Lieutenant Colonel Edward James Augustus Howard Brush, CBDSOOBE (5 March 1901 – 22 July 1984), known as Peter Brush, was a Northern Irishunionist politician and paramilitary leader. In later life Brush was also known by the nickname "Basil", as a joke based on the television puppet Basil Brush.[1]
By the time he retired from the army he had reached the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. Settling in County Down he took up farming but remained involved in military activity with the Territorial Army.[3] He also served as deputy Lord Lieutenant of Down until resigning from the position in 1974.[5][6] While a prisoner of war Bush wrote a textbook about horses which was later published. In civilian life he was a member of the Irish National Hunt Steeplechase Committee and a committee member of Down Royal Racecourse.[7]
Brush first received public attention in 1973 when stories appeared in the press that he had been drilling his own right-wingloyalist private militia force. Claiming 5,000 members, the group, known as Down Orange Welfare, became involved in the Ulster Workers' Council strike of 1974, with Brush taking a leading role in planning the stoppage as a member of the Ulster Workers' Council's Co-ordinating Committee.[3]
In February 1977, Brush "shocked" his unionist colleagues with a speech suggesting that they should come to an agreement with the Fine Gael government led by TaoiseachLiam Cosgrave, arguing that unionist and Fine Gael votes combined would outnumber Fianna Fáil and "Irish Socialist republicans" in a United Ireland. Brush believed the British government was seeking to withdraw from Northern Ireland, and a 32-county state in NATO would be preferable to a power-sharing administration with the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) in Northern Ireland as it was then constituted.[9] He left the public eye after a second less successful loyalist strike in 1977.[10]
^Peter Barberis, John McHugh, Mike Tyldesley, Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organizations: Parties, Groups and Movements of the 20th century, Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000, p. 213