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Patrick Brown (Northern Irish politician)

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Patrick Brown
Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly
for South Down
In office
7 May 2022 – 23 April 2024
Preceded bySinéad Bradley
Succeeded byAndrew McMurray
Member of Newry, Mourne and Down District Council
In office
22 May 2014 – 7 May 2022
Preceded byCouncil established
Succeeded byDavid Lee-Surginor
ConstituencyRowallane
Personal details
NationalityNorthern Irish
Political partyAlliance
OccupationPolitician

Patrick Brown is a Northern Irish former politician who was an Alliance Party Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA). He was elected as an MLA in the 2022 Northern Ireland Assembly election for South Down , and before that served as a councillor on Newry, Mourne and Down District council since 2014.[1]

He resigned in April 2024 after 10 years as a public representative to take up a job running a non-profit organisation working on basic income advocacy.

Early life

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Brown grew up in Crossgar and Downpatrick where he attended two schools, including Shimna Integrated College.[2] Brown went to University of Sheffield, where he received his bachelor's degree and master's degrees in political science and international development respectively.[3][2]

Upon his return to Northern Ireland, Brown started several small businesses, including a water and sanitation charity doing work in East Africa and a firm that supports social enterprises and other third sector organizations.[2]

Brown founded a political travel business, Politrip, in 2017 before selling the brand in 2021 to a new company set up by Politrip's then general manager to continue its operations - Volunteer USA Ltd. The business allowed young people to volunteer on election campaigns in the US. This business was damaged by the Covid epidemic and forced to close in 2023.[4]

Brown was awarded his Ph.D. on Universal basic income and Conflict transformation at Queen's University Belfast[2] only weeks after his election in May 2022's Assembly elections in Northern Ireland.[5]

Political career

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During his undergraduate studies, Brown did a two-week work placement in Naomi Long's office in Westminster.[3]

In 2014, Brown was one of the youngest people to be elected as a Councillor in Newry, Mourne and Down District Council. In March 2017, Brown was arrested for drink driving his motorbike.[6][7] His case was referred to the council's standards watchdog, who suspended Brown from his council duties for six months. At the time he apologised for what he called an ‘incredibly stupid decision’ and worked with a road safety charity to better understand the impact drink driving has on people’s lives.[7] He was re-elected five years later in the 2019 local elections topping the poll in the Rowallane area.[7][2][8]

During his time in Newry, Mourne and Down Council Brown made a name for himself as an outspoken critic of the local authority, challenging their lack of openness and transparency over decision-making and spending priorities, particularly regarding large capital projects such as new council offices in Newry and a ‘gondola’ in Newcastle.

He also led a number of campaigns on progressive and green issues, including securing the council’s support for equal marriage, abortion liberalisation and divestment of councillor pension funds from fossil fuels.

Brown first ran for the Northern Ireland Assembly in 2016, achieving Alliances best result in the South Down constituency up to that date with 5.36% of the vote. In the 2017 Assembly elections Brown almost doubled his vote to 9.18%, narrowly missing the 5th seat.

Brown won 13.9% of the vote in the 2019 UK Parliamentary election in South Down, placing 4th overall with 6916 votes the party’s highest vote in a Westminster election in South Down to date.[9]

In the 2022 Assembly election, Brown was the 3rd candidate elected in South Down, winning 6942 first preference votes. Notably, Brown became the first Alliance MLA for South Down, a largely Nationalist constituency.[10][5]

As an MLA, Brown served as the party’s spokesperson on Animal Welfare, anti-poverty spokesperson, and Infrastructure at various times. In the Assembly, he sat on the Infrastructure and Windsor Framework Committees. He founded an All-party Group on UBI at Stormont, the first of its kind anywhere in the UK.

In November 2023, it was revealed that a political travel business founded by Brown but sold to its then General manager in late 2021 had gone bust owing thousands of pounds to students who would not get their money back after their trips were cancelled. Instead they were offered "internship[s]" with the Alliance Party ahead of the 2022 Northern Ireland Assembly election campaign. The firm, Volunteer USA Ltd – trading as Politrip - went into liquidation in 2022 with debts of more than £64,000. While Brown expressed his sympathies for the students affected, he made it clear he was no longer responsible for the company, which he had sold in Autumn 2021..[11]

Brown stood down as an MLA with immediate effect on 23 April 2024 due to "personal reasons" after 10 years as an elected representative. He later issued a statement clarifying that he had accepted a job offer earlier that month, to run a non-profit organisation called Equal Right which campaigns for universal basic income, and that he felt he had been ‘struggling’ in the role as an MLA for some time, including coming to terms with a recent diagnosis of ADHD.[12]

It later emerged that Brown had been facing an investigation from a standards watchdog, following a complaint made in 2023 about Brown's conduct towards Shimna Integrated College in Newcastle, County Down, and its board of governors.[13] The complaint was made by the school, in response to Brown lodging his own complaint against the school in 2022 on behalf of numerous constituents who had approached him to raise serious concerns, including relating issues related to governance and bullying at the school.

It was alleged in the complaint that because Brown would not reveal the names of the constituents who raised these concerns (which he claimed had come to him on the basis of anonymity), and because he had previously applied to be a governor on the school’s board (but was rejected because he was aligned to a political party, which Brown had challenged as an attempt to manipulate board membership) that he was acting out of his own personal interest. The complaint was partially upheld with the Standards and Privileges Committee concluding that Brown should not have referenced his own application to the board when raising concerns on behalf of constituents. The Committee report also found that there was evidence of constituents raising these concerns with Brown. A group called Shimna Support Group was formed by parents soon after to represent those concerned about the school’s direction of travel.

Brown strongly rejected any suggestion that the complaint led to his resignation, and was adamant that he had done nothing wrong and was only representing constituents concerns.

Electoral Record

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2022 Assembly election: South Down – 5 seats[14]
Party Candidate FPv% Count
1 2 3 4 5 6
Sinn Féin Sinéad Ennis 26.17% 14,381          
Sinn Féin Cathy Mason 18.13% 9,963          
Alliance Patrick Brown 12.63% 6,942 8,071 8,251 8,865 9,301  
DUP Diane Forsythe 11.82% 6,497 6,512 6,513 6,617 8,034 11,073
SDLP Colin McGrath 11.07% 6,082 7,748 8,164 8,798 8,933 9,119
SDLP Karen McKevitt 5.47% 3,006 4,772 4,875 5,090 5,139 5,259
TUV Harold McKee 5.96% 3,273 3,279 3,280 3,332 4,118  
UUP Jill Macauley 5.24% 2,880 2,900 2,902 2,944    
Aontú Rosemary McGlone 2.14% 1,177 1,439 1,488      
Green (NI) Noeleen Lynch 0.75% 412 564 580      
People Before Profit Paul McCrory 0.37% 205 270 283      
Independent Patrick Clarke 0.24% 134 209 224      
Electorate: 84,046   Valid: 54,952 (65.38%)   Spoilt: 679   Quota: 9,159   Turnout: 55,631 (66.19%)  
UK General election 2019: South Down[15]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Chris Hazzard 16,137 32.4 ―7.5
SDLP Michael Savage 14,517 29.2 ―5.9
DUP Glyn Hanna 7,619 15.3 ―2.1
Alliance Patrick Brown 6,916 13.9 +10.3
UUP Jill Macauley 3,307 6.6 +2.7
Aontú Paul Brady 1,266 2.5 New
Majority 1,620 3.2 ―1.6
Turnout 49,762 62.9 ―4.3
Registered electors 79,113
Sinn Féin hold Swing ―0.8
2017 Assembly election: South Down – 5 seats[16]
Party Candidate FPv% Count
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Sinn Féin Sinéad Ennis 20.76% 10,256            
Sinn Féin Chris Hazzard 17.87% 8,827            
SDLP Sinéad Bradley 14.82% 7,323 7,487 8,906.12        
DUP Jim Wells 15.76% 7,786 8,088 8,091.36 8,091.64 10,821.64    
SDLP Colin McGrath 10.34% 5,110 5,202 5,512.8 6,043.68 6,632.42 7,228.42 7,613.62
Alliance Patrick Brown 9.18% 4,535 4,883 5,101.64 5,194.88 6,007.82 6,730.82 6,874.66
UUP Harold McKee 8.45% 4,172 4,509 4,522.44 4,527.76      
TUV Lyle Rea 1.28% 630            
Green (NI) Hannah George 0.98% 483            
Independent Patrick Clarke 0.39% 192            
NI Conservatives Gary Hynds 0.17% 85            
Electorate: 75,415   Valid: 49,399 (65.50%)   Spoilt: 535   Quota: 8,234   Turnout: 49,932 (66.21%)  
2016 Assembly election: South Down – 6 seats[17]
Party Candidate FPv% Count
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
DUP Jim Wells 12.25% 5,033 5,183 6,470          
UUP Harold McKee 8.47% 3,481 3,812 5,168 5,567 6,141      
Sinn Féin Chris Hazzard 12.28% 5,045 5,142 5,144 5,321 5,321.5 7,277.5    
SDLP Sinéad Bradley 12.32% 5,059 5,231 5,241 5,828 5,834 6,144    
Sinn Féin Caitríona Ruane 10.20% 4,191 4,240 4,244 4,335 4,335 5,415 6,664.5  
SDLP Colin McGrath 10.44% 4,288 4,429 4,440 5,033 5,038 5,121 5,190 5,397
SDLP Seán Rogers 8.68% 3,564 3,699 3,721 4,076 4,086.5 4,227.5 4,309 4,595.75
Sinn Féin Michael Gray-Sloan 8.57% 3,520 3,571 3,572 3,665 3,665      
Alliance Patrick Brown 5.36% 2,200 2,841 2,869          
TUV Henry Reilly 6.62% 2,718 2,800            
Independent John McCallister 2.81% 1,156              
Green (NI) John Hardy 2.00% 820              
Electorate: 77,409   Valid: 41,075 (53.06%)   Spoilt: 570   Quota: 5,868   Turnout: 41,645 (53.80%)  

References

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  1. ^ "South Down result - Northern Ireland Assembly Elections 2022". BBC News. Archived from the original on 6 May 2022. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Your Candidate in South Down is". Alliance Party v2. Alliance Party of Northern Ireland. Archived from the original on 8 May 2022. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Register" – via linkedin.
  4. ^ "Students lose money as company founded by Alliance Party MLA goes bust". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk. 14 November 2023. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 25 April 2024.
  5. ^ a b "South Down: History in the making as Diane Forsthye becomes area's first female unionist MLA and Alliance's Patrick Brown gets elected". belfasttelegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Archived from the original on 10 May 2022. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  6. ^ "Alliance selects Patrick Brown as Assembly candidate for South Down". The Irish News. 20 April 2021. Archived from the original on 19 June 2021. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
  7. ^ a b c "Alliance man faces watchdog probe over post about council recruitment". May 2022.
  8. ^ "Patrick Brown for South Down in the Northern Ireland Assembly elections". Who Can I Vote For? by Democracy Club. Archived from the original on 13 May 2021. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
  9. ^ "2019 general election results - South Down". UK Parliament. Archived from the original on 12 June 2022. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  10. ^ "South Down result - Northern Ireland Assembly Elections 2022". BBC News. Archived from the original on 6 May 2022. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  11. ^ "Students lose money as company founded by Alliance Party MLA goes bust". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk. 14 November 2023. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 25 April 2024.
  12. ^ "Alliance MLA Patrick Brown resigns South Down seat". BBC News. 23 April 2024. Retrieved 23 April 2024.
  13. ^ "Patrick Brown: Alliance MLA who quit was facing standards investigation". BBC News. 25 April 2024. Retrieved 25 April 2024.
  14. ^ "Statement of Persons Nominated – South Down". Archived from the original on 8 April 2022. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
  15. ^ "South Down Parliamentary constituency". BBC News. BBC. Archived from the original on 8 January 2020. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  16. ^ "NI Assembly Election 2017". EONI. Archived from the original on 19 August 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
  17. ^ "NI Assembly Election 2016". EONI. Archived from the original on 19 August 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
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