the basis of a new government in Stormont." It appears that the move was rejected once it became clear to the SDLP that the deal would favour the unionist majority. Speaking about the deal in 2002 Paisley said:
Adams has stated repeatedly that he has never been a member of the ] (IRA).<ref>{{cite web | title = Adams denies IRA links as book calls him a genius | author = Rosie Cowan | url = http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,802084,00.html | publisher = '']'' | date = ], ] | accessdate = 2007-03-22}}</ref> This is a controversial position given much evidence to the contrary:
{{Cquote|"The SDLP did not want to go along the road that we would have wanted them to go. I wouldn't say there were talks, there was an exchange of views between us, but it never got anywhere. We were prepared to try and seek a way whereby we could govern Northern Ireland and that people of both faiths could be happy with the way it was being governed, but it all rested on the key point &mdash; the person with power would be the person that the people gave the power."<ref>See BBC News article Tuesday, ] ] 'Ian Paisley sought 'deal' with SDLP' available </ref>|20px|20px|Ian Paisley, 2002}}


* In January 1973, Adams was photographed at the funeral of IRA man Francis Liggett dressed in the IRA's black beret marching alongside the coffin with IRA members.<ref name="iecho"> by Jack Holland, '']'', July 2002</ref> In 2002, ], convicted for being part of a bomb team that attacked London in March 1973, said in public that Gerry Adams was "my commanding officer" at that time.<ref name="iecho"/>
Paisley opposed the 1972 suspension by the British government of ] of the ] and government (known colloquially by the term Stormont due to the location of ] on the Stormont estate). He opposed the ] which sought to rework relationships between Northern Ireland, the ] and the United Kingdom, and which provided for a power-sharing executive (government) involving both communities in Northern Ireland, and a controversial all-island ] linking Northern Ireland and the Republic on a legal but not constitutional level. Sunningdale collapsed following the ], which cut water and electricity supplies to many homes, and the failure of the British ], ] and the British Prime Minister, ], to defend the power-sharing executive. Supporters of Paisley played an important role in orchestrating the strike. In January 1974, he (Paisley) was subdued and thrown out of the Stormont Assembly by members of the RUC.


* In early 1977, Adams went to the home of a Belfast journalist who lived near Turf Lodge and worked for the BBC '']'' program. He presented himself as representing the Belfast Brigade of the Provisional IRA.<ref name="iecho"/>
In April 1977 Paisley famously declared he would retire from politics if a forthcoming United Unionist Action Council general strike was unsuccessful. The strike failed, but Paisley did not keep the promise.


* He was arrested after the ] in February 1978 and was charged with IRA membership. Adams denied the membership charge, threatened to sue reporters who repeated the charge, and applied for bail. The case went to court but the charges were dismissed. Many senior Republicans at that time were surprised by Adams's denial of membership, for they had usually taken the approach of offering no comment to such a charge. In this fashion, they offered no information and did not contribute to speculation (see for example pp. 265-66 in Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, ''The Life and Politics of an Irish Revolutionary''}.
==Political life==
In the ] Paisley was elected ] (MP) for the ] which he has retained ever since and is now the longest serving MP from Northern Ireland. The following year Paisley established the most successful and longest lasting of his political movements, the Democratic Unionist Party which replaced his Protestant Unionist Party. It soon won seats at local council, provincial, national and European level; Paisley was elected one of Northern Ireland's three ] (MEPs) at the first elections to the Brussels and Strasbourg-based ] in 1979, holding a rare, triple mandate, as an MEP, an MP, and a ] (MLA). On his first day he attempted to interrupt the then ] ], but was shouted down by fellow MEPs. In an address by ] to the Parliament in 1988, Paisley accused him of being ] (see ]), repeatedly interrupting his speech by shouting and holding up placards. He was removed from the chamber by other MEPs. He easily retained his seat in every European election until he stood down in 2004, receiving the highest popular vote of any British MEP (although as Northern Ireland uses a different electoral system to Great Britain for European elections, the figures are not strictly comparable)<ref>Your Vote: How it Works, BBC News. 1 June, 2004 </ref>.


* In 1980, an undercover ] officer followed Adams across the border during an investigation into an IRA ] operation.<ref name="iecho"/>
The DUP also holds nine seats in the ] and has been elected to each of the Northern Ireland conventions and assemblies set up since the party's creation. For a long time it was the principal challenger to the major ] party, the Ulster Unionist Party (known for a time in the 1970s and 1980s as the ''Official Unionist Party'' (OUP) to distinguish it from the then multitude of other unionist parties, some set up by deposed former leaders). In February 1981 Paisley claimed the UUP were conspiring to kill him.{{cn|date=March 2007}} In December of the same year the United States State Department revoked his visa, citing his "divisive rhetoric".


* ], a former IRA member, ] and ] informer from ], has claimed he spoke to Adams at IRA meetings in the 1980s. He states that Adams was a battalion quarter-master responsible for weapons, then the age of 22 Adams became ] of the Second Battalion, Belfast Brigade IRA.<ref>p66, ''The Informer'', Sean O'Callaghan</ref>
In the ], the DUP overtook the UUP, achieving thirty seats to the UUP's twenty-seven, and in the ], achieving almost twice their vote share and taking nine seats to the UUP's one (successfully unseating then UUP leader ]).


* On ] ], Irish ] Michael McDowell publicly named Adams as a member of the seven-man ruling ] during a radio interview.<ref name="ira"/> According to the ] government, he has been a member for over 20 years, although he has never been convicted of IRA membership and continues to deny it. In July, McDowell said that, according to senior police sources, three Sinn Féin leaders, including Adams, had stepped down from the IRA command in a prelude to a peace move. Adams denied the report. "We can't stand down from a body of which we were not members", he said.
=='Ulster says no'==
In the 1980s Paisley, like all the major Unionist leaders, opposed the ] (1985), signed by British Prime Minister ] and ] ] (Prime Minister) Dr. ]. The Agreement provided for an Irish input into the governing of Northern Ireland, through an Anglo-Irish Secretariat based at Maryfield, outside ] and meetings of the Anglo-Irish Conference, co-chaired by the Republic's Minister for Foreign Affairs and Britain's Secretary of State for Northern Ireland. The Unionists objected due to the fact that the Agreement was imposed on the people with no referendum, and to the notion of a foreign government ''"interfering"'' in the affairs of a part of the United Kingdom. ] also objected.


* In ''Memoirs of a Revolutionary'', the autobiography of ], Provisional IRA Chief of Staff during 1969-72, Adams is described as commander of the Belfast Brigade (albeit only in the caption of a photograph).
A rally of protesters, numbering an estimated 200,000 people, met in front of ] after a campaign dubbed after its slogan "Ulster Says No". The rally, which was addressed by Paisley and then UUP leader ], passed off peacefully but was ignored by the government. On December 9, 1986, Paisley was once again ejected from the ] for continually interrupting a speech by Thatcher.


* Adams is named as an IRA member during the 1970s in books by ], ], ] and Mark Urban.<ref>{{cite book | last = Moloney | first = Ed | authorlink = Ed Moloney | title = A Secret History of the IRA | publisher = ] | date = 2002 | pages = p. 140 | doi = | isbn = 0-141-01041-X}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Taylor | first = Peter | authorlink = Peter Taylor (Journalist) | title = Provos The IRA & Sinn Féin | publisher = ] | date = 1997 | pages = p. 140 | doi = | isbn = 0-7475-3818-2 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = English | first = Richard | authorlink = Richard English | title = Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA | publisher = ] | date = 2003 | pages = p. 110 | doi = | isbn = 0-330-49388-4 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Urban | first = Mark | authorlink = | title = Big Boys' Rules: SAS and the Secret Struggle Against the IRA | publisher = ] | date = 1993 | pages = p. 26 | doi = | isbn = 0-571-16809-4}}</ref>
In 1985 he and the rest of the Unionist MPs ] at Westminster in protest at the Anglo-Irish Agreement and were, all but one (], who lost his seat to the ]'s ]), returned in the resulting by-elections.


== President of Sinn Féin ==
In 1995 he played a part in the first standoff over marching at ], County Armagh between the ] and local residents of the Garvaghy Road. The march passed off after the decision was made by the ] (RUC) to allow it and Paisley ended the march hand in hand with ] who appeared to perform a "]". This "Victory Jig" was seen by some as an act of ].<ref>The "Victory Jig" appears to have discredited Trimble in the longrun to the benefit of Dr. Paisley. See comments on the "Victory Jig" . See video of the controversial march through the area and "Victory Jig" in the 1995 section .</ref>
{{unreferencedsect|date=June 2006}}
In 1978, Gerry Adams became joint-vice-president of Sinn Féin and he became a key figure in directing a challenge to the Sinn Féin leadership of President Ruairí Ó Brádaigh and joint-Vice President Daithí O'Conaill. Others who supported Adams and were from Belfast included Jim Gibney, Tom Hartley, and ]. Some characterize the different approaches as a conflict between a more pragmatic northern leadership which surrounded Adams and the more traditional ] leadership of ], who was President of Provisional Sinn Féin from its inception until 1983. This view misses the complexity of the situation.


The 1975 IRA-British truce is often viewed as the event that began the challenge to the original Provisional Sinn Féin leadership, which was said to be Southern-based and dominated by southerners like Ó Brádaigh and O'Conaill. However, the Chief of Staff of the IRA at the time, ], was a senior figure from Belfast. Others in the leadership were also Northern based, including ] from Belfast. Adams (allegedly) rose to become the most senior figure in the ] on the basis of his absolute rejection of anything but military action, but this conflicts with the fact that during his time in prison Adams came to reassess his approach and became more political. It is alleged that "provisional" republicanism was founded on its opposition to the ]-inspired "broad front" politics of the ]-led ], but this too is disputed.
==The Belfast Agreement==
Paisley's DUP was initially involved in the negotiations under former ] ] that led to the ] of 1998. However the party withdrew in protest when ], a ] party with links to the ],<ref> 10 Downing Street website.</ref> was allowed to participate after its ceasefire. Paisley and his party opposed the Agreement in the referendum that followed its signing, and which saw it approved by over 70% of the voters in Northern Ireland and by over 90% of voters in the Republic of Ireland.


One of the core reasons that the Provisional IRA and provisional Sinn Féin were founded, in December 1969 and January 1970, respectively, was that people like Ó Brádaigh and O'Connell, and Billy McKee, opposed participation in constitutional politics, the other was the failure of the Goulding leadership to for the defence of nationalist areas. When, at the December 1969 IRA convention and the January 1970 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis the delegates voted to participate in the Dublin (Leinster House), Belfast (Stormont) and London (Westminster) parliaments, the organizations split. Gerry Adams, who had joined the Republican Movement in the early 1960s, did not go with the Provisionals until later in 1970.
Although Paisley often stresses his loyalty to the ], he accused ] of being ]'s "parrot" when she voiced approval of the Agreement. The claim is reflective of the fact that in the United Kingdom the Monarch is obliged to reflect the position of the government and is not permitted to publicly contradict official government policy.


In Long Kesh in the mid-1970s, and writing under the pseudonym '''Brownie''' in '']'', Adams called for increased political activity, especially at a local level, by Republicans. The call resonated with younger Northern people, many of whom had been active in the Provisional IRA but had not necessarily been highly active in Sinn Féin. In 1977, Adams and ] drafted the address of Jimmy Drumm at the Annual ] Commemoration at Bodenstown. The Address was viewed as watershed in that Drumm acknowledged that the war would be a long one and that success depended on political activity that would complement the IRA. For some, this wedding of politics and armed struggle culminated in Danny Morrison's statement at the 1981 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis in which he asked "Who here really believes we can win the war through the Ballot box? But will anyone here object if, with a ballot paper in one hand and the ] in the other, we take power in Ireland". For others, however, the call to link political activity with armed struggle had been clearly defined in Sinn Féin policy and in the Presidential Addresses of Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, but it had not resonated with the young Northerners (It can be argued that Sinn Féin had been trying to link political activity with military activity since at least the late 1950s).
As part of the deal, the Republic altered the controversial ], which had originally claimed its government's ''de jure'' right to govern the whole island of Ireland, including Northern Ireland.


Ironically, while Adams was advocating that the Movement needed more involvement in politics, he was one of the key opponents of Sinn Féin putting forward a candidate for the first election to the ], in 1979. Even after the election of ] as MP for Fermanagh/South Tyrone, a part of the mass mobilization associated with the ] by republican prisoners in the '']'' of the ] prison (known as ] by Republicans), Adams was cautious about political involvement by Sinn Féin. ], the Taoiseach of the Republic of Ireland, called an election for June 1981. At an Ard Chomhairle meeting Adams recommended that they contest only four constituencies. Instead, H-Block/Armagh Candidates contested nine constituencies and elected two TDs. This, along with the election of Bobby Sands, was precursor to the a big electoral breakthrough in elections in 1982 to the Northern Ireland Assembly. Adams, Danny Morrison, Martin McGuinness, ], and ] were elected as abstentionists. Because of a fear of being outflanked by Sinn Féin, the SDLP with 14 elected representatives, also abstained from participating in the Assembly and it was a failure. The 1982 election was followed by the 1983 Westminster election, in which Sinn Féin's increased and Gerry Adams was elected, as an abstentionist, as MP for West Belfast. It was in 1983 that Ruairí Ó Brádaigh resigned as President of Sinn Féin and was succeeded by Gerry Adams.
The DUP fought the resulting election to the ], to which Paisley was elected, while keeping his seats in the Westminster and European parliaments. The DUP took two seats in the multi-party power-sharing executive (Paisley, like the leaders of the ] and ] chose not to become a minister) but those DUP members serving as ministers (] and ]) refused to attend meetings of the Executive Committee (cabinet) in protest at Sinn Féin's participation.
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: ] and Ian Paisley outside Belfast's high court having won a legal challenge over assembly elections in November 2001.]] -->


Republicans had long claimed that the only legitimate Irish state was the ] declared in the Proclamation of the Republic of 1916, which they considered to be still in existence. In their view, the legitimate government was the ], which had been vested with the authority of that Republic in 1938 (prior to the ]) by the last remaining anti-] deputies of the ]. Adams continued to adhere to this claim of republican political legitimacy until quite recently - however in his 2005 speech to the Sinn Féin ] he explicitly rejected it.
The Executive ultimately was suspended over unionist unhappiness on the nature of Provisional IRA disarmament.{{cn|date=March 2007}} By the same token, the ] and Sinn Féin wouldn't move to decommission because it felt that other parties, notably the Unionists and the ], were slow in implementing other areas of the Agreement, such as demilitarisation and policing reform, that were of great importance to republicans. The alleged discovery of a Republican spy network operating among civil servants in the seat of government and parliament, led to the UUP's decision to suspend the institutions created under the Belfast Agreement.


As a result of this non-recognition, Sinn Féin had abstained from taking any of the seats they won in the British or Irish parliaments. At its 1986 Ard Fheis, Sinn Féin delegates passed a resolution to amend the rules and constitution that would allow its members to sit in the Dublin parliament (Leinster House/Dáil Éireann). At this ] led a small walkout, just as he had done twelve years earlier with the creation of Provisional Sinn Féin. This minority, which rejected dropping the policy of ], now nominally distinguishes itself from Provisional Sinn Féin by using the name ] (or Sinn Féin Poblachtach), and maintains that they are the true Sinn Féin republicans.
While the Agreement has not been scrapped, its institutions remain suspended, principally pending a resolution on the issue of policing. The DUP had repeatedly pledged to destroy the Agreement, however since becoming the leading Unionist Party, they have backed it with the ']' (December 2004) where the principles of the Belfast Agreement where upheld.


Adams' leadership of Sinn Féin was supported by a Northern-based cadre that included people like ] and ]. Adams and others, over time, pointed to Sinn Féin electoral successes in the early and mid-1980s, when hunger strikers ] and ] were elected to the ] and ] respectively, and they advocated that Sinn Féin become increasingly political and base its influence on electoral politics rather than paramilitarism. The electoral effects of this strategy were shown later by the election of Adams and McGuinness to the House of Commons.
On ] ], Ian Paisley refused Sinn Féin's nomination to be ].


=== Voice ban ===
On ] in ], following ] parades, Ian Paisley made a public comment referring to co-operating with Sinn Féin. "They are not fit to be in partnership with decent people. They are not fit to be in the government of Northern Ireland and it will be over our dead bodies if they ever get there."<ref> BBC News</ref>


In popular consciousness in Britain, Adams is primarily remembered during the latter part of this period for the ban on the media broadcast of his voice (the ban actually covered all ] organizations and unionist terrorist organizations, but in practice Adams was the only one prominent enough to appear regularly on TV). This ban was imposed by the then prime minister ] on ], ], the reason given being to "deny terrorists the oxygen of publicity" after the BBC interviewed ].<ref>, By Michael Foley '']'', ] ]</ref>
==Religious views==
Paisley promotes a highly conservative form of biblical literalism, which he describes as "Bible Protestantism." The website of Paisley's public relations arm, the European Institute of Protestant Studies (ianpaisley.org), describes the Institute's purpose as to "expound the Bible, expose the Papacy, and to promote, defend and maintain Bible Protestantism in Europe and further afield." Paisley's website describes a number of doctrinal areas in which he believes that the "Roman church" has deviated from the Bible and thus from true Christianity. These include the doctrine of ], which Paisley claims on his website has given rise to "revolting superstitions and idolatrous abuses," the veneration of saints and the ] (excessive and not biblically supported, in Paisley's view), and the institution of the Papacy, which Paisley believes has no biblical foundation.


A similar ban, known as ], had been law in the Republic of Ireland since the 1970s. However media outlets soon found ways around the ban, initially by the use of subtitles, but later and more commonly by the use of an actor reading his words over the images of him speaking.
On social/cultural issues, Paisley's views are similar to those of such American fundamentalists as ] and ]. He rejects ]'s theory of evolution by natural selection in favor of biblical ]. He preaches against ] and supports laws criminalising its practice. He and his organisation have publicly spoken out against what he views to be blasphemy in popular culture, including criticism of the stage productions '']'' and '']''. On at least one issue, Paisley shares views with his Catholic counterparts; he opposes legal ].


This ban was much lampooned in cartoons and satirical TV shows, notably '']'', and in '']'' (as being required to inhale helium to "subtract credibility"), and was criticized by ] organizations worldwide and British media personalties, including BBC Director General ] and BBC foreign editor ]. The ban was finally lifted by Prime Minister ] on ], ].
Depite his anti-Catholicism, there is evidence that Paisley has attracted a small number of Catholic votes in his Westminster and European constituencies.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld199900/ldhansrd/pdvn/lds06/text/61016-0004.htm#06101616000042 |title=House of Lords Hansard for 16 Oct 2006 ( pt 1 ) |accessday=30 |accessmonth =March |accessyear=2007 |year=2006 |month=October |quote=My Lords, I cannot comment on that, but I pay tribute to the work of the noble Lord. I am told that the people of Rathlin Island vote to a man and woman for the leader of the DUP, because he got them electricity as a constituency Member, so he is definitely in their favour.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.belfasttoday.net/ViewArticle2.aspx?SectionID=6279&ArticleID=2066260 |title=Belfast Today for all your local news |accessday=30 |accessmonth =March |accessyear=2007 |year=2007 |month=March |publisher=Johnston Press Digital Publishing |quote=There has even been strong evidence that a number of Catholic voters in the area vote for Ian Paisley and the DUP.}}</ref> Though often at political odds with the ], he has some religious followers in the Republic.{{cn|date=April 2007}} It was specifically in his religious capacity that he first agreed to meet the ], ]. Paisley revised this stance in September 2004, when he agreed to meet Ahern in his political capacity as leader of the Democratic Unionist Party. Known for a sense of humour, at an early meeting with Ahern at the Irish embassy in ], Paisley requested breakfast and asked for boiled eggs; when Ahern asked him why he had wanted boiled eggs, Paisley quipped "it would be hard for you to poison them", much to Ahern's amusement.<ref>http://www.ianpaisley.org/article.asp?printerFriendly=true&ArtKey=ballymena</ref>


== Moving into mainstream politics ==
Paisley, an ardent ] all his life, has sometimes asked journalists and nationalist politicians "let me smell your breath" when they asked him tough questions, insinuating that they had taken on board some alcohol, or "devil's buttermilk" as he often puts it.
Sinn Féin continued its policy of refusing to sit in the ] parliament even after Adams won the ] constituency. He lost his seat to ] of the ] (SDLP) in the ]. However, he easily regained it at the next election in May 1997.


Under Adams, Sinn Féin appeared to move away from being a political voice of the Provisional IRA to becoming a professionally organized political party in both ] and the ].
==Relationship with the SDLP==


SDLP leader ], MP, identified the possibility that a negotiated settlement might be possible and began secret talks with Adams in 1988. These discussions led to unofficial contacts with the British ] under the ], ], and with the government of the Republic under ] &ndash; although both governments maintained in public that they would not negotiate with "terrorists" .
From the 1960s, one of his main rivals was civil rights leader and co-founder of the nationalist SDLP, ]. Though their parties are often at loggerheads, Hume and Paisley worked jointly on behalf of Northern Ireland in the ] and on occasion worked jointly in the ]. Indeed the complexity of their relationship was demonstrated when it was discovered that Hume had visited Paisley's home to dine with Ian and his wife, Eileen, on ] one year in the 1990s. When Hume resigned the leadership of the SDLP, Paisley gave very warm praise of "John" and a very accurate estimation of how difficult the SDLP would find it to fill the void left by the departing leader.{{cn|date=March 2007}} Some suggested that the comments by Paisley were given because he thought he was just chatting to journalists and that the TV cameras weren't on.{{cn|date=March 2007}} The sight of an affable, low-key Paisley at that moment contrasted with the usual media image of the forceful, loud, aggressive Paisley people were used to seeing.


These talks provided the groundwork for what was later to be the ], as well as the milestone ] and the ].
] tells the story of the occasion when he said to Ian Paisley, "Ian, if the word 'no' were to be removed from the English language, you'd be speechless, wouldn't you!" Paisley replied, "No, I wouldn't!"


These negotiations led to the IRA ceasefire in August 1994. Irish ] ] (who had replaced Haughey) and who had played a key role in the Hume/Adams dialogue through his Special Advisor ], regarded the ceasefire as permanent. However the slow pace of developments, contributed in part to the (wider) political difficulties of the British government of ] and consequent reliance on ] votes in the House of Commons, led the IRA to end its ceasefire and resume the campaign.
Having spent most of his career, as he himself jokingly admitted once, saying 'No', Paisley assumed the chairmanship of the Agriculture committee of the Northern Ireland Assembly created by the Belfast Agreement, where he was praised (even by Sinn Féin members with whom he worked) as an effective, co-ordinating chairman. The Minister for Agriculture, Nationalist SDLP's ], remarked that she and Paisley had a "workmanlike" relationship.


A restituted ceasefire later followed, as part of the negotiations strategy, which saw teams from the British and Irish governments, the ], the SDLP, ] and representatives of ] paramilitary organizations, under the chairmanship of former ] Senator Mitchell, produced the ] (also called the ''Good Friday Agreement'' as it was signed on ], 1998). Under the agreement, structures were created reflecting the Irish and British identities of the people of Ireland, with a ] and a ] created.
==Defender or demagogue?==
His critics see his work in the European Parliament and in Stormont of late and argue that he could have been, had he so wished, one of the greatest ''builders'' of a new inclusive Northern Ireland. To his supporters, Ian Kyle Paisley is seen as a passionate and brilliant defender of the union between Northern Ireland and Great Britain. They argue that he stood up for unionists who were under attack from nationalists from the Republic of Ireland and from British governments willing to give away "unionist rights" and ignore unionist fears to placate ] and the ]. To some, he is seen as the wrecker whose extremism almost destroyed Northern Ireland. To others, Ian Paisley is the great defender, the protector who saved Northern Ireland from "]" and "] rule".


Articles 2 and 3 of the Republic's constitution, '']'', which claimed sovereignty over all of Ireland, were reworded, and a power-sharing Executive Committee was provided for. As part of their deal Sinn Féin agreed to abandon its abstentionist policy regarding a "six-county parliament", as a result taking seats in the new ]-based Assembly and running the education and health and social services ministries in the power-sharing government.
To his opponents however, including some unionists, Paisley is seen as a demagogue, a crude rabble-rouser who spent his political career saying 'no' and being passed by; "no" to O'Neill's reform, "no" to contacts with the Republic, "no" to Sunningdale, "no" to the convention, "no" to James Prior's ''rolling devolution'', "no" to the ], "no" to the Belfast Agreement. By them he is seen as a uniquely destructive influence whose extremism lost potential friends and helped alienate people outside Northern Ireland sympathetic to unionism. In the 1980s, the ]'s ] described Paisley as a ].{{cn|date=March 2007}} Former members of ] paramilitary groups on ceasefire because of the Belfast Agreement verbally attacked Paisley at one press conference, saying that as impressionable teenagers they had been attracted to extreme loyalism by his violent and provocative speeches, blaming him for much of the violence that resulted.{{cn|date=March 2007}} Paisley has never accepted any culpability for any violence, despite his many fiery speeches, which often presented the political conflict in stark ] terms as a ] battle between good and evil (see ]).


Opponents in Republican Sinn Féin accused Sinn Féin of "selling out" by agreeing to participate in what it called "] assemblies" in the Republic and Northern Ireland. However Gerry Adams insisted that the Belfast Agreement provided a mechanism to deliver a united Ireland by non-violent and constitutional means, much as ] had said of the ] nearly 80 years earlier.
In September 2005, he was criticised for stoking unionist violence in Belfast over the 75-metre diversion of a provocative Orange Order march along a thoroughfare serving as a boundary between nationalist and unionist communities. Quoted by '']'' newspaper, he called the diversion "the spark which kindles a fire there could be no putting out"<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/Northern_Ireland/Story/0,2763,1567926,00.html</ref>. Widespread loyalist riots followed, producing, among other results, what Northern Ireland secretary Peter Hain called "serious attempts to kill police in some instances".<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/Northern_Ireland/Story/0,2763,1568084,00.html</ref>


When Sinn Féin came to nominate its two ministers to the Executive Council, the party, like the SDLP and the ] (DUP) chose for tactical reasons not to include its leader among its ministers. (When later the SDLP chose a new leader, it selected one of its ministers, ], who then opted to remain in the Committee.)
==Campaign against homosexuality==
{{main|Save Ulster from Sodomy}}


Adams remains the President of Sinn Féin, with ] serving as Sinn Féin parliamentary leader in Dáil Éireann, and ] the party's chief negotiator and effective party head in the Northern Ireland Assembly. His son, Gearoid is a primary school teacher and has represented Co. Antrim in gaelic football.
''"Save Ulster from Sodomy"'' was a campaign launched by Paisley in 1977, in opposition to the Campaign for Homosexual Law Reform (Northern Ireland), established in 1974. Paisley's campaign sought to prevent the extension to Northern Ireland of the ] which had decriminalised homosexual acts between males over 21 years of age in ] and ]. The campaign failed when legislation was passed in 1982 as a result of the previous year's ruling by the ] in the case of ].<ref>Stonewall timeline of Gay & Lesbian history available .</ref>


On ], ] it was reported that Adams was re-elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly.<ref>. ], ], ].</ref>
== 2004 illness and beyond ==
In an attempt to quell rumours of a serious or terminal illness, Paisley's family stated in July 2004 that he had been undergoing tests. The family declined to indicate the nature of the suspected illness, citing privacy. In 2005, ] confirmed that his father had been gravely ill in 2004 and suggested that his family had prepared for what they feared was his impending death. Ian Paisley confirmed in 2006 that he has made a full recovery from his illness.


On ], ], he met with DUP leader Ian Paisley face-to-face for the first time, and the two came to an agreement regarding the return of the power-sharing executive in Northern Ireland.<ref>{{cite web | title = May date for return to devolution | author = | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/6494599.stm | publisher = '']'' | date = ], ] | accessdate = 2007-03-26}}</ref>
Paisley has aged noticeably in recent years. He has lowered his political profile, instead devoting much of his time to working with his church on the missions in Africa, where he has some followers. At the age of 78 he retired his ] seat at the ] and was succeeded by ]. However he retained his ] seat in the ], celebrating his win in the traditional manner by singing a hymn in the count centre. In 2005 Paisley was made a ], a post to which he became entitled as leader of the fourth largest political party in the British Parliament.<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/4363746.stm</ref> In February 2006, he said he never intends to retire from politics.{{cn|date=March 2007}}


== St Andrews Agreement ==
On ] ], Paisley gave his provisional assent to the ], by which Sinn Féin would fully accept the ] (PSNI), and the Democratic Unionist Party would agree to become a full part of the Northern Ireland Executive. Paisley left immediately after speaking to the press conference for his fiftieth wedding anniversary. Since then, Paisley has indicated that his party ''"would not be found wanting"'' if Sinn Féin gives formal support to policing in Northern Ireland. Sinn Féin did endorse the PSNI, and in the ] Paisley and the DUP received an increased share of the vote and increased their assembly seats from 30 to 36. On Monday ] ], the date of the British Government deadline for devolution or dissolution, Paisley led a DUP delegation to a meeting with a Sinn Fein delegation led by ] which agreed on a DUP proposal that the executive would be established on ] after a delay of six weeks.


== Family ==
Ian Paisley married his wife ] (née Cassells) on ] ]. It was announced on the ] ] that Eileen would be one of three DUP politicians to be created a ]. She sits as a ] in the ]. They have five children, twin sons, Kyle and ], and three daughters including ]. Three of their children have followed their father into politics or religion: Kyle, into the church; Ian is a DUP assemblyman; and daughter Rhonda a retired DUP councillor and artist. He has a brother, Harold, who currently preaches the Gospel in the United States and Canada.


== Trivia == == References ==
{{Reflist}}
*In 1988, when ] delivered a speech to the ], Paisley shouted "I Denounce you as the ]!" and held up a red poster reading "Pope John Paul II ANTICHRIST" in black letters. John Paul continued with his address after Paisley was ejected from the auditorium.<ref>{{cite news|last=MacDonald|first=Susan|title=Paisley ejected for insulting Pope|publisher=]|date=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Chrisafis|first=Angelique|title=The Return of Dr. No|publisher=]|date=] }}</ref><ref>http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE7DC1630F935A25753C1A96E948260</ref> <ref>http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/ulster/article1826297.ece</ref>
{{main|Denunciation of Pope John Paul II by Ian Paisley}}


== Published works ==
* Paisley has claimed in an article that the seat no. 666 in the ] is reserved for the Antichrist.<ref>http://www.ianpaisley.org/article.asp?ArtKey=666</ref>
*''Falls Memories'', 1982
* Paisley and Gerry Adams are both mentioned in "Don't Blame Me", a song by Scottish punk rock group ].
*''The Politics of Irish Freedom'', 1986
*''A Pathway to Peace'', 1988
*''An Irish Journal''
*''An Irish Voice''
*''Cage Eleven'', 1990
*''The Street and Other Stories'', 1992
*''Free Ireland: Towards a Lasting Peace'', 1995
*''Before the Dawn'', 1996, Brandon Books, ISBN 0-434-00341-7
*''Selected Writings''
*''Who Fears to Speak...?''
*''Hope and History'', 2003, Brandon Books, ISBN 0-86322-330-3


==External links== == See also ==
*]
{{wikiquote}}
*]
{{wikisource author}}
*]
* (April 2006; interviewed by ])
*]
* Counterarguments from a Catholic standpoint
*]
*
*]
*
*
*
*
*


*J. Bowyer Bell. ''The Secret Army: The IRA 1916 -''. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 1979.
==References==
*Colm Keena. ''A Biography of Gerry Adams''. Cork, Ireland: Mercier Press, 1990.
{{reflist}}
*Ed Moloney. ''A Secret History of the IRA''. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2002.
*O'Callaghan, Sean. ''The Informer''. Corgi. 1999. ISBN 0-552-14607-2
*Robert W. White. ''Ruairi O Bradaigh, the Life and Politics of an Irish Revolutionary''. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2006.
*Anthony McIntyre. , academic lecture examining Gerry Adams' role in the Republican Movement


== External links ==
==Bibliography==
* official profile
{{cleanup-section|date=April 2007}}
*
*''The Protestant Reformation: The Preaching of Ian R. K. Paisley : Four Biographical Sermons : ], ], ], ]'' (Audio CD)
*
*''The Soul of the Question and the Question of the Soul''
* voting record
*''Christian Foundations''
*''Protestants Remember!''
*''Union with Rome: The Courtship and Proposed Marriage of Protestantism by Romanism and the Objections Thereto'' (Ravenhill pulpit) (Ravenhill pulpit)
*''Ravenhill Pulpit: The Preaching of Ian R.K. Paisley''
*Souvenir booklet: ''The 50th Anniversary of the Larne Gun-Running'' (Ravenhill pulpit) (Ravenhill pulpit)
*''The Five Protestant Bishops whom Rome Burned: ], ], ], ], ]''
*''Jesus Christ: Not Able to Sin''
*''No Pope Here''
*''God's Ultimatum to the Nation''
*''Getting Your Priorities Right'' (Martyr's memorial pulpit) (Martyr's memorial pulpit)
*''The Authority of the Scriptures vs. the Confusion of Translations: Dr. Ian Paisley Thunders Out For the King James Version and its texts!'' (B.F.T)
*''Exposition of the Epistle to the Romans'' (Ian R.K.Paisley Library)
*''Classic Sermons''
*]
*''Messages from the Prison Cell''
*''Sermons With Startling Titles''
*''Betrayal of our National Heritage''
*''U.D.I.''
*''The Unaged Birth and the Unembellished Gospel''
*''Some Kidd But Definitely No Goat!: The Story of the Witty, the Learned, the Eccentric and the Controversial Dr. Kidd of Aberdeen''
*''For Such a Time as This''
*''The Ulster Problem, Spring 1972: A Discussion of the True Situation in Northern Ireland''
*''The Living Bible: The Livid Libel of the Scriptures of Truth: an Exposure of the So-called Bible for Everyone''
*''The Jesuits: Their Start, Sign, System, Secrecy, Strategy''
*''The Archbishop in the Arms of the Pope of Rome!: Protestant Ministers in the Hands of the Police of Rome!''
*''Three great reformers''
*''The Massacre of St. Bartholomew: A Record of Papal Terror and Protestant Triumph in France in the Sixteenth Century''
*''] and the Church of Rome''
*''False Views by Modern Man: An Exposure of "Good News for Modern Man - The New Testament - Today's English Version"''
*''Grow Old Along With Me''
*''Paisley: The Man and his Message''
*''The Ecumenical Nightmare: Church Unity in 1980!''
*''Text a Day Keeps the Evil Away''
*''Into the Millennium : 20th century Messages for 21st century Living''
*''The Rent Veils at Calvary''
*''The Fundamentalist and his State'': Address delivered on June l5, 1976 to the World Congress of Fundamentalists meeting at Usher Hall, Edinburgh
*''America's Debt to Ulster''
*''The Crown of Thorns''
*''An Enemy has Done This: Terror and Treachery in Northern Ireland''
*''Expository Sermons''
*''The Garments of Christ''
*''My Plea for the Old Sword''
*''Christian Foundations''
*''Sermons for Special Occasions''
*''Paisley's Pocket Preacher: Thumbnail gospel sermons''
*''The Livid Libel of the Scriptures of Truth: An Exposure of the So-called Bible in Everyday Language for Everyone'' (B.F.T)
*''The Revised English Bible: The Antichrist Bible, An Exposure''
*''Be Sure''
*''Ulster: The Facts''
*''The Crown Rights of Jesus Christ'': An address delivered by request before the General Synod of the Bible Presbyterian Church of America
*''An Exposition of the Epistle to the Romans,: Prepared in the Prison Cell''
*''The Common Bible (Revised Standard Version): The Bible of the Antichrist''
*'The 59 Revival: An Authentic History of the Great Ulster Awakening of 1859''


{{unreferenced|date=June 2006}}
==Sources and further information==
* ] '' \ian_paisley06.ram''
*], ''God save Ulster! The religion and politics of ]''. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1986.
*], ''Persecuting Zeal: a portrait of Ian Paisley'', Brandon Books, 1996.
*], ''God and the Gun'', Orion Books, London.
*], "Ian Paisley and the Reformed Tradition", ''Political Studies'', September 1987.
*] & ], ''Paisley'', Poolbeg Press, 1986.
*], ''Ian Paisley: My Father'', Marshall Pickering, 1988.
*], ''Ian Paisley: Voice of Protestant Ulster''. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic, 1987.

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Revision as of 11:49, 3 May 2007

Gerry Adams MP MLA
President of Sinn Féin
In office
1983–present
Preceded byRuairí Ó Brádaigh
ConstituencyBelfast West
Personal details
Born (1948-10-06) October 6, 1948 (age 76)
Belfast
Political partySinn Féin
SpouseCollette McArdle
WebsiteSinn Féin - Gerry Adams

Gerard Adams (Irish Gearóid Mac Ádhaimh; born 6 October, 1948) is an Irish Republican politician and abstentionist Westminster Member of Parliament for Belfast West. He is President of Sinn Féin, which became the largest nationalist, republican or pro-Belfast Agreement political party in Northern Ireland in the 2005 UK general election.

Adams is a spokesman for the Irish republican movement or the "Provisional movement" which encompasses Sinn Féin and the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), an proscribed organisation in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland. He is widely regarded as playing a pivotal role in getting the IRA to give up its "war" against the UK in return for devolved government for Northern Ireland. Senior political, security and media figures, including the Minister for Justice in the Republic of Ireland assert that, from the 1970s until mid-2005, Adams is alleged to have been a member of the IRA's governing army council. He has also been accused of being the IRA commander in Belfast during the 1970s. Adams has denied that he has ever been a member of the IRA.

From the late 1980s, Adams was an important figure in the Northern Ireland peace process, initially following contact by the then Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) leader John Hume and subsequently with the Irish and British governments and then other parties. In 2005, the IRA indicated that its war was over and, barring hard line elements, the republican movement is now exclusively committed to democratic politics. Under Adams, Sinn Féin changed its traditional policy of abstentionism towards Leinster House in 1986 and later to take seats in the Northern Ireland Assembly, although the party retains a policy of abstentionism towards Westminster. For three years, it participated in the power-sharing executive committee (cabinet) in Northern Ireland, where it shared powers with the Ulster Unionist Party and the SDLP. (The Democratic Unionist Party appointed two ministers but did not sit in the committee in protest at the presence of Sinn Féin.)

Background

Gerry Adams was born in West Belfast into a nationalist Catholic family, consisting of 10 children who survived infancy, 5 boys, 5 girls and their parents, Gerry Adams Sr. and Annie Hannaway.

Gerry Sr. and Annie came from strong republican backgrounds. Adams's grandfather, also Gerry Adams, had been a member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) during the Irish War of Independence. Two of Adams's uncles, Dominic and Patrick Adams, had been interned by the governments in Belfast and Dublin. Although it is reported that his uncle Dominic was a one-time IRA chief of staff, J. Bowyer Bell, in his widely respected book, The Secret Army: The IRA 1916 (Irish Academy Press), states that Dominic Adams was a senior figure in the IRA of the mid-1940s. Gerry Sr. joined the IRA aged sixteen; in 1942 he participated in an IRA ambush on a Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) patrol but was himself shot, arrested and sentenced to eight years imprisonment.

Adams's maternal great-grandfather, Michael Hannaway, was a member of the Fenians during their dynamiting campaign in England in the 1860s and 1870s. Michael's son, Billy, was election agent for Eamon de Valera in 1918 in West Belfast but refused to follow de Valera into democratic and constitutional politics upon the formation of Fianna Fáil. Annie Hannaway was a member of Cumann na mBan, the women's branch of the IRA. Three of her brothers (Alfie, Liam and Tommy) were known IRA members.

Yet as a result of the IRA being outlawed north and south of the border, and the many difficulties faced by its members - trouble finding work, lengthy terms in jail, lack of support among the larger Irish community - hardcore republicans were isolated and shunned even with their own community: "West Belfast republicanism was dominated by three families: the Adamses, the Hannaways, and the Burnses. They were all intermarried, the consequence of the imprisonment of their male members. When figures like Gerry Adams Sr. emerged after having served their jail terms, they found girls of a marriageable age either already spoken for or reluctant to marry into the IRA. Inevitably they drifted into relationships with the sisters of their IRA comrades.... The IRA in places like West Belfast... grew heavily dependent on a small, often interrelated network of extended families... the result was that republican involvement tended to be an inherited rather than acquired activity... would pass on to their children their political views as well as a special, exclusive sense of shared suffering".

Adams attended St Finian's Primary School on the Falls Road where he was taught by the De La Salle Christian Brothers. He then attended St Mary's Christian Brothers Grammar School after passing the eleven-plus exam in 1960. He left St. Mary's with six O-levels, and became a bartender, but became increasingly involved in the Irish republican movement, joining Sinn Féin and Fianna Éireann in 1964.

When Third Way Magazine asked Adams whether he was a Christian he said: 'I like the sense of there being a God, and I do take succour now from the collective comfort of being at a Mass or another religious event where you can be anonymous and individual – just a sense of community at prayer and of paying attention to that spiritual dimension which is in all of us; and I also take some succour in a private, solitary way from being able to reflect on those things.'

Early republican career

In the late 1960s, a civil rights campaign developed in Northern Ireland. Adams, it is reported, was an active supporter. Instead of leading to change, the civil rights movement was met with protests from Loyalist counter demonstrators. This culminated in August 1969, when Northern Ireland cities like Belfast and Derry erupted in major rioting and British troops were called in at the request of the Government of Northern Ireland (see 1969 Northern Ireland Riots). Against this backdrop, the IRA and its political counterpart in Sinn Féin, emerged.

Adams was active in Sinn Féin at this time; it is reported that he was also a key figure in the Belfast IRA. In August 1971, internment without trial was introduced in Northern Ireland under the Special Powers Act. Adams was interned after this on HMS Maidstone. In late June and early July, 1972, the IRA negotiated a short-lived truce with the British and an IRA delegation met with William Whitelaw. The delegation included Sean Mac Stiofain (Chief of Staff), Daithi O'Conaill, Seamus Twomey, Ivor Bell, Martin McGuinness and Gerry Adams. The IRA insisted Adams be included in the meeting and he was released from internment to participate. He was re-arrested in July 1973 and interned at Long Kesh (Maze) internment camp. After taking part in an IRA-organised escape attempt he was sentenced to a period of imprisonment, which was also served at the Maze.

In 1983, he became the first Sinn Féin MP elected to the British House of Commons since the 1950s. Following his election (as MP for Belfast West) the British government lifted a ban on him travelling to Britain. In line with Sinn Féin policy, he refused to sit in the House of Commons.

On 14 March 1984, Adams was seriously wounded in an assassination attempt when several Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF) gunmen fired about twenty shots into the car in which he was travelling. After the shooting, under-cover plain clothes police officers seized three suspects who were later convicted and sentenced. One of the three was John Gregg. Adams claimed that the British army had prior knowledge of the attack and allowed it to go ahead.

Alleged IRA Membership

Adams has stated repeatedly that he has never been a member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA). This is a controversial position given much evidence to the contrary:

  • In January 1973, Adams was photographed at the funeral of IRA man Francis Liggett dressed in the IRA's black beret marching alongside the coffin with IRA members. In 2002, Marion Price, convicted for being part of a bomb team that attacked London in March 1973, said in public that Gerry Adams was "my commanding officer" at that time.
  • In early 1977, Adams went to the home of a Belfast journalist who lived near Turf Lodge and worked for the BBC Spotlight program. He presented himself as representing the Belfast Brigade of the Provisional IRA.
  • He was arrested after the La Mon Restaurant Bombing in February 1978 and was charged with IRA membership. Adams denied the membership charge, threatened to sue reporters who repeated the charge, and applied for bail. The case went to court but the charges were dismissed. Many senior Republicans at that time were surprised by Adams's denial of membership, for they had usually taken the approach of offering no comment to such a charge. In this fashion, they offered no information and did not contribute to speculation (see for example pp. 265-66 in Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, The Life and Politics of an Irish Revolutionary}.
  • In 1980, an undercover Special Branch officer followed Adams across the border during an investigation into an IRA counterfeiting operation.
  • Sean O'Callaghan, a former IRA member, Garda and MI5 informer from County Kerry, has claimed he spoke to Adams at IRA meetings in the 1980s. He states that Adams was a battalion quarter-master responsible for weapons, then the age of 22 Adams became Officer Commanding of the Second Battalion, Belfast Brigade IRA.
  • On 20 February 2005, Irish Minister for Justice Michael McDowell publicly named Adams as a member of the seven-man ruling IRA army council during a radio interview. According to the British government, he has been a member for over 20 years, although he has never been convicted of IRA membership and continues to deny it. In July, McDowell said that, according to senior police sources, three Sinn Féin leaders, including Adams, had stepped down from the IRA command in a prelude to a peace move. Adams denied the report. "We can't stand down from a body of which we were not members", he said.
  • In Memoirs of a Revolutionary, the autobiography of Seán Mac Stíofáin, Provisional IRA Chief of Staff during 1969-72, Adams is described as commander of the Belfast Brigade (albeit only in the caption of a photograph).

President of Sinn Féin

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In 1978, Gerry Adams became joint-vice-president of Sinn Féin and he became a key figure in directing a challenge to the Sinn Féin leadership of President Ruairí Ó Brádaigh and joint-Vice President Daithí O'Conaill. Others who supported Adams and were from Belfast included Jim Gibney, Tom Hartley, and Danny Morrison. Some characterize the different approaches as a conflict between a more pragmatic northern leadership which surrounded Adams and the more traditional nationalist leadership of Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, who was President of Provisional Sinn Féin from its inception until 1983. This view misses the complexity of the situation.

The 1975 IRA-British truce is often viewed as the event that began the challenge to the original Provisional Sinn Féin leadership, which was said to be Southern-based and dominated by southerners like Ó Brádaigh and O'Conaill. However, the Chief of Staff of the IRA at the time, Seamus Twomey, was a senior figure from Belfast. Others in the leadership were also Northern based, including Billy McKee from Belfast. Adams (allegedly) rose to become the most senior figure in the IRA Northern Command on the basis of his absolute rejection of anything but military action, but this conflicts with the fact that during his time in prison Adams came to reassess his approach and became more political. It is alleged that "provisional" republicanism was founded on its opposition to the communist-inspired "broad front" politics of the Cathal Goulding-led Official IRA, but this too is disputed.

One of the core reasons that the Provisional IRA and provisional Sinn Féin were founded, in December 1969 and January 1970, respectively, was that people like Ó Brádaigh and O'Connell, and Billy McKee, opposed participation in constitutional politics, the other was the failure of the Goulding leadership to for the defence of nationalist areas. When, at the December 1969 IRA convention and the January 1970 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis the delegates voted to participate in the Dublin (Leinster House), Belfast (Stormont) and London (Westminster) parliaments, the organizations split. Gerry Adams, who had joined the Republican Movement in the early 1960s, did not go with the Provisionals until later in 1970.

In Long Kesh in the mid-1970s, and writing under the pseudonym Brownie in Republican News, Adams called for increased political activity, especially at a local level, by Republicans. The call resonated with younger Northern people, many of whom had been active in the Provisional IRA but had not necessarily been highly active in Sinn Féin. In 1977, Adams and Danny Morrison drafted the address of Jimmy Drumm at the Annual Wolfe Tone Commemoration at Bodenstown. The Address was viewed as watershed in that Drumm acknowledged that the war would be a long one and that success depended on political activity that would complement the IRA. For some, this wedding of politics and armed struggle culminated in Danny Morrison's statement at the 1981 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis in which he asked "Who here really believes we can win the war through the Ballot box? But will anyone here object if, with a ballot paper in one hand and the armalite in the other, we take power in Ireland". For others, however, the call to link political activity with armed struggle had been clearly defined in Sinn Féin policy and in the Presidential Addresses of Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, but it had not resonated with the young Northerners (It can be argued that Sinn Féin had been trying to link political activity with military activity since at least the late 1950s).

Ironically, while Adams was advocating that the Movement needed more involvement in politics, he was one of the key opponents of Sinn Féin putting forward a candidate for the first election to the European Parliament, in 1979. Even after the election of Bobby Sands as MP for Fermanagh/South Tyrone, a part of the mass mobilization associated with the 1981 Irish Hunger Strike by republican prisoners in the H blocks of the Maze prison (known as Long Kesh by Republicans), Adams was cautious about political involvement by Sinn Féin. Charles Haughey, the Taoiseach of the Republic of Ireland, called an election for June 1981. At an Ard Chomhairle meeting Adams recommended that they contest only four constituencies. Instead, H-Block/Armagh Candidates contested nine constituencies and elected two TDs. This, along with the election of Bobby Sands, was precursor to the a big electoral breakthrough in elections in 1982 to the Northern Ireland Assembly. Adams, Danny Morrison, Martin McGuinness, Jim McAllister, and Owen Carron were elected as abstentionists. Because of a fear of being outflanked by Sinn Féin, the SDLP with 14 elected representatives, also abstained from participating in the Assembly and it was a failure. The 1982 election was followed by the 1983 Westminster election, in which Sinn Féin's increased and Gerry Adams was elected, as an abstentionist, as MP for West Belfast. It was in 1983 that Ruairí Ó Brádaigh resigned as President of Sinn Féin and was succeeded by Gerry Adams.

Republicans had long claimed that the only legitimate Irish state was the Irish Republic declared in the Proclamation of the Republic of 1916, which they considered to be still in existence. In their view, the legitimate government was the IRA Army Council, which had been vested with the authority of that Republic in 1938 (prior to the Second World War) by the last remaining anti-Treaty deputies of the Second Dáil. Adams continued to adhere to this claim of republican political legitimacy until quite recently - however in his 2005 speech to the Sinn Féin Ard Fheis he explicitly rejected it.

As a result of this non-recognition, Sinn Féin had abstained from taking any of the seats they won in the British or Irish parliaments. At its 1986 Ard Fheis, Sinn Féin delegates passed a resolution to amend the rules and constitution that would allow its members to sit in the Dublin parliament (Leinster House/Dáil Éireann). At this Ruairí Ó Brádaigh led a small walkout, just as he had done twelve years earlier with the creation of Provisional Sinn Féin. This minority, which rejected dropping the policy of abstentionism, now nominally distinguishes itself from Provisional Sinn Féin by using the name Republican Sinn Féin (or Sinn Féin Poblachtach), and maintains that they are the true Sinn Féin republicans.

Adams' leadership of Sinn Féin was supported by a Northern-based cadre that included people like Danny Morrison and Martin McGuinness. Adams and others, over time, pointed to Sinn Féin electoral successes in the early and mid-1980s, when hunger strikers Bobby Sands and Kieran Doherty were elected to the British House of Commons and Dáil Éireann respectively, and they advocated that Sinn Féin become increasingly political and base its influence on electoral politics rather than paramilitarism. The electoral effects of this strategy were shown later by the election of Adams and McGuinness to the House of Commons.

Voice ban

In popular consciousness in Britain, Adams is primarily remembered during the latter part of this period for the ban on the media broadcast of his voice (the ban actually covered all republican organizations and unionist terrorist organizations, but in practice Adams was the only one prominent enough to appear regularly on TV). This ban was imposed by the then prime minister Margaret Thatcher on 19 October, 1988, the reason given being to "deny terrorists the oxygen of publicity" after the BBC interviewed Martin McGuinness.

A similar ban, known as Section 31, had been law in the Republic of Ireland since the 1970s. However media outlets soon found ways around the ban, initially by the use of subtitles, but later and more commonly by the use of an actor reading his words over the images of him speaking.

This ban was much lampooned in cartoons and satirical TV shows, notably Spitting Image, and in The Day Today (as being required to inhale helium to "subtract credibility"), and was criticized by freedom of speech organizations worldwide and British media personalties, including BBC Director General John Birt and BBC foreign editor John Simpson. The ban was finally lifted by Prime Minister John Major on 17 September, 1994.

Moving into mainstream politics

Sinn Féin continued its policy of refusing to sit in the Westminster parliament even after Adams won the Belfast West constituency. He lost his seat to Joe Hendron of the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) in the 1992 general election. However, he easily regained it at the next election in May 1997.

Under Adams, Sinn Féin appeared to move away from being a political voice of the Provisional IRA to becoming a professionally organized political party in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

SDLP leader John Hume, MP, identified the possibility that a negotiated settlement might be possible and began secret talks with Adams in 1988. These discussions led to unofficial contacts with the British Northern Ireland Office under the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Peter Brooke, and with the government of the Republic under Charles Haughey – although both governments maintained in public that they would not negotiate with "terrorists" .

These talks provided the groundwork for what was later to be the Belfast Agreement, as well as the milestone Downing Street Declaration and the Joint Framework Document.

These negotiations led to the IRA ceasefire in August 1994. Irish Taoiseach Albert Reynolds (who had replaced Haughey) and who had played a key role in the Hume/Adams dialogue through his Special Advisor Martin Mansergh, regarded the ceasefire as permanent. However the slow pace of developments, contributed in part to the (wider) political difficulties of the British government of John Major and consequent reliance on Ulster Unionist Party votes in the House of Commons, led the IRA to end its ceasefire and resume the campaign.

A restituted ceasefire later followed, as part of the negotiations strategy, which saw teams from the British and Irish governments, the Ulster Unionist Party, the SDLP, Sinn Féin and representatives of loyalist paramilitary organizations, under the chairmanship of former United States Senator Mitchell, produced the Belfast Agreement (also called the Good Friday Agreement as it was signed on Good Friday, 1998). Under the agreement, structures were created reflecting the Irish and British identities of the people of Ireland, with a British-Irish Council and a Northern Ireland Legislative Assembly created.

Articles 2 and 3 of the Republic's constitution, Bunreacht na hÉireann, which claimed sovereignty over all of Ireland, were reworded, and a power-sharing Executive Committee was provided for. As part of their deal Sinn Féin agreed to abandon its abstentionist policy regarding a "six-county parliament", as a result taking seats in the new Stormont-based Assembly and running the education and health and social services ministries in the power-sharing government.

Opponents in Republican Sinn Féin accused Sinn Féin of "selling out" by agreeing to participate in what it called "partitionist assemblies" in the Republic and Northern Ireland. However Gerry Adams insisted that the Belfast Agreement provided a mechanism to deliver a united Ireland by non-violent and constitutional means, much as Michael Collins had said of the Anglo-Irish Treaty nearly 80 years earlier.

When Sinn Féin came to nominate its two ministers to the Executive Council, the party, like the SDLP and the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) chose for tactical reasons not to include its leader among its ministers. (When later the SDLP chose a new leader, it selected one of its ministers, Mark Durkan, who then opted to remain in the Committee.)

Adams remains the President of Sinn Féin, with Caoimhghín Ó Caoláin serving as Sinn Féin parliamentary leader in Dáil Éireann, and Martin McGuinness the party's chief negotiator and effective party head in the Northern Ireland Assembly. His son, Gearoid is a primary school teacher and has represented Co. Antrim in gaelic football.

On 8 March, 2007 it was reported that Adams was re-elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly.

On 26 March, 2007, he met with DUP leader Ian Paisley face-to-face for the first time, and the two came to an agreement regarding the return of the power-sharing executive in Northern Ireland.


References

  1. Cairt Chearta do Chách — Sinn Féin press release, 26 January 2004.
  2. ^ Minister accuses Adams of IRA role by Angelique Chrisafis, The Guardian, 21 February 2005
  3. "1984: Sinn Fein leader shot in street attack". BBC. Retrieved 2007-03-22. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. Kevin Maguire (14 December, 2006). "Adams wants 1984 shooting probe". BBC. Retrieved 2007-03-22. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  5. Rosie Cowan (1 October, 2002). "Adams denies IRA links as book calls him a genius". The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-03-22. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  6. ^ Sinn Fein's Adams denies IRA membership in BBC radio interview by Jack Holland, The Irish Echo, July 2002
  7. p66, The Informer, Sean O'Callaghan
  8. Moloney, Ed (2002). A Secret History of the IRA. Penguin Books. pp. p. 140. ISBN 0-141-01041-X. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  9. Taylor, Peter (1997). Provos The IRA & Sinn Féin. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. p. 140. ISBN 0-7475-3818-2. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  10. English, Richard (2003). Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA. Pan Books. pp. p. 110. ISBN 0-330-49388-4. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  11. Urban, Mark (1993). Big Boys' Rules: SAS and the Secret Struggle Against the IRA. Faber and Faber. pp. p. 26. ISBN 0-571-16809-4. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  12. Dubbing SF voices becomes the stuff of history, By Michael Foley The Irish Times, 17 September 1994
  13. Sinn Fein's Gerry Adams Wins In Northern Ireland. Associated Press, 8 March, 2007.
  14. "May date for return to devolution". BBC. 26 March, 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-26. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)

Published works

  • Falls Memories, 1982
  • The Politics of Irish Freedom, 1986
  • A Pathway to Peace, 1988
  • An Irish Journal
  • An Irish Voice
  • Cage Eleven, 1990
  • The Street and Other Stories, 1992
  • Free Ireland: Towards a Lasting Peace, 1995
  • Before the Dawn, 1996, Brandon Books, ISBN 0-434-00341-7
  • Selected Writings
  • Who Fears to Speak...?
  • Hope and History, 2003, Brandon Books, ISBN 0-86322-330-3

See also

  • J. Bowyer Bell. The Secret Army: The IRA 1916 -. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 1979.
  • Colm Keena. A Biography of Gerry Adams. Cork, Ireland: Mercier Press, 1990.
  • Ed Moloney. A Secret History of the IRA. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2002.
  • O'Callaghan, Sean. The Informer. Corgi. 1999. ISBN 0-552-14607-2
  • Robert W. White. Ruairi O Bradaigh, the Life and Politics of an Irish Revolutionary. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2006.
  • Anthony McIntyre. Gerry Adams Man Of War and Man Of Peace?, academic lecture examining Gerry Adams' role in the Republican Movement

External links

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Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded byGerry Fitt Member of Parliament for Belfast West
19831992
Succeeded byJoe Hendron
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