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| - Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) on Friday elected Edwin Poots as new leader, handing the hardliner the immediate task of choosing a new first minister in the British-ruled province. Poots narrowly won the contest to replace current leader Arlene Foster, who was ousted in a coup amid tensions over post-Brexit arrangement, securing 19 of 36 votes in a ballot of DUP lawmakers in Belfast and London. He will also be empowered to pick her successor as first minister of Northern Ireland, after he pledged during campaigning that he would not personally take on the role. "This party has been the authentic voice of unionism and will continue to be the authentic voice of unionism under my leadership," Poots said at the DUP's Belfast headquarters. The 55-year-old currently serves as Northern Ireland's regional agriculture minister and is seen as a hardline figure within the pro-UK party, which has been roiled by growing anger over the impact of Britain's European Union withdrawal. Foster announced last month she would step down, falling foul of the post-Brexit Northern Irish "protocol", which effectively keeps it in the bloc's customs union and single market for goods. Many in the DUP believe it endangers the province's union with Britain. "The Northern Ireland protocol has proven to be a massive challenge for us," Poots said, vowing to unite the differing strands of unionism. "If we are to fight this, to ensure that everybody in Northern Ireland is not worse off as a consequence of the protocol, that is for us to do that together." Poots is also a "young earth creationist" who rejects the theory of evolution and believes the world was made by God around 4,000 BC. In his victory speech he thanked "almighty God for giving me the health and strength to do this". Poots beat the only other candidate, Westminster lawmaker Jeffrey Donaldson, by just two votes. Donaldson was regarded as a more moderate candidate and the close result highlights the increasingly stark ideological divide within the party. Foster, 50, has said she will stand down as party leader on May 28 and as Northern Ireland's first minister at the end of June. Many unionists in Northern Ireland, which is split between pro-UK and pro-Ireland factions, believe the protocol has effectively created an "Irish sea border" which casts the region adrift from mainland Britain -- England, Scotland and Wales. Under the leadership of Foster, who is considered a moderate, the DUP has vehemently opposed the protocol but been powerless to prevent UK prime minister Boris Johnson imposing it. The DUP leadership contest comes amid a wider crisis in political unionism in Northern Ireland, which is home to 1.9 million people. Steve Aiken -- the head of the second largest pro-UK political group the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) -- also announced his resignation on Saturday. Anger about the post-Brexit protocol was a contributing factor to more than a week of rioting across Northern Ireland in April, which emanated from the unionist community and saw at least 88 police injured. Unionists, including Foster and Aiken, have brought a judicial review of the legality of the protocol at the High Court in Belfast. The court was told on Friday it was "unlawful on a number of grounds". jts/jj/bp
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