DUP leadership contenders deliver eve-of-polls messages to party voters
Edwin Poots (left) and Jeffrey Donaldson are in the race to be the next DUP leader (PA)
Democratic Unionist Party leadership contenders Jeffrey Donaldson and Edwin Poots have issued eve-of-poll messages in a final bid to clinch the position.
The pair are running to replace outgoing leader Arlene Foster who announced her resignation last month.
It is the first leadership contest in the DUPâs 50-year history.
Mr Donaldson and Mr Poots face several challenges, including post-Brexit trading arrangements under the Northern Ireland Protocol, which has been reviled by unionists and loyalists as a âborder in the Irish Seaâ.
They will also want to unite unionism which is in such turmoil that the leader of the second largest pro-union party, the UUP, has also stepped down.
Just one candidate, former army captain Doug Beattie, has indicated he will run to replace outgoing leader Steve Aiken.
Under a âstrength and experience to leadâ strapline, Mr Poots, the current Stormont Agriculture minister, tells the party electorate that he believes he has the âright plan to reform our partyâ and to âreinvigorate unionismâ.
Mr Poots previously indicated he will nominate a colleague to serve as first minister.
Mr Donaldsonâs final message to voters includes a pledge to stand in the next Assembly election, scheduled to take place in May 2021, and become first minister.
He has promised âmajor changesâ and âgreater participative structuresâ within the party, and pledged to provide âunited leadership to unionism and the countryâ.
The DUPâs 28 MLAs and eight MPs will meet virtually on Friday to hear both menâs pitches before voting in a secret ballot.
Mr Donaldson and Mr Poots will have 10 minutes each to speak to the electoral college.
The contenders to succeed Nigel Dodds as deputy leader, Gregory Campbell, Paula Bradley and Paul Frew, will each have five minutes to make their case.
Voters will cast their ballot at party headquarters on Friday afternoon before polls are due to close at 4pm.
Mrs Foster confirmed on Wednesday that she would be voting, but declined to say who she would be backing.
She resigned following an internal revolt against her leadership.
The move came in the form of a letter of no confidence signed by a majority of the partyâs senior elected representatives.
The outgoing DUP leader will step down from that role on May 28, and as Stormont First Minister at the end of June.
Earlier Sinn Féin president Mary Lou McDonald warned the DUP against any move that could destabilise powersharing in Northern Ireland.
She said the leadership of the party is âentirely a matter for themselvesâ, but she added: âPowersharing has to work for everyone.â
âIt is very, very unwise in the mouth of a leadership election for anyone in political unionism to be talking about destabilising the institutions,â she said.
âThe institutions have to work, powersharing has to work, the Good Friday Agreement has to work, Stormont House (Agreement) needs to be delivered, Acht na Gaeilge (Irish language act) and the cultural legislative package needs to be delivered.
âAnd the reason why all these things need to happen is because thatâs how we give each of our citizens the best chance, the best shot at having a decent quality of life and living in a stable, respectful society.â




