Ulster Loyalist Central Co-ordinating Committee

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Irish Political History series
Ulster Loyalism

Terminology
Loyalism
Unionism


Key documents
Belfast Agreement
Government of Ireland Act 1920
Solemn League and Covenant
Sunningdale Agreement


Parties
Democratic Unionist Party
Ulster Unionist Party
United Ulster Unionist Coalition
Popular Unionist Party
Protestant Unionist Party
Vanguard Unionist Progressive Party
Ulster Democratic Party
Progressive Unionist Party


Paramilitaries
Ulster Volunteer Force
Ulster Defence Association
Loyalist Volunteer Force
Orange Volunteers
Red Hand Commandos
Red Branch Knights
Ulster Young Militants
Combined Loyalist Military Command
ULCCC


Other Organisations
Peep O'Day Boys
Ulster Resistance


Cultural
"The Twelfth"
Apprentice Boys of Derry
Orange Institution
Royal Black Preceptory


Songs
Billy Boys
Derry's Walls
God Save the Queen
Rule Britannia
The Sash


Symbols and Flags
Coat of arms of Northern Ireland
Orange order flag
Red Hand of Ulster
Ulster Banner
Union Flag


Other movements & links
Monarchy in the Irish Free State
Irish Nationalism
Irish republicanism
Irish Unionism

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The Ulster Loyalist Central Co-ordinating Committee (ULCCC) was set up in 1974 in the aftermath of the Ulster Workers Council Strike, in order to facilitate meetings and policy co-ordination between the Ulster Workers Council, the loyalist paramilitaries and the political representatives of loyalism.

Seen as an important links between grass-roots loyalism and more mainstream Unionist politics, the ULCCC was chaired by Glenn Barr and met in the Belfast offices of the Vanguard Progressive Unionist Party on a weekly basis. Initially committed to unionism, the ULCCC began to move towards the idea of Ulster nationalism and, in 1976, published Towards an Independent Ulster, a document containing firm proposals for the transition of Northern Ireland to an independent state. The issue did not gain across the board support, being more of a pet project of the Ulster Defence Association and, as a result, the ULCCC soon broke up. Some supporters of the document formed the Ulster Independence Party.

The ULCCC was revived in 1991 under the leadership of Ray Smallwoods (the leader of the Ulster Democratic Party who was killed by the IRA in July 1994), although it did not gain much importance due to the existence by that time of the Combined Loyalist Military Command, which brought together the leaderships of the UDA and UVF.


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