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McGuinness 'a hard act to follow'

03:05, Mar 8 2013

 

Sinn Fein veteran Francie Molloy insisted his party colleague Martin McGuinness would be a hard act to follow after winning the Westminster seat vacated by Stormont's deputy First Minister.

Mr Molloy, the outgoing principal deputy speaker at the Northern Ireland Assembly, vowed to represent all the people of the Mid Ulster constituency in the wake of his by-election victory.

"I would like to thank my colleague and comrade Martin McGuinness for the work he has done this past 15 years in moving Mid Ulster forward," said Mr Molloy after the results were declared at Cookstown Leisure Centre. "Martin is going to be a hard act to follow, I understand that, but we will try our best to do that and we will continue to build the process and work with everyone - I want to represent all the people of Mid Ulster, not just those who voted for me, not just the Sinn Fein support."

In keeping with Sinn Fein's abstentionist policy, Mr Molloy will not take his seat in the House of Commons.

Sinn Fein saw its majority substantially cut from 15,363 at the 2010 General Election to 4,681. A lower turnout - down from 63.23% in 2010 to 55.38% - and the emergence of a unified unionist candidate were undoubted factors in the reduction.

However, the Sinn Fein share of the vote also reduced from 2010 (52.00% to 46.93%) while other parties made some in-roads against its dominant position. Mr Molloy secured 17,462 votes to the 12,781 (34.35%) polled by his closest rival, agreed unionist Nigel Lutton.

Of the remaining two candidates, Social Democratic and Labour Party MLA Patsy McGlone polled 6,478 votes and the Alliance Party's Eric Bullick secured 487. The SDLP's share of vote was up from 14.26% in 2010 to 17.41% this time round while Alliance's also went up slightly (1.31% from 0.97%).

The by-election campaign was played out under the shadow of a historic Troubles murder The highly emotive contest saw Mr Molloy come face to face with Mr Lutton - the son of a former policeman whose murder the senior republican was alleged in the House of Commons to have had a role in.

Mr Molloy has always vehemently denied the claim levelled against him six years ago under parliamentary privilege by Upper Bann Democratic Unionist MP David Simpson that he was a suspect in the 1979 shooting of ex-Royal Ulster Constabulary reservist Frederick Lutton.

As predicted, there was no handshake between the victorious Sinn Fein politician and Mr Lutton at the declaration, although the unionist candidate did say the men exchanged hellos.

 
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