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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
National
Rory Carroll Ireland correspondent

David Trimble funeral unites politicians from across spectrum

From left: Michael D Higgins and Boris Johnson at the funeral of David Trimble in Lisburn
Boris Johnson attends the funeral of David Trimble with the Irish president, Michael D Higgins, left, in Lisburn. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA

David Trimble faced bitter opposition from across the political spectrum during his life but his funeral has united British, Irish and Northern Irish leaders in paying tribute to his accomplishments and sacrifice.

The service in Lisburn on Monday brought together the British prime minister, Boris Johnson, and other political representatives from London, Dublin and Belfast to bid farewell to Northern Ireland’s inaugural first minister.

It was a rare gathering and show of solidarity – and a truce in current political tensions – to honour Lord Trimble, an architect of the 1998 Good Friday agreement and a former Ulster Unionist party (UUP) leader, who died last week at the age of 77.

Ireland’s president, Michael D Higgins, and taoiseach, Micheál Martin, joined Northern Ireland’s party leaders at Harmony Hill Presbyterian church, a name both apt and ironic given Trimble’s torrid time as a peacemaker.

Trimble shared the 1998 Nobel peace prize with John Hume, the then leader of the Social Democratic and Labour party (SDLP), but he was labelled a traitor by many fellow unionists and faced death threats.

David Trimble’s funeral
Mourners hear tributes to Lord Trimble’s ‘considerable strength of character’ at the service. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA

Ireland’s tricolour flew at half-mast over the Irish parliament in Dublin as a mark of respect for his role in ending the Troubles while striving to safeguard Northern Ireland’s place in the UK.

The former British prime minister Tony Blair said Trimble had shown immense courage in leading unionists, despite deep misgivings, into a new era. “It is what defines leadership in the end,” he told the BBC.

Mourners heard personal stories of Trimble’s boyhood at Bangor grammar school in the 1960s, his career as a law professor at Queen’s University in Belfast and how he overcame shyness to become a transformational leader of the UUP from 1995 to 2005.

The Rev Fiona Forbes said people had come to remember an academic, a Nobel laureate, a husband, a father and a grandfather. “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God,” she said.

Charles McMullen, a former moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, told mourners: “Provenance shone its light on him.” The reward was a transformed political landscape that had allowed a generation to grow up in relative peace, he said.

“History will be exceedingly kind to David, even if life brought many unrelenting pressures and demands. Alongside others, he rose to seemingly impossible challenges with considerable strength of character, intellectual acumen and complete integrity,” said McMullen.

The gathering of Michelle O’Neill, Sinn Féin’s first minister designate, Jeffrey Donaldson of the Democratic Unionist party (DUP), Doug Beattie of the UUP, Alliance’s Stephen Farry and Colum Eastwood of the SDLP was likely to be a brief respite in post-Brexit disputes that have poisoned Northern Irish politics and paralysed power-sharing institutions at Stormont.

The Northern Ireland secretary, Shailesh Vara, his Labour counterpart, Peter Kyle, the former Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams and the former taoiseach Bertie Ahern, who struck up a friendship with Trimble during the Good Friday negotiations, also attended.

The former US president Bill Clinton said last week that Trimble’s legacy would endure “in all who are living better lives because of him today”.

Commentators said it felt like the end of an era after the deaths over the past decade of Martin McGuinness, Ian Paisley, Seamus Mallon and Hume – other key figures in consolidating the Good Friday agreement.

Trimble is survived by his widow, Daphne, and their two daughters and two sons.

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