Education
University College Dublin.
University College Dublin.
He was Leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party from 2011 to 2015. He lost his council seat in a surprise result in 1981 but returned in 1985 and served as the first Catholic Deputy Mayor of Belfast in 1995–1996. He first stood for the Westminster constituency of South Belfast in the 1979 general election and subsequently contested the constituency at each subsequent general election, though not in the 1986 by-election (caused by the resignation of Unionist MPs in protest at the Anglo Irish Agreement).
He was also elected from the constituency to the Northern Ireland Peace Forum in 1996 and the Northern Ireland Assembly in 1998 and 2003.
In 2004 he became his party"s deputy leader. He received 10,339 votes while the Democratic Unionist Party (Democratic Unionist Party) candidate Jimmy Spratt received 9,104 votes and Ulster Unionist Party candidate Michael McGimpsey received 7,263 votes.
He was then re-elected by an increased majority in the 2010 general election. On 5 November 2011, he was elected leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party at its conference in Belfast, succeeding Margaret Ritchie.
In a 2012 interview with The News Letter, McDonnell criticised Sinn Féin.
He said the party were run along "Soviet style" lines where there was a military structure and where former terrorists were being placed into positions of power. He also claimed many people voting for Sinn Féin were doing so as an act of defiance. In June 2013, the Social Democratic and Labour Party abstained during the vote on the Civil Service (Special Advisers) Bill in Stormont, ensuring its passing.
This led to claims from Sinn Féin that the Social Democratic and Labour Party was endorsing a "hierarchy of victims" agenda and abandoning the principles of the Good Friday Agreement.
In the United Kingdom general election, 2015 he stood again in Belfast South and was returned on 24.5% of the vote, the lowest ever vote share recorded by a successful Member of Parliament in any part of the United Kingdom. On 14 November 2015, McDonnell lost the leadership contest held at the Social Democratic and Labour Party"s annual conference.
McDonnell"s first involvement with politics came when he joined the National Democrats and stood as the party candidate in the 1970 election in North Antrim and lost to Ian Paisley. As Social Democratic and Labour Party chief, Alasdair McDonnell described the terms of the Sixth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, a seemingly blocked plan to reduce the number of MPs in the House of Commons by 50 (including two from Northern Ireland) to 600, as “a bureaucratic numbers game initiated by the Tories for purely party political advantage”. Despite the reported claims from Sinn Féin that it was inevitable that someone would mount a legal challenge to "what republicans view as a discriminatory law" no such challenge has since emerged.
54th United Kingdom Parliament. 55th United Kingdom Parliament. 56th United Kingdom Parliament.
1st Northern Ireland Assembly.
2nd Northern Ireland Assembly. 3rd Northern Ireland Assembly.
4th Northern Ireland Assembly]
He was also a Member of the Legislative Assembly of Northern Ireland for Belfast South from 1998 until 2015.