Andrew Hunter (born January 8, 1943) is a United Kingdom politician and a member of the Orange Order. He was Member of Parliament for Basingstoke from 1983 until 2005.
Hunter was first elected to Basingstoke as a Conservative in the 1983 election, and had been deputy chairman of the right-wing Monday Club. In 2002 he withdrew from the Conservative Party, in order to fight elections for the Northern Ireland Assembly as a candidate of the Democratic Unionist Party. He had family and Orange Order connections with Northern Ireland and had opposed the Good Friday Agreement. The elections were held in November 2003, and he failed to gain his seat. On December 10, 2004 it was announced that he had joined the DUP Parliamentary Group in the House of Commons, the first MP for a mainland seat to sit for a Northern Ireland-based party.
Hunter stepped down from the House of Commons at the 2005 general election and suggested he would move to Northern Ireland to become more involved with DUP politics. As editor of the magazine Right Now!, Hunter has also been linked to the Freedom Party (UK) and the Springbok Club.
Andrew Hunter (1814-?) was a noted Methodist Preacher, sometimes referred to as the "The Father of Methodism in Arkansas." Andrew Hunter United Methodist Church is named for him.