Jim Wells (politician)


Jim Wells is a Northern Ireland politician formerly of the Democratic Unionist Party and longest ever serving DUP MLA, formerly Deputy Speaker of the Northern Ireland Assembly. Wells is one of five Assembly members for South Down. He was a councillor on Down District Council from 2001 to 2011.

Professional career

Wells was employed as a manager by the National Trust from 1989 until 1998. In 2017, he resigned his membership of the National Trust over a number of issues connected to gay pride.

Political career

Wells was elected to serve as a Councillor in Down District Council in 2001, having previously held a seat on Lisburn Borough Council and Banbridge Borough Council. He served on the Council until stepping down at the 2011 election.
He was Assembly Member for the South Down constituency initially from 1982 to 1986. He was re-elected in 1998 and is currently in his fifth term having been re-elected in 2017.
During that time he served as Deputy Chair of the Committee for Health, Social Services and Public Safety before he was appointed as Minister of Health in September 2014 where he served until his removal in May 2015.
Wells had the party whip withdrawn in May 2018 after he criticised the leadership in the media for reneging on a promise to reinstate him as a minister. In September 2019 he said he did not believe the party would select him to stand for election again.

Personal views

Wells is an evangelical Christian and is an outspoken proponent regarding conservative Christian principles. He describes himself as 'pro-life' and 'pro-traditional marriage'.
Wells believes in Young Earth creationism and advocates for creationism to be "taught in every school". Along with his DUP colleagues, Nelson McCausland and Gregory Campbell, he lobbied for creationism to be included in the Giant's Causewayexhibition. Initially the National Trust acceded to the request, but withdrew the exhibition in 2012 after coming under pressure from the public. Wells is not alone in his creationist views. In 2013 some 40% of DUP activists believe that creationism should be taught in science classes, a Belfast Telegraph survey found.

Controversy

Wells had been tipped to become Northern Ireland's Health Minister during a midterm reshuffle of DUP Ministers. However, this failed to be realised as many within his party thought him too gaffe prone to hold the position. He continued to court controversy over his views on abortion, gay rights and Pride marches. Wells stated in 2012 that abortion in Northern Ireland should remain illegal except in medical emergencies, without exception for pregnancies resulting from rape.
Many political commentators and critics had claimed that the gaffe prone MLA would not be offered the role in the near future because of the importance of implementing health reform known as "Transforming your Care". It was widely believed that the then Health Minister Edwin Poots was seen by his party as a safer pair of hands to handle the review. However, in an unexpected turn of events, the DUP leader Peter Robinson dismissed Edwin Poots and appointed Wells to the Health role in September 2014.
On 21 January 2015, Wells said he continues to support a ban on gay men donating blood. Such bans were lifted in the rest of the UK in 2011; Wells's department had spent £39,000 as of January 2015 fighting a legal appeal of the ban.
In 2015 he also said "The gay lobby is insatiable, they don’t know when enough is enough".
On 6 June 2018, Wells compared abortion to the Nazi Holocaust on BBC Radio Ulster's Nolan Show, describing the calls for Westminster to change Northern Ireland's abortion laws as a "ghastly situation". He would later go on to clarify that he only meant to make the comparison to the Holocaust in relation to the "numbers" involved. Arlene Foster responded to Wells comments by saying "I think it's the wrong use of language" when discussing a "very emotive issue".

Resignation as Health Minister

During a hustings event on 23 April 2015, Wells was quoted as saying, "You don't bring a child up in a homosexual relationship. That the child is far more likely to be abused and neglected."
In a transcript released later, it showed that Wells had stated "All evidence throughout the world says the best way to raise children is in a loving, stable, married relationship; the facts show that, the facts show that certainly you don't bring a child up in a homosexual relationship. That a child is far more likely to be abused or neglected. I say again, I say again, a child is far more likely to be abused or neglected in a non-stable marriage situation, gay or straight."
Wells retracted the statement after a backlash from political leaders and the media. He claimed he was under pressure as a result of his wife's serious illness and that his view was not DUP policy. The views attracted strong criticism from other parties and calls for his resignation. On 24 April 2015, the Police Service of Northern Ireland confirmed that they had received a complaint and officers were making enquiries. The Public Prosecution Service later confirmed that Wells would not be charged. By mid October 2015 the Public Prosecution Service said it was decided that the case did not meet the test for prosecution.
On 25 April 2015, it was alleged that Wells, who was doing door-to-door canvassing, called at a lesbian couple's house and during a conversation was critical of their lifestyle. The PSNI said they had received three complaints regarding the conduct of an individual in Rathfriland on Saturday evening. In 2016 a lesbian woman, Dorothy Gardner, was convicted and sentenced to three months in jail after pleading guilty to making false statements to police about Wells.
On Monday 27 April 2015, Wells announced his resignation as Health Minister, citing his wife's ill health.
By the end of Wells short tenure as Health minister little had changed and no major health reforms had been progressed. By July 2015, Wells was still stinging from his forced removal from health and stated that "I should still be a Minister".
Wells remains an MLA but has lost any significant power base within the DUP. He has since commented on his resignation, stating on Belfast Live: "After four decades of work and dedication to the public I basically landed on the scrap heap because I felt I had to resign. I was abused and accused and it was all nonsense but for the sake of the DUP, I had to go, I had to sacrifice myself."

Loss of party whip

Approaching the third anniversary of his sacking as Health Minister, Wells made allegations in the Belfast Telegraph in April 2018, that special advisors, the Press office and Leadership of the DUP reneged on a promise to re-instate him as health Minister. On Monday 9 April he appeared on BBC Talkback and criticised the DUP leadership, DUP press office and DUP special advisors. As a result of his attacks, the party withdrew the whip from Wells in May 2018. This reduced the DUP to 27 seats in the Assembly, the same number as Sinn Féin.