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Rhonda Paisley

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Name
  
Rhonda Paisley

Uncles
  
Harold Paisley

Parents
  
Ian Paisley

Role
  
Author


Rhonda Paisley Saturday Live Rhonda Paisley talks to Ian Paisley 1987 YouTube

Books
  
My Power Diary, My Power Words File, Kids Under Construction, Ian Paisley, my father

Siblings
  
Ian Paisley, Jr., Kyle Paisley, Cherith Paisley, Sharon Paisley

Grandparents
  
James Kyle Paisley, Isabella Paisley

Saturday live rhonda paisley talks to ian paisley 1987


Rhonda Paisley (born 1960) is an author, and former politician from Northern Ireland. She is the second daughter of the late Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader and Northern Ireland's former First Minister Ian Paisley, is unmarried, and lives with her mother in the family home. She attended Bob Jones University in the United States (the same institution from which her father received his honorary degree), where she was awarded a BA in Fine Art.

Contents

Rhonda Paisley Ian Paisley My Father Rhonda Paisley 9780551017221 Amazoncom Books

Saturday live presented by rhonda paisley


Political career

Paisley served as a Belfast City councillor for the DUP. Sammy Wilson named her as Lady Mayoress during his tenure as first DUP Lord Mayor of Belfast in 1986/87. She served eight years as a councillor before leaving politics, later claiming that "the game plan of politics frustrated me".

Media career

Paisley once guest-presented Saturday Live, a TV chat-show on the Republic of Ireland's RTÉ One channel. Her father was one of her guests.

Controversy

The day after a series of "Ulster Freedom Fighters" (UFF) incendiary bombings on shops in the Republic of Ireland during July 1991, Paisley claimed the bombings had been "perfectly understandable" given the "betrayal" of Northern Ireland by the British government. A serving DUP councillor at the time, Paisley was widely condemned in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.

Paisley took a case to a Fair Employment Tribunal in 1998. The case was against the Arts Council of Northern Ireland, in which she alleged religious discrimination. She was awarded £24,249. It was ruled that she had been discriminated against on account of her religious beliefs and political opinions when applying for the post of an arts co-operation officer in 1995. She is a long-standing member of the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster, which her father established.

In March 2005 Paisley took a legal action alleging gender discrimination against the DUP, which named her father, Ian Paisley, after she failed in her application for a post in the policy and communications unit in the DUP. The case was settled out of court, and Paisley received an apology from the party.

References

Rhonda Paisley Wikipedia


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