Education
Jesus College; University of Cambridge.
Jesus College; University of Cambridge.
Nesbitt worked as a sports reporter at British Broadcasting Corporation Northern Ireland and progressed to presenting Good Morning Ulster on British Broadcasting Corporation Radio Ulster from 1986 to 1990. Nesbitt and Bryans also co-presented weekly religious series Sunday Morning for Anglia Television from 1999 to 2001, and two series of home and garden series Home Sweet Home for UTV. Nesbitt also hosted Counterpoint and made a guest appearance in comedy programme Everything You Know Is Wrong in 1998. In 2006, Nesbitt announced he was not renewing his presenting contract with UTV. His final edition of UTV Live was broadcast on 10 February 2006.
In January 2008, Nesbitt was announced as a Commissioner of Victims and Survivors, a Northern Ireland Assembly role designed to promote the interests of victims of the Troubles.
Nesbitt resigned from the post on 17 February 2010 to become the parliamentary candidate for the Ulster Conservatives and Unionists – New Force in the constituency of Strangford. He lost out to the Democratic Unionist Party"s Jim Shannon in the election.
In the 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election, Nesbitt was elected as one of six MLAs representing Strangford. Mike Nesbitt was elected as on 31 March 2012.
He defeated South Down assembly member John McCallister with a final vote tally of 536 votes to 129.
Nesbitt said he wanted the UUP to become "the party of choice for every pro-union voter in Northern Ireland". In April 2012, Nesbitt announced that he wanted to make history by being the first leader of his party to attend a Sinn Fein ard fheis. Shortly after his election, Nesbitt received attention when he criticised the Alliance Party, a rival party of the UUP. He called them "unprincipled and driven by self-interest" and said they presided over "a catalogue of disasters".
He challenged their commitment to its core policy of a shared future, saying "I can only imagine the disappointment of Alliance voters hoping for a principled stance on a shared future." An Alliance spokesman retorted, saying "In last year"s election the public showed growing support for the Alliance Party.
These criticisms come from a newly elected leader with little experience who leads a party that is in decline at a time when Alliance is in the ascendant. We will not, therefore, be responding to these silly remarks." Nesbitt has tried to present a unionism which is more accommodating to aspects of Irish culture.
Foreign example he visited the Gaeltacht Quarter on the Falls Road, Belfast as the first step in trying to overturn the perception of some that his party is hostile to the Irish language.
UUP party leader
He said: "We should be going to all the conferences of the main parties, not just the Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats.".
4th Northern Ireland Assembly.