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Belfast Live
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Brendan Hughes

Analysis: UUP conference seeks to distance party from unionist rivals

An Irish dancing troupe is probably among the last things you would expect to see at a unionist party conference.

But perhaps the trio on the UUP stage hailing from a dance academy called "Royal Tara" helped balance out the surprise.

While the choice of interval act was somewhat unexpected, it continued the messaging the Ulster Unionists have been pushing in the run-up to this conference.

A young girl with a hurl and sliotar featuring in its party political broadcast had already helped the UUP grab some extra media exposure.

Members of the Royal Tara Dance Academy perform on stage at the conference. (Kelvin Boyes / Press Eye.)

Under the leadership of Doug Beattie, the UUP is attempting to position itself as more positive, progressive and inclusive than its unionist party rivals.

The party leader, who has only been in the job for around four months, strode across the stage at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Belfast as he delivered his keynote speech.

For too long unionism "has been viewed as negative, backward and angry," he told UUP members.

"Yet some of the most socially liberal within Northern Ireland are found within unionism and loyalism."

The party conference included contributions from elected representatives from all four UK nations, with both Labour and the Conservatives represented.

Mr Beattie declared: "My unionism is rooted in the whole of the United Kingdom and can be found in London, Edinburgh, Cardiff and of course Belfast."

The Upper Bann MLA expressed a confident tone going into a potentially early Stormont Assembly election.

Party Leader Doug Beattie pictured at the Saturday conference. (Kelvin Boyes / Press Eye.)

But he also signalled the possibility that the Ulster Unionists could go into opposition if they do not become the lead unionist party, arguing that a mandatory five-party coalition "no longer delivers good government".

"We need to create a working power-sharing government with a working power-sharing opposition to hold them to account," he added.

The UUP is displaying a newfound confidence after promising poll results. Only at the next election will we discover whether this translates into votes.

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