Lord Kilclooney.

Former senior Ulster Unionist Lord Kilclooney has claimed he is “no racist” amid strong backlash for his “typical Indian” tweet.

A member of the British House of Lords has claimed he is not a racist after branding Irish Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Leo Varadkar a “typical Indian.” Lord Kilclooney, a former senior Ulster Unionist, made the comment on Twitter in response to a tweeted story from BBC Newsline with the headline “DUP: Varadkar’s visit to Northern Ireland showed ‘disrespect.’”

Lord Kilclooney, formerly known as John Taylor, is refusing to delete the tweet, stating that he is “no racist.”

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The 80-year-old claims that Varadkar is "most provocative" and has "misunderstood the views of many unionists."

“It is not racially abusive as he himself has confirmed he is half Indian,” Kilclooney added in a follow-up tweet.

“That is great and not to be dismissed as the Indians are a great race. However, he has damaged North/South relations by being continually offensive and provocative to the Unionist majority in NIreland.”

Taoiseach Varadkar commented on the tweet in the Dáil (Irish parliament) claiming that he initially thought it came from a parody account.

He was backed by Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald and former Tánaiste (Deputy Prime Minister) Joan Burton who both condemned the language used.

This is the second time that the Lord Kilclooney has commented on Varadkar's race, referring to him as “the Indian” in November 2017. He later withdrew this tweet but a complaint to the House of Lords standards commissioner was dismissed.

Ulster Unionist party leader Robin Swann has stated that Lord Kilclooney does not represent him tweeting that the peer “doesn’t speak for me.”

Alliance Party leader Naomi Long claimed Kilclooney was “an embarrassment” and said that the comment was a "slur on all Indian people with his use of the word typical."

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Taoiseach Varadkar was born in Dublin to an Irish mother and an Indian father. He was elected as leader of the Fine Gael party and took on the role of Taoiseach in June 2017.

In September 2017, former deputy leader of the UUP Kilclooney also claimed that Nationalists were "not equal" to Unionists in Northern Ireland. 

“Everyone, Nationalist and Unionist, must have equal opportunity. Politically Unionists are the majority and so the two are not equals,” Lord Kilclooney wrote.

Should Lord Kilclooney apologize for the tweet? Let us know in the comments section, below.