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Cedric Wilson

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Preceded by
  
New Creation

Role
  
American football player

Name
  
Cedric Wilson

Career start
  
2000


Nationality
  
British

Weight
  
83 kg

Succeeded by
  
George Ennis

Height
  
1.78 m

Positions
  
Wide receiver

Cedric Wilson mediacmgdigitalcomsharedltltcachethumbnail

Born
  
6 June 1948 (age 75) Belfast, Northern Ireland (
1948-06-06
)

Political party
  
NI Unionist Party UK Unionist Party (until 1999)

Similar People
  
Najeh Davenport, Willie Parker, Kevan Barlow, Jeff Reed, Nate Washington

Education
  
University of Tennessee

Cedric wilson senior football highlights


Cedric Wilson (born 6 June 1948) is a politician in Northern Ireland.

Born in Belfast, Wilson became the director of a private nursing home. In 1981, he was elected to Castlereagh Borough Council for the Democratic Unionist Party, a post he held until 1989. During this time, he became known for his role in campaigning against the Anglo-Irish Agreement.

At the 1982 Northern Ireland Assembly election, Wilson stood unsuccessfully in Belfast South.

In 1996, he joined the UK Unionist Party (UKUP), and was elected to the Northern Ireland Forum under the top-up system in 1996. When the Forum was replaced by the Northern Ireland Assembly, Wilson won a seat in Strangford outright, initially placing third out of twenty-two candidates.

In 1999, Wilson and three of the four other UKUP Assembly members left the party to form the Northern Ireland Unionist Party (NIUP). They argued that they should not quit their Assembly seats should Sinn Féin take up its seats in the without prior Provisional Irish Republican Army decommissioning of weapons. Wilson became the party leader, and in the 2001 general election, he contested the Strangford seat, but came bottom of the poll, with only 1.9% of the vote.

This poor showing was reflected in the 2003 Assembly election, when Wilson initially placed only tenth out of thirteen candidates, and all the NIUP members lost their seats.

Wilson remained leader of the NIUP, but the party is currently inactive. Wilson stood as an independent candidate in the Strangford constituency at the 2007 Assembly election where he polled 305 votes (0.8%), thus finishing last out of the fifteen candidates.

References

Cedric Wilson Wikipedia