Five things you need to know about DUP politicians and science – New Scientist

Nigel Dodds and Arlene Foster, DUP deputy leader and leader

Charles McQuillan/Getty Images

By Frank Swain

Having failed to win an overall majority in the UKs general election, Theresa Mays Conservative party is hoping to foster an informal coalition with Northern Irelands Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). Members of the party have taken controversial stances on everything from climate change to evolution, with one assembly member being unaware that heterosexual people can contract HIV. Here are five things you need to know when it comes to science and the DUP

The party has a history of speaking out against climate change. Senior member Sammy Wilson has called climate change a con, and described the Paris Agreement as window dressing for climate chancers. During his time as Northern Irelands environment minister, he said that people would eventually look back at this whole climate change debate and ask ourselves how on Earth we were ever conned into spending billions of pounds on the issue.

It isnt just Wilson though in 2014, DUP ministers tried to oppose proposals to introduce local measures against climate change in Northern Ireland.

Northern Ireland remains the only part of the UK where women cannot access abortion unless their life is endangered by pregnancy a legal situation that is incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights, according to a Belfast High Court ruling in 2015.

But on taking leadership of the party in 2016, Arlene Foster promised to block any attempt to change these laws, telling reporters I would not want abortion to be as freely available here as it is in England.

Foster did, however, say she might consider an amendment in cases of rape. But the DUPs Jim Wells formerly the health minister for Northern Ireland opposes abortion even in these circumstances.

DUP assembly member Thomas Buchanan has previously called for creationism to be taught in schools. In 2016, he voiced support for an evangelical Christian programme that offers helpful practical advice on how to counter evolutionary teaching. He has expressed a desire to see every school in Northern Ireland teaching creationism, describing evolution as a peddled lie.

Buchanan told the Irish News Im someone who believes in creationism and that the world was spoken into existence in six days by His power, adding that children had been corrupted by the teaching of evolution.

The DUPs leader narrowly survived a no-confidence motion following a disastrous attempt to bolster green energy in Northern Ireland by providing subsidies for wood burners. Arlene Foster introduced the scheme in 2012 when she was head of the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment. The original budget was 25 million, but a lack of price controls meant that, over five years, almost 500 million went up in smoke.

Last year, DUP assembly member Trevor Clarke admitted that he had thought only gay people could be infected with HIV, until a charity explained otherwise. He made the comments during a parliamentary debate around a campaign to promote awareness and prevention of HIV in Northern Ireland and to increase support for those living with HIV.

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Five things you need to know about DUP politicians and science - New Scientist

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