Mid Ulster: Sinn Féin’s Francie Molloy re-elected with comfortable majority

Veteran politician beats DUP by almost 10,000 votes even as share of poll slips

Sinn Féin’s Francie Molloy during the count at Meadowbank Sports Arena last night. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA Wire
Sinn Féin’s Francie Molloy during the count at Meadowbank Sports Arena last night. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA Wire

The Mid Ulster boxes were the first to arrive at the count centre in Magherafelt on Thursday night, and, as the local constituency, it was the first of the eight being tallied at Meadowbank Sports Arena to declare.

Nobody expected any surprises here. The veteran Sinn Féin politician Francie Molloy was sitting on a comfortable majority of more than 12,000 votes, and at 3am he was duly re-elected with 45.9 per cent of the vote.

Sinn Féin has held Mid Ulster for 22 years, since the late Martin McGuinness, the former deputy first minister, first won it for the party, in 1997. He was the constituency's MP until 2013, when he was replaced by Mr Molloy in a byelection.

With 20,473 votes, Mr Molloy's share was lower than in the 2017 election, when he won 54.5 per cent of the vote. He nevertheless came in almost 10,000 votes ahead of his nearest rival, Keith Buchanan of the DUP.

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Mel Boyle of the Alliance Party increased the party's share from 2.3 to 7.9 per cent, while the SDLP's Denise Johnston increased her party share by 4.5 percentage points.

Turnout in Mid Ulster was 63.83 per cent, down by almost 5 percentage points compared with 2017 but still slightly ahead of the turnout in Northern Ireland as a whole, which stood at 62.09 per cent.

In his acceptance speech, Mr Molloy said it had been a Brexit election. "Brexit has wrecked the entire political process, and it is going to wreck the Union as well. The one certainty for us to return to the European Union is Irish unity. That's the open door we have to Europe, and I would hope to continue that as soon as possible."

Freya McClements

Freya McClements

Freya McClements is Northern Editor of The Irish Times