Beattie was born in 1965 in a military base in Hampshire; his father was a warrant officer in the Royal Ulster Rifles, a regiment of the British Army. The family returned to Portadown, County Armagh, Northern Ireland, when he was 10 following the ending of his father's regular service. The family moved into a house in Union Street, in the densely-populated Edgarstown area on the outskirts of the town centre.[3]
Beattie's mother died young, leaving his father (who had by this time enlisted with the Ulster Defence Regiment) to raise him, his three sisters and two brothers. At the age of 15 he accidentally shot a friend when the two of them found Beattie Snr's personal protection weapon and were playing with it. Although shot in the head, his friend recovered.[4]
Military career
At the age of 16, in 1982, Beattie joined the Royal Irish Rangers and following training was posted to the 2nd Battalion who were stationed in Wavell Barracks, Berlin.[5]
In over 28 years of service, he rose to the rank of Warrant Officer First Class (WO1) and was appointed regimental sergeant major. During that time he served in Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq and Northern Ireland, being awarded the General Officer NI commendation, the Queen's Commendation for Bravery (for saving the lives of enemy soldiers)[6] and the NATO Meritorious Service Medal. He was commissioned from the ranks in 2005, gaining promotion to captain.[7]
Following his return from Afghanistan, Beattie published the first of two books, An Ordinary Soldier,[9] which became an immediate best seller in the United Kingdom and propelled him into the public eye.[10] Beattie's follow-up book was Task Force Helmand.[11]
Before the 2017 Ulster Unionist Party leadership election, Beattie was named by commentators as a possible contender to replace former leader Mike Nesbitt; however, in the end only Robin Swann ran, and was elected unopposed.[15][16] In October 2019, after Swann announced he was standing down as leader of the party, Beattie ruled himself out of contention as the next leader and endorsed former Royal Navy commander Steve Aiken and served as Deputy instead.[17]
In May and September 2020, Beattie was threatened by the South East Antrim UDA after he condemned threats they had made against journalists.[19][20]
Leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
Beattie announced in May 2021 that he was putting his name forward to be the next leader of the UUP following the resignation of Steve Aiken. He said that he would be "able to reach out to all people in Northern Ireland regardless of what your religion is, sexual orientation or ethnicity".[21] Beattie was elected unopposed on 17 May 2021,[22] and was officially ratified 10 days later.
In January 2022, Beattie apologised after posting a joke on Twitter about the wife of DUP politician Edwin Poots.[23] In the aftermath, several of Beattie's historic tweets re-emerged, containing content that was perceived as "casually misogynistic", and including derogatory comments about women and members of the Irish Traveller community.[24][25] The tweets were posted between 2011 and 2014, while Beattie was still a serving soldier and before he entered politics. Beattie said that he was "deeply ashamed" of the tweets.[26]
Beattie attended protests against the Northern Ireland Protocol, the post-Brexit trade arrangements. In March 2022, he announced he would continue to oppose the Protocol but would no longer take part in the series of rallies. Beattie said they had been hijacked by loyalists to raise tensions "that now see a resurgence in UVF activity". Following this, his constituency office in Portadown was attacked,[27] and a poster of a noose around his neck appeared at a loyalist rally in Lurgan.[28]
At the 2022 Assembly election, he was the fourth candidate elected in Upper Bann, despite initial reports that he was at risk of losing his seat.
During the election count, Beattie told the Belfast Telegraph that “I’ve set the direction of travel. And what we have done previously, within the Ulster Unionist Party, is something bad has happened and we’ve all said ‘Oh, we’ll have to rethink what we’re doing’ and we’ve gone off in a completely different direction.
“I don’t believe that’s the case this time.” [29][30]
Beattie caused further controversy in December 2022 when he said, during a debate on restoring the Northern Ireland Assembly, that the DUP "scream, whinge and whine like a girl from the sidelines".He subsequently apologised for the remarks.[31]
Following losses for the UUP in the 2023 local elections, Beattie said that unionism was always likely to "take a hit across the board" due to Sinn Féin's growth.[32] He remarked, however, that "a fully functioning Stormont will stop the swing to Sinn Fein in its tracks."[33]
Throughout his leadership of the Ulster Unionist Party, Beattie had repeatedly called for the restoration of the devolved Northern Ireland Executive.[34] In August 2023, he said that the absence of a devolved government is "causing untold harm in Northern Ireland" and, without an Executive, Northern Ireland has "no say, no scrutiny and absolutely no power."[35]
Resignation
On 19 August 2024, it was reported that Beattie was going to resign as UUP leader. He confirmed this in a statement later that same day, stating: “It is now clear that some believe the momentum needed to keep the Ulster Unionist party moving in the right direction cannot come from me. Irreconcilable differences between myself and party officers combined with the inability to influence and shape the party going forward means that I can no longer remain the party leader.”[36]
Following his announcement, there was speculation that he would stand in the subsequent leadership election, though Beattie ruled himself out, saying: "It would simply not be credible, or right, for me to put my name forward to be re-elected as the party leader. I must accept that while a large number would like me to stay as leader there is an equal number that may not."[39][40]
Views
Beattie has been characterized as a 'progressive'[41] and 'liberal' within the UUP, but said upon his election as leader that those with conservative values had "nothing to fear" from him and that he would "tread a path to make sure that your voice is heard and I will never denigrate your opinion".[22][42] He proposed a motion in Stormont calling for a ban on gay conversion therapy, which passed, and argued it is "fundamentally wrong to view our LGBTQ community as requiring a fix or cure".[43]
Beattie is against the Northern Ireland Protocol, the post-Brexit trade arrangements, believing it is damaging to the Belfast Agreement. He said "I do not want a hardened border on the island of Ireland, but neither do I want a border in the Irish Sea".[43]
A former soldier, Beattie has pressed for Northern Ireland to adopt the Armed Forces Covenant and ensure support for military veterans and their families.[44] He also argues that soldiers who served during the Troubles should not be immune from prosecution, saying "Soldiers were here to stand between the terrorists and the terrorised. If they went outside the law then they have to face the law".[45]
Beattie is a firm supporter of devolution and has opposed boycotts of the devolved institutions in Northern Ireland.[46]
As a proponent of the Belfast Agreement, Beattie is opposed to the St Andrews Agreement as he believes it "changed" the Belfast Agreement and turned "every election into a sectarian headcount."[47]
References
Some statement related to Beattie's resignation.[48]
^"Top UUP figures: we still believe in liberal unionism". www.newsletter.co.uk. News Letter. 10 June 2017. Retrieved 18 January 2022. Even I myself have always classed myself as being Irish, Northern Irish and British, but a proud unionist.
^Hughes, Brendan; McCambridge, Jonathan (9 May 2023). "UUP leader: Local election choice between delivery or dysfunction". BelfastLive. Retrieved 21 August 2023. That is why it is the firm belief of the Ulster Unionist Party that the Assembly and Executive must be restored to deal with the challenges still posed by the Windsor Framework and to grasp its opportunities.