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John Kyle (unionist politician)

Cllr John Kyle
Interim Leader of the
Progressive Unionist Party
In office
3 June 2010 – 16 October 2010
Preceded by Dawn Purvis
Succeeded by Brian Ervine
Member of
Belfast City Council
Assumed office
April 2015
Constituency Titanic
Member of
Belfast City Council
In office
February 2007 – April 2015
Constituency Pottinger
Personal details
Born 1951 (age 65–66)
Belfast, Northern Ireland
Nationality British
Political party Progressive Unionist Party
Children 5
Alma mater Queens University of Belfast
Profession General Practitioner
Religion Evangelical
Website Cllr Dr John Kyle

John Kyle (born 1951) is a Councillor on Belfast City Council, and the former interim leader of the centre-left loyalist Progressive Unionist Party (PUP) in Northern Ireland.

Kyle was born in East Belfast and attended Grosvenor Grammar School and Queen's University Belfast (QUB). He graduated as a medical doctor in 1975 and has practiced medicine in Belfast and London. Since 1993, he has been a General Practitioner at Holywood Arches Health Centre.

Kyle was co-opted onto Belfast City Council following the death of party leader and MLA, David Ervine in 2007, sitting with party colleague Cllr Hugh Smyth, OBE. He is a member of Belfast City Council's Development Committee, Health and Environmental Services Committee, and the Parks and Leisure Committee.

Due to the planned change in local councils in Northern Ireland, the local elections due for 2009 were postponed, awaiting provisions for the new eleven council model (as agreed by the DUP/Sinn Féin led government); and as a result Kyle, along with all other councillors remained in office. Kyle was re-elected to Belfast City Council in 2011. Following the resignation of Dawn Purvis MLA from the party on 3 June 2010, Kyle was selected as interim leader.

Purvis' resignation came in the aftermath of a killing in the Shankill Road area of West Belfast, widely believed to be carried out by the PUP-linked Ulster Volunteer Force. Purvis announced that she could no longer "defend the indefensible", in a clear reference to the killing.

Kyle as a result became interim leader of a party facing a very uncertain future; with no representation in the Northern Ireland Assembly, and loyalist politics in clear disagreement with the UVF. On the day after the funeral of the murdered man, Kyle claimed that he believed that the UVF had still not decommissioned all of its weapons - as previously confirmed by the Independent Monitoring Commission.


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