The Ulster Unionist leadership "is treacherous rabble" and no one in Northern Ireland politics has behaved "more dishonourably" than Mr David Trimble, the DUP annual conference has heard.
Mr Christopher Stalford said UUP leaders were a disgrace to Northern Ireland and were completely out of touch with ordinary people. The UUP annual conference a week ago had heard predictions that the party would increase its Assembly representation from 28 to 33 seats, he said.
"If they really believe that, and if Mr Trimble is so proud of his record, let him call an election now. But predictions of the UUP winning 33 Assembly seats, like everything else in the party, is a tissue of lies. David Trimble knows the DUP is going to wipe the floor with him. To coin a phrase, 'our day has yet to come'."
Mr Andrew McIntrye said the DUP was the party of young people: "Unionist youth reject the capitulation and sell-out of pro-Agreement unionism. They want a voice they can trust."
Mr Bert Johnston said RUC officers, who had given "their today for our tomorrow", had been contemptuously cast aside by the UUP. He condemned the Sinn FΘin Health Minister, Ms Bairbre de Br·n.
"She doesn't come to Stormont on a bus, she comes on a broomstick. She decides which hospitals are closed and which stay open. It used to be that Sinn FΘin/IRA decided who to put in hospital."
Mr Stephen Moutray said it was "a blight on society" that Mr Martin McGuinness was Education Minister - "this man is unfit to hold ministerial office". The IRA had killed and injured dozens of children in gun and bomb attacks and had beaten others in "punishment" attacks, he added.
Mr Andrew McCreery condemned demilitarisation along the Border. Protestant farmers in south Armagh felt vulnerable working in their fields without the protection of the security forces.
He accused the British government of indifference. "Why are their three times the troops in Kosovo as there are in Northern Ireland? Why are our best security force personnel in the Middle East when the people of Northern Ireland are under threat?
"Tony Blair can align himself with the terrorist KLA to free Kosovo and with the terrorist Northern Alliance to free Afghanistan. But the DUP will not allow alignment with the IRA in Northern Ireland."
Assembly member Mr Jim Wells condemned the forthcoming amnesty for former IRA activists on the run.
"It is disgraceful that some of the most dastardly terrorists, responsible for some of the most heinous crimes, will soon be back on our streets. If this party's policy had been adhered to, they would have been captured, tried and executed."
Mr Paul Porter said the British government hypocritically fought "terrorists" overseas but surrendered to them at home.