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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Ben Quinn and Martin Belam

David Trimble, key architect of Good Friday agreement, dies aged 77

David Trimble
David Trimble was the first person to hold the office of first minister of Northern Ireland. Photograph: Matthew Lloyd/Getty Images

David Trimble, Northern Ireland’s inaugural first minister and a crucial unionist architect of the Good Friday agreement, has died aged 77.

His death on Monday was announced by the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), the party he led into a historic power-sharing arrangement with nationalists and republicans in Northern Ireland.

Lord Trimble was the first person to serve in the role of first minister, and won the Nobel peace prize, along with John Hume, leader of the nationalist SDLP party, for their part in negotiations for the Good Friday agreement. He was UUP leader between 1995 and 2005, accepting a life peerage in the House of Lords in 2006.

Trimble had played a “crucial and courageous role” in the Good Friday agreement negotiations, said Ireland’s Taoiseach, Micheál Martin, who said all in politics at the time had “witnessed his crucial and courageous role.”

Tony Blair, who was one of the brokers of the peace deal as Labour prime minister and had an often fraught relationship with Trimble, paid tribute by saying that he had “showed politics at its very best.”

Tributes from across Northern Ireland’s political divide and beyond were paid to a politician whose own political journey from hardline unionism to a risk-taking partner with his sworn enemies helped end decades of strife.

Describing Trimble as “a man of courage and vision”, the UUP’s leader, Doug Beattie, said: “He chose to grasp the opportunity for peace when it presented itself and sought to end the decades of violence that blighted his beloved Northern Ireland.”

“He will forever be associated with the leadership he demonstrated in the negotiations that led up to the 1998 Belfast agreement.”

Trimble had demonstrated bravery and courage while battling his recent illness in a way that was typical of the qualities he showed in his political career, at Stormont and at Westminster, Beattie added.

On the nationalist side, the Sinn Féin leader, Mary Lou McDonald, said on Twitter that she was “saddened” to hear of Trimble’s death, adding: “His contribution to building the peace process in Ireland will stand as a proud and living legacy of his political life.”

Trimble’s death was announced shortly before the Tory leadership TV debate between Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak. They both paid tribute to Trimble – who joined their party in 2007 – as “a giant.”

The SDLP leader, Colum Eastwood, said Trimble had left an “indelible mark on our shared island’s story” and that without him there would not have been a Good Friday agreement.

David Trimble, Tony Blair and John Hume
David Trimble, Tony Blair and the Irish nationalist John Hume await the results of the Good Friday agreement referendum. Photograph: Alan Lewis/Photopress Belfast

The MP for the Westminster constituency of Foyle said: “Over the course of his political career, but particularly in difficult years of the Good Friday agreement negotiations, he demonstrated immense courage and took political risks that sustained the life of our fledgling peace process.

“He doesn’t often enough get credit for it, but without David Trimble’s fortitude, there would simply have been no agreement.”

Peter Mandelson, who was secretary of state for Northern Ireland from late 1999 to 2001, referred to the “pain and strife” which Trimble had faced as he went about implementing the agreement, while Alastair Campbell, strategist and spokesman for Blair at the time, described Trimble as someone who “could be a difficult and mercurial character, but he was the right man in the right place at the right time”.

Sir Jeffrey Donaldson, the leader of Northern Ireland’s largest unionist party and a former UUP member who left over his opposition to Trimble’s pro-agreement stance, said: “David leaves a huge and lasting legacy to Northern Ireland. He can undoubtedly be said to have shaped history in our country.”

The former Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams expressed his “deep regret” at Trimble’s death and extended his “sincere condolences” to his family and his former UUP colleagues.

Born in Belfast in 1944, he was educated at Queen’s University before becoming a barrister and a lecturer. His involvement in politics picked up pace in the 1970s and he was involved in the Vanguard party, an extreme unionist grouping.

A return to the mainstream unionist establishment followed, however, and he rejoined the Ulster Unionist party in 1978, becoming MP at Westminster for Upper Bann at a by-election on May 17, 1990.

The high point of his career, at that point, was when he won the Ulster Unionist leadership in September 1995 after the resignation of the veteran Sir James Molyneaux.

Others paying tribute to him included Boris Johnson, the UK prime minister, who said he was “deeply saddened”. The Labour leader, Keir Starmer, said Trimble was a “towering figure of Northern Ireland and British politics”.

Trimble is survived by his wife, Daphne, and his sons and daughters, Richard, Victoria, Nicholas and Sarah.

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