Northern Ireland sinks into political paralysis

(Belfast) A week after Sinn Fein’s historic victory, Northern Ireland is mired in political paralysis, with DUP Unionists determined to block the functioning of the new Assembly to oppose post-Brexit arrangements in the British province.

Posted at 10:04 a.m.

Paul FAITH, with Callum PATON in Dublin
France Media Agency

Shortly before the 90 elected representatives followed one another to sign the register during the first session of the Local Assembly in Belfast, the leader of the unionists of the DUP, Jeffrey Donaldson, confirmed the choice of his party to block the operation of the institution.

“We have taken the decision not to support at this stage the election of a President to the Assembly”, declared.

The Unionist leader, whose party is viscerally committed to union with Britain, insisted on the need to “send a clear message” to both the European Union and the British government “that we are very serious on the need to resolve the issue of Northern Irish protocol.

He stressed that “no Unionist elected official” “supports the protocol” and called on the government to act “now” to “restore Northern Ireland’s place within the United Kingdom”.

Renegotiate or adjust?

The newly elected Assembly met on Friday for the first time since Sinn Fein, supporters of reunification with the Republic of Ireland, came first in local elections on May 5, a first in more than a hundred years of history of Province.

But second, the DUP refuses to share power with the nationalist party, as provided for in the peace agreement concluded in 1998, as long as the post-Brexit customs controls provided for in the protocol negotiated by London during the divorce with the ‘European Union.

Jeffrey Donaldson, who had already refused to appoint a local deputy prime minister, reiterated his fierce opposition to this protocol, which according to him threatens the place of Northern Ireland within the United Kingdom.

Michelle O’Neill, Sinn Fein vice-president called to become the new head of the Northern Irish government, accused him of “taking the public hostage”.


PHOTO PETER MORRISON, ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sinn Fein Vice President Michelle O’Neill

Citing political tensions in the province and disruptions in trade, the British government wants to renegotiate in depth the protocol signed when it left the EU, while Brussels says it is only ready for adjustments. He nevertheless calls on the parties in Northern Ireland to form an executive to offer the inhabitants of the province “the stable government they deserve”.

London threatened Thursday to act unilaterally to override the protocol, possibly as early as next week, an unacceptable stance for Brussels that could trigger severe trade retaliation.

“Anti-democratic”

But according to Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney, any unilateral action by the British government would be “undemocratic”.

“The protocol must be implemented with flexibility and pragmatism to take into account the concerns” of the unionist camp, he said on BBC Radio 4.

But if it took unilateral action, in addition to “breaking international law”, the British government would “be acting deliberately undemocratically, as 53 of the 90 elected members of the Northern Irish Assembly support the protocol”.

On the other hand for David Frost, the ex-Mr. Brexit of the British government, “the government has no other option now but to act unilaterally to no longer apply all or part of the protocol”.

“There is an imminent threat to our ability to govern Northern Ireland,” he wrote in the Conservative daily on Friday. The Telegraphbelieving that European reprisals, which raise fears of a trade war, would be “disproportionate”.

By keeping Northern Ireland in the European single market and customs union, the protocol aims to preserve peace by avoiding the return of a physical border between the British province and the Republic of Ireland, member of the EU. .

According to Guardiana delegation of members of the American Congress must go in the next days to London, Belfast, Brussels and Dublin to reiterate the attachment of the White House to the peace agreement and the protocol.


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