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Alex Maskey

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Preceded by
  
Sue Ramsey

Succeeded by
  
Mairtin O Muilleoir

Education
  
St Malachy's College

Preceded by
  
Monica McWilliams

Role
  
Irish Politician


Succeeded by
  
Fra McCann

Name
  
Alex Maskey

Preceded by
  
New Creation

Preceded by
  
Jim Rodgers

Party
  
Sinn Fein

Alex Maskey Listen to how Alex Maskey squared up to 39Smokin Joe Frazier39

Similar People
  
Mickey Brady, Paul Maskey, Sammy Wilson, Gerry Kelly, Gerry Adams

Panel 1 alex maskey


Alex Maskey (born 8 January 1952) is an Irish politician who was the first member of Sinn Féin to serve as Belfast's Lord Mayor. He was Sinn Féin's longest sitting councillor and is currently an MLA for West Belfast as well as being a former councillor for the Laganbank area of Belfast.

Contents

Alex Maskey wwwsinnfeiniefilesimagesorig2013MaskeyAlexjpg

Alex maskey belfast city hall 1988


Early life

Alex Maskey Alex Maskey Belfast39s first republican mayor quits council

Maskey was educated at St Malachy's College and at the Belfast Institute for Further and Higher Education and then worked in Belfast docks as a labourer and barman. He was a successful amateur boxer, having only lost 4 out of 75 fights.

Alex Maskey Sinn Feins Alex Maskey rails against PMs Irish border plan

When the Troubles broke out in 1969 he became involved with the Provisional Irish Republican Army, and was interned twice in the 1970s.

Politics

Maskey stood unsuccessfully in West Belfast in the 1982 Assembly Election.

In 1983, as part of the armalite and ballot box strategy, Maskey won a by-election for a seat on Belfast City Council from the Upper Falls area and became the first member of Sinn Féin to be elected to Belfast City Council since the beginning of The Troubles and only the second to be elected in Northern Ireland.

Maskey emerged as a key ally of Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams' approach to the strategy. In 1987 he survived being shot at close range by loyalist paramilitaries. In 1996 Maskey was elected to the Northern Ireland Peace Forum for the Belfast West constituency but did not attend the Forum in accordance with Sinn Féin's policy of abstentionism. Two years later he was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly, which on this occasion Sinn Féin did not boycott.

Maskey's growing political profile led him to contest the Belfast South constituency in the 2001 general election as part of Sinn Féin's strategy of building up their vote in one of their weaker constituencies.

In the local elections held on the same day he switched to the Laganbank area of South Belfast and won a seat there.

In 2002 Maskey became the first ever republican to serve as Lord Mayor of Belfast. His first duty in office was to open the annual Presbyterian General Assembly despite being a non-Presbyterian.

Maskey garnered general praise when as part of his duties as Lord Mayor in July 2002 he laid a wreath in memorial of British soldiers who died in the First World War. However he declined to attend the main memorial ceremony, stating that it was "the military commemoration of the Battle of the Somme". In his office he flew the British Union Jack and the Irish tricolour side by side.

In the 2003 Assembly election Maskey stood in South Belfast again and won Sinn Féin's first seat there with a boost in the vote share. He contested the seat in the 2005 general election with the vote share down on the Assembly elections, losing to the Social Democratic and Labour Party candidate, Alasdair McDonnell.

Assassination attempt

Maskey was targeted for assassination on at least one occasion

Health

On Christmas Day, 2005, Maskey suffered a heart attack while with his family. Several weeks later he appeared on BBC Radio Ulster to talk about his health.

Later years

In 2006 he participated in the negotiations resulting in the Basque nationalist organisation ETA truce announced on 22 March. On 23 April 2007 he was announced as one of three Sinn Féin members who would sit on the re-vamped Northern Ireland Policing Board.

Maskey resigned from Belfast City Council in October 2010, as part of Sinn Féin's policy of abolishing double jobbing.

References

Alex Maskey Wikipedia