From claims that he drunkenly projectile vomited over the mayor of Beijing to allegations of sexual impropriety, the BBC Spotlight episode throws up questions about how so many close to Jeffrey Donaldson saw fragments of the truth without ever putting the whole picture together.
The criminal case against Jeffrey Donaldson may be over, but the BBC Spotlight documentary raises questions about whether there were years of warning signs, rumours and allegations that were seen, discussed or quietly explained away.
None of the new claims aired by the BBC formed part of the criminal trial. Most have never been tested in court, and Donaldson declined to respond to the programme’s allegations. Yet taken together, they paint a portrait of a politician whose public image, private conduct, and reputation within political circles may have been very different things.
Perhaps the most striking contribution came from Lady Daphne Trimble. She rejected the carefully cultivated image of Donaldson as an upright Christian statesman, claiming he had “used his Christianity to hoodwink the public”.
She also alleged that her late husband, former First Minister David Trimble, regarded Donaldson as “a thorn in the flesh” and believed he had been instrumental in stirring hostility towards him during the fraught early years of the peace process.
The documentary also featured a succession of accounts from senior politicians and former police officers describing what they claimed was excessive drinking, despite Donaldson’s public reputation as a teetotaller.
Former RUC Serious Crime Squad head Norman Baxter recalled seeing Donaldson leaving an exhibition at Westminster in 2000, carrying two bottles of wine and drinking from one in Westminster Hall. Later that evening, he alleged Donaldson had a young woman on either side of him with his arms around them, leaving him feeling uneasy.
Former DUP MP Ian Paisley Jr claimed Donaldson became heavily intoxicated during a delegation to Beijing, vomiting over the Mayor of Beijing.
Former DUP MLA Jim Wells described another overseas trip to Namibia, where he said Donaldson drank heavily alongside a tribal chief despite publicly presenting himself as someone who did not drink alcohol.
According to those interviewed, this behaviour became more pronounced after Donaldson joined the DUP.
Another allegation centred on a 2008 visit to Washington DC. Witnesses claimed Donaldson was so intoxicated that he fell over during an event at the Northern Ireland Bureau before later sitting on the lap of a female MLA in a Georgetown bar and attempting to kiss her.
Former PSNI detective Tim Hanley also recounted an encounter from 2006 while working for MI5, claiming he saw Donaldson entering Chariots, a gay sauna in Vauxhall.
Meanwhile, former personal assistant David Archer alleged that Lady Eleanor Donaldson once told him she intended to divorce her husband once their children reached adulthood.
The programme revisited the 2009 Westminster expenses scandal, when Donaldson claimed expenses for 68 pay-per-view films recorded as room service, prompting speculation at the time that they were pornographic films.
Lady Trimble further alleged that, amid longstanding rumours surrounding Donaldson’s activities in both Westminster and Northern Ireland, a member of the Ulster Unionist Party commissioned a private investigator to examine the claims. The UUP said it has no record of any such investigation.
Jim Wells also disclosed that rumours of Donaldson having relationships with younger women had circulated within political circles. He said he confronted Donaldson directly during a trip to Johannesburg and that Donaldson denied the allegations.
Perhaps the most politically significant revelation concerned events in 2021, shortly before Donaldson became DUP leader.
Ian Paisley Jr claimed he was contacted by a woman who alleged Donaldson had exploited her and was determined to stop him becoming party leader. According to Paisley, although the woman did not wish to make a formal complaint, he informed Edwin Poots and also alerted another politician outside the DUP. Paisley said he additionally made senior figures within the party aware of the allegation. Edwin Poots said he respected the complainant’s wishes at all times.
The documentary also featured Jacqui Montgomery Devlin, the former Head of Safeguarding at the Presbyterian Church in Ireland. She said that, around a year before Donaldson’s arrest, she met Complaint A and her husband, along with a senior detective.
Although Complaint A did not identify her alleged abuser during the meeting, Jacqui Montgomery Devlin said she suspected it was Donaldson. She claimed the detective later telephoned her that evening to confirm that the suspect was Jeffrey Donaldson. She said she was therefore not surprised when news of his arrest became public.
Donaldson did not respond to the allegations made in the programme.
In a statement issued prior to the documentary going to air, the DUP said it had acted swiftly when Donaldson was first charged and believed justice had been served following his conviction. Party leader Gavin Robinson, deputy leader Michelle McIlveen, and the party chairman said they were deeply concerned by allegations that have emerged regarding Donaldson’s behaviour, and by suggestions that some individuals may have had knowledge of inappropriate conduct that was never reported to party officers. The party has now commissioned an independent review.
If there is one thing the Spotlight documentary exposed, it is that institutions cannot simply dismiss repeated warning signs because each individual incident, viewed in isolation, appears inconclusive. That is often how institutional failure begins.
The documentary actually tells two separate stories.
The first is about the image Jeffrey Donaldson carefully cultivated. A devout Christian. A family man. A politician who projected discipline, restraint and moral certainty. Those interviewed described something altogether different. They claim to have witnessed heavy drinking, inappropriate behaviour, rumours that circulated for years, and a private life which, they allege, bore little resemblance to the public persona.
The second story is more important. It is about who knew what, when they knew it, and whether those who found themselves in possession of troubling information responded adequately. Ian Paisley Jr’s account of being approached by a woman in 2021 and Jacqui Montgomery Devlin’s account of learning the identity of Complaint A’s alleged abuser before Donaldson’s arrest are very different from gossip about someone’s private life. They raise questions about how serious concerns were handled once they reached people in positions of responsibility.
None of this proves that anyone could have prevented the crimes for which Donaldson has now been convicted. Nor does it establish that any individual or institution deliberately covered up wrongdoing. But when institutions fail, it is usually because information remains compartmentalised, rumours are dismissed as hearsay and awkward conversations are avoided, which results in individuals assuming someone else will act and organisations prioritising reputation over scrutiny.
Churches, schools, sporting organisations, and public bodies have all commissioned reviews that found opportunities were missed because concerns were never joined together or pursued with sufficient rigour, and politics should not imagine itself immune.
Jeffrey Donaldson has been held accountable for his crimes. That chapter has ended. The DUP’s independent review should establish, as far as possible, what information existed, who possessed it, how it was handled and whether different decisions could reasonably have been made, rather than becoming an exercise in assigning blame after the event.
However, this is clearly an issue that stretches beyond the DUP and any review would lack the ability to compell witnesses from the PSNI and MI5, which leads to the argument that the handling of Jeffrey Donaldson ultimately could warrant a public inquiry.
If the Spotlight episode leaves Northern Ireland with one lingering question, it must be whether too many people, across too many institutions, saw fragments of the truth without ever putting the whole picture together.
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