Background
Whilst Chairman of the Ulster Young Unionist Council in 1970, Laird became the youngest member of the Parliament of Northern Ireland, after winning the seat of Belfast Saint Anne"s in a by-election caused by the death of his father, Doctor Norman Laird Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire.
Career
In 2013 Laird allegedly offered to lobby for a firm against parliamentary rules. Consequently, he resigned from the Ulster Unionist Party. He was expelled from the Ulster Unionist Parliamentary Party in January 1972 when he voted for a Democratic Unionist Party censure motion opposing a ban on certain processions planned for The Twelfth.
He topped the poll in Belfast West in the Northern Ireland Assembly election, 1973 opposed to the proposals of the former Prime Minister Brian Faulkner.
He repeated this feat as an Ulster Unionist candidate in the 1975 Constitutional Convention election. He established John Laird Public Relations in 1976, which, now called JPR, is Northern Ireland"s longest established Puerto Rico company still in existence.
He was created a life peer on 16 July 1999 as Baron Laird, of Artigarvan in the County of Tyrone. Laird studied at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution.
A proponent of as a language, Lord Laird wants road signs in Irish, English and Ullans on all roads in Ireland, as "parity of esteem" as signed up for under the Good Friday Agreement.
Similarly, he says that the Garda Síochána should be renamed to An Garda Síochána/Hannin Polis. Laird served as head of the Ulster-Scots Agency, before resigning in April 2004, in protest at a cut in government funding for the agency. Lord Laird found himself at the centre of a minor scandal in 2005, when it was revealed that while chairman of the Ulster-Scots agency, Laird had spent in excess of £2500 of public money on taxis between Belfast and Dublin.
Laird sat in the as an independent.
Laird has used parliamentary privilege to speak out against the Irish Republican Army (Ireland Republican Army) in the In May 2005 he claimed that Philosophy Flynn, an advisor to the Taoiseach, Bertie Ahern, was active in the Ireland Republican Army. In December that year he said that there were 200 Ireland Republican Army "sleepers" in high places in the Republic of Ireland. In November 2007 he again used parliamentary privilege to name senior Ireland Republican Army members who he said were responsible for the murder of south Armagh man Paul Quinn in October.
He was suspended from the House on 18 December 2013. Expenses
Laird claimed parliamentary expenses of £73,000 in 2008/09, making him the most expensive peer in the for that parliamentary year.
In December 2006 Laird announced plans to stand in Donegal North–East and Donegal South–West on what he termed a radical Ulster-Scots ticket.
He said he intended to use the publicity platform of his candidacy to highlight what he called the double standards of the Irish Government in relation to the Ulster-Scots movement. However, after suffering a mild heart attack he did not stand.
Membership
Orange Order; 1st Northern Ireland Assembly (1973–1974).