Ireland Turns Left in Election

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jerrym
Ireland Turns Left in Election

The left wing nationalist Sinn Fein party bucked the rightward European trend in winning the largest share of the popular vote in the Irish election last week on a platform of housing in a country with runaway housing prices and healthcare. Its voting percentage was not fully reflected in seat victories because it never expected to do so well based on previous results and so did not run a full slate of candidates. Nevertheless, its 37 seats was only one seat less than the right-wing Fianna Fail, who won the most seats.  Sinn Fein also said they would hold a referendum on unification with Northern Ireland, something that may well happen as England's abandonment of the EU hurts the island's economy on both sides of the border and as demographics mean Catholics will be a majority in the North over time as school children there are majority Catholic already, thereby putting an end to English colonial rule on the island, but it may take more than five years. 

It took nine years and three elections, but the economic crash of 2008 has demolished the Irish party system. The Great Recession stoked up a popular demand for change that the old political class was unable or unwilling to satisfy. On February 8, the established order collapsed under the strain as Sinn Féin overtook the dominant center-right parties, whose combined vote share slumped to an all-time low. At a time when left parties in Europe have been losing ground to their rivals on the Right and center, the Irish election bucked the trend. Whatever Sinn Féin does next, this was clearly a left-wing vote. The exit poll showed that health and housing were by far the most important issues for voters. Two-thirds wanted investment in public services to be prioritized over tax cuts. 31 percent agreed with the statement that Ireland “needs a radical change in direction”. It’s possible that this opportunity for change will be squandered. But right now, the momentum in Irish politics is with the Left, and the traditional conservative parties are on the back foot. An election that was supposed to call time on the political turbulence of the last decade has had the opposite effect.

None of that was meant to happen when the Fine Gael leader Leo Varadkar called the snap election in January. Varadkar’s party had spent the past four years governing in partnership with its traditional rival Fianna Fáil. Both parties suffered major attrition in the first two postcrisis elections: by 2016, their combined vote share had dipped below 50 percent (in 2007, it was 69 percent). The only way for the conservative parties to stay in power while excluding Sinn Féin was through an unprecedented grand-coalition deal. Fianna Fáil didn’t take any cabinet positions, but its votes kept Leo Varadkar in the Taoiseach’s office. The two parties saw this as an unnatural arrangement and wanted to get back to their long-established routine, with a center-right government facing a center-right opposition and taking turns to steer the ship of state. ...

The outcome of the election came as a shock to everyone, including Sinn Féin. The party leadership was prepared for a battle to hold onto its existing seats, and ran a defensive campaign. Before looking at Sinn Féin in particular, we need to ask why there was such a widespread mood for change in search of a political outlet. To begin with, the much-vaunted economic recovery has never lived up to the hype. Headline figures for GDP are deeply unreliable, because multinational companies use the Irish economy as a clearing house for transfer pricing. In 2015, the official stats purported to show GDP growing by 26 percent. No government minister boasted about that “success story” — it was patently absurd — but they carried on bragging when the same questionable statistics gave a figure that sounded at least halfway plausible. The growth wasn’t all fictitious, but it by-passed the majority of Irish workers. In the exit poll on February 8, voters were asked if they had felt the benefits of the recovery: 63 percent said no.

Younger people stressed the importance of housing as an issue: nearly two-fifths of those under the age of thirty-four said it was the most important factor in deciding how to vote. Runaway home prices have made it impossible for most people in that age bracket to buy their own home, while landlords hike rents to extortionate levels and hotel construction swallows up residential space. When the Irish economy crashed in 2008, governments led by Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael spent tens of billions of euro bailing out the banks and property developers who were responsible for the recession. Public money salvaged the financial and property systems, but there was no structural change imposed as a quid pro quo, and certainly no attempt to restore the public-housing sector as an alternative to private provision. Now, the same banks that would have gone to the wall without state support charge interest rates well above the eurozone average, while politicians like Leo Varadkar claim that US vulture funds make a valuable contribution to the housing market. It’s hard to blame the shortage of affordable housing on impersonal market forces, when the people whose decisions were responsible for it have names and faces that are well known to everyone. ...

Sinn Féin positioned itself as the party of choice for those who wanted to register their discontent. Unlike the Labour Party and the Greens, it hadn’t been in government during the recession, and didn’t bear responsibility for the bank bailout or cuts to public services. The party also had a much wider reach and activist base than Ireland’s radical-left groups, whose support is concentrated in the larger cities. The first opinion polls revealed a surge towards Sinn Féin, which held up on election day. It’s now the largest party by vote share (24.5 percent), and level with Fianna Fáil on seats won (37 each — although Fianna Fáil has an extra seat because the parliamentary speaker is automatically reelected). The result would have been even worse for the conservative parties if Sinn Féin had known how well it was likely to perform: the Irish electoral system has multi-seat constituencies, and Sinn Féin could have picked up an extra seat in several districts if it had run more than one candidate. When it looked as if Sinn Féin was catching up with the center-right parties, they responded with a barrage of attacks focusing on the party’s links with the IRA, past and (allegedly) present. To their great frustration, none of those attacks seemed to work. There were a number of reasons for that.

The party now has a younger generation of leaders with no IRA background who’ve come of age over the last decade: Mary Lou McDonald, Pearse Doherty, Eoin Ó Broin. It was easier to associate Sinn Féin with the IRA when everyone knew that the party president, McDonald’s predecessor Gerry Adams, had been a central figure in the IRA leadership for decades. McDonald may not be to everyone’s taste, but nobody can accuse her of direct involvement in a campaign of guerrilla warfare that was deeply unpopular in the South. Politicians and media commentators who are hostile to Sinn Féin have also reduced the force of their own arguments by linking them to an unpopular political agenda. Every time they invoked the memory of IRA atrocities, it came with an implicit addendum: “And that’s why you have to put up with rack-renting landlords and a creaking health service.” ...

Sinn Féin certainly has a much better chance of achieving Irish unity by political means than through the resumption of a failed military campaign. Sinn Féin’s critics accuse the party of planning to scrap the non-jury Special Criminal Court (SCC), supposedly at the behest of its IRA masters. Originally set up to deal with subversive organizations, the SCC has since broadened its remit to cover gangland crime. Amnesty International and the Irish Council for Civil Liberties have called for its abolition. ...

Sinn Féin wasn’t the only party competing for the left-wing vote. Its rivals can be divided into two broad categories, left-center and left-radical. The Irish Labour Party used to dominate the first of these political niches, but it had a terrible election, winning less than 5 percent of the vote. Labour’s best-ever performance came in 2011 with an anti-austerity platform, but it reneged on that platform immediately by going into coalition with Fine Gael, alienating its new supporters. Five years later, it lost thirty of its thirty-seven seats. There was no recovery this time around, just continued decline. It’s hard to see where Labour can go from here. The party seems bereft of new political thinking. The Social Democrats, a group set up by two ex-Labour politicians, now have the same number of TDs, with some fresh, newly elected faces to articulate their message. You can get a very similar center-left policy offer from the Social Democrats without any of Labour’s recent baggage: we might end seeing a reverse takeover by the new party if Labour carries on treading water.

The Greens had a better day than Labour, with a 7 percent vote share and twelve seats. However, the result will have been a letdown for the party after the Green surge in last year’s European election. That increased support reflected a greater sense of urgency about climate change, especially among younger people. But the Greens are a profoundly inadequate vehicle for that sentiment: Ireland’s radical-left parties have a much better record when it comes to environmental issues. When the Green Party leader Eamon Ryan spoke in television debates, there was a striking discrepancy between his accurate diagnosis of the climate and biodiversity crises and the modest, incremental solutions he put forward. Ryan’s party has no equivalent of the ambitious ecological programs recently developed by left-wing forces in Britain and the United States. ...

Further to the left, the Solidarity–People Before Profit alliance retained five of the six seats it won in 2016, while left-wing independents like Thomas Pringle and Joan Collins also held on — a much better outcome than seemed likely after last year’s local elections. These victories often came down to fine margins, and the socialist groups might not be so lucky next time. But for now, the radical left has preserved its foothold in national politics. That means there’s some breathing space to reflect on what they got right and wrong over the last decade. At their best, Ireland’s radical-left forces have punched above their weight on the wider political stage. They were centrally involved in the struggle against water charges, the most important anti-austerity movement after 2008, which mobilized huge numbers of working-class people and forced the government to scrap its plans. They were also the only political actors with a consistent pro-choice policy, before the work of feminist campaigners made it expedient for the bigger parties to get on board. On both water charges and abortion rights, Sinn Féin initially took an evasive and equivocal line, and organized pressure from its left flank had a real impact. The vote for successful left-wing candidates in Dublin and Cork builds on years of activism in communities that had been ignored and abandoned by the political mainstream. On the debit side, organizational fragmentation has made it harder for the radical left to develop a cohesive political identity and platform. In 2011, the socialist groups stood on a joint ticket as the United Left Alliance (ULA), but that broke up within a couple of years. One of the ULA’s component parts, the Socialist Party, then ran candidates for election as the Anti-Austerity Alliance, which in turn became Solidarity. Even for people who follow politics closely, these comings and goings must have been very confusing. ...

What will Sinn Féin do with its unprecedented mandate? The party’s tactical choices will stem from its underlying political character. One of Sinn Féin’s star performers during the election campaign was Eoin Ó Broin, the party’s housing spokesman, who represents a west Dublin constituency. Before Ó Broin became a TD, he wrote an important book, Sinn Féin and the Politics of Left Republicanism (2009), which looked at successive attempts over the last century to blend republicanism with left-wing ideology. As Ó Broin noted, his own party had a clear hierarchy of political goals, with national reunification taking priority over socialism. This meant that Sinn Féin’s version of left-wing politics, “relegated to a future point in the struggle, would always be underdeveloped, as the more immediate needs of the national struggle took precedence.” Ó Broin urged his party to “end the hierarchy of objectives implied in the party’s ideology, policy and strategy,” by putting democratic socialism on a level footing with Irish unity. However, the pecking order he criticized remains firmly in place. It’s not that there’s anything reactionary or undesirable about the idea of a united Ireland. The partition settlement of the 1920s was a fiasco, and it’s perfectly legitimate for Sinn Féin to want to overturn it. The Good Friday Agreement (GFA) contains an agreed mechanism for them to do so, by means of a border poll. Demographic change and the Brexit crisis have made the idea of a vote in favor of Irish unity seem much more plausible than it was at the time when the GFA was signed.

Sinn Féin’s time in government north of the border hasn’t resulted in any major social-democratic reforms, yet the party hasn’t paid a significant electoral price for that. However, things are likely to be very different in the South if Sinn Féin doesn’t satisfy the desire for change that powered its recent surge. In the North of Ireland, Sinn Féin is primarily a nationalist party, whose function is to represent a community that suffered many years of political exclusion. As long as it defends the interests of that community, while promoting the long-term goal of a united Ireland, it will have a solid base of support to draw upon, however little progress it makes on a left-wing economic agenda that was never central to the party’s appeal. In any case, Sinn Féin can always gesture towards the lack of decision-making powers: Northern Ireland is still a region within the United Kingdom, not a state with its own national budget. Sinn Féin won’t have the same leeway in the South: either it delivers on at least some of its pledges, or it may find its voters looking for a new home, just as Labour’s 2011 electorate deserted the party after it formed a government with Fine Gael and ditched its anti-austerity program. The volatility of Irish electoral politics cuts both ways.

The most important reform promised by Sinn Féin during the election campaign was its housing platform, developed by Eoin Ó Broin, which calls for an emergency rent freeze, a cap on mortgage interest rates, and the construction of public housing on a scale that hasn’t been seen for decades. If carried out, that platform would have a lasting impact on the quality of life for large numbers of people (and probably secure their votes for Sinn Féin, much like Fianna Fáil’s own house-construction program in the 1930s and 1940s).

But it would also damage the interests of all those who benefit from the current setup, including the banks and the big players in the Irish construction industry. The same goes for every other social-democratic policy. To supplement their domestic power, conservative forces will also enlist the support of the European Union, whose budgetary rules they will cite as an insuperable barrier to any progressive economic agenda.

Trying to push through significant reforms in a governing alliance with the center right is the road to nowhere — especially since those parties will be anxious to cut Sinn Féin down to size by scuppering its projects and associating it with unpopular measures. Sinn Féin’s well-honed sense of political pragmatism may be enough to stop the party from going down that road, even if its core ideology allows for it. At any rate, the conservative stabilization of Irish politics so ardently desired by the “stake in the country people,” as Liam Mellows once called them, hasn’t arrived yet.

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2020/02/ireland-election-results-sinn-fein

 

Sean in Ottawa

The analysis that this was support for left causes is borne out by polls of voters. The fact that it came form a nationlist party was not the deciding issue. I appreciate that the thread title, and the poster's comment emphasize what seems to be the real priority and motivations for the voters.

Thanks

Ken Burch

Sean in Ottawa wrote:

The analysis that this was support for left causes is borne out by polls of voters. The fact that it came form a nationlist party was not the deciding issue. I appreciate that the thread title, and the poster's comment emphasize what seems to be the real priority and motivations for the voters.

Thanks

As was long the case in Quebec, the organizing principle of most of the Irish left, from the time of James Connolly and the Citizen Army through the late 20th Century - has been some form of Irish nationalism-a concept which is currently expressed simply as support for ending the partition of Ireland into a 26 county Republic made up of three of the four historic provinces of Ireland, plus three of the nine counties of the historic province of Ulster in the North on one side, with the other 6 counties of Ulster hived off into a pro-British, Protestant-majority statelet known currently as Northern Ireland.   

The liberation project of the Irish people has had to be nationalist, has had to be run on the basis of organizing one part of the Irish population-the Irish Catholic community, though with some notable Protestant figures involved, such as Emmet and Wolfe Tone in the 1798 revolt and Charles Steward Parnell in the 1870s-because the pro-British community, having been convinced through British propaganda that the Catholic majority on the island would never allow them to survive in peace and freedom if Ireland became independent, refused to ever make common ground with the majority community, and refused, until the Good Friday Peace Accords of the 1990s, to even acknowledge that the pro-Irish community, either before or after partition, had any legitimate grievances against the status quo.

That said, if Sinn Fein ends up in a governing coalition in the Republic, they are going to have to resolve an interesting contradiction:  SF has run, in elections in the Republic, as a left-wing, anti-austerity party.  In the North, in their role as partners in the power sharing executive, they have spent years administering steep cuts in benefits and other austerity measures as a party of government.

If they stay with anti-austerity politics in the republic, they could undermine their position in the North, where they have been imposing austerity in the name of proving themselves to be a "responsible" party of government, possibly opening the way for a left-republican alternative to gain votes and seats from them at the next N.I. election.  If they join a coalition in the republic and become partners in austerity there, they could destroy their support there and create an opening for another left party to sweep past them there, a development the British and the Unionists in Ulster would likely use as an argument for continuing to fight against the political unification of the island.

Ken Burch

SF had an incredibly efficient distribution of its vote share in this election:   there were 42 SF candidates and 37 of them were elected.

Who knows how well they might have done had they contested most of the 159 seats that were up for grabs in Ireland's 39 multi-member constituency.

Were I to offer them one bit of advice, it would be NOT to join a coalition with either "old party".   If Fianna Fail OR Fine Gael tries to lead a government with SF as partner-Fine Gael actually finished third in the seat count and the first preference popular vote total-either "old party" will insist that more austerity measures need to be passed and that SF has no choice but to join them in pushing those measures through.   If SF agrees to do so, it's support is guaranteed to crash in the next election; this is what happened to the Irish Labour Party after the 2011 election.  Labour finished second in that election, with 37 seats and 19.4% of the first preference vote-the exact same number of seats SF took this year, though a much lower popular vote share- and could easily have chosen to sit as the official opposition and lead the fight against austerity, letting .  But Irish Labour's leader, Eamonn Gilmore, was a Blairite, and chose to join a Fine Gael-led coalition with implemented savage cuts in Ireland's already badly underfunded social welfare state.   At the 2016 election, Labour fell to seven seats and 6.6% of the vote, and both SF and various independent left parties started gaining.  This year, they fell to six seats and 4.4% of the vote, and I'd say it's an open question as to whether Irish Labour will survive the next election at all.

jerrym

Quote:

 The liberation project of the Irish people has had to be nationalist, has had to be run on the basis of organizing one part of the Irish population-the Irish Catholic community, though with some notable Protestant figures involved, such as Emmet and Wolfe Tone in the 1798 revolt and Charles Steward Parnell in the 1870s-because the pro-British community, having been convinced through British propaganda that the Catholic majority on the island would never allow them to survive in peace and freedom if Ireland became independent, refused to ever make common ground with the majority community, and refused, until the Good Friday Peace Accords of the 1990s, to even acknowledge that the pro-Irish community, either before or after partition, had any legitimate grievances against the status quo.

To understand why Sinn Fein ended up being a sectarian Catholic party despite many of the leaders of the Irish independence movement and the early days of Sinn Fein being Protestant, one only has to look at the quotes of Ian Paisley's, the founder and leader of Northern Ireland's by far largest Protestant unionist party, quotes. He followed a tradition of such vile rhetoric that has gone on since the rebellion of 1798 when the English faced the United Irishmen rebellion of Catholics and Protestants. After the rebellion, the English have enabled and encouraged, until recently, the most rabid vitriol to split Catholics and Protestants, with Paisley only being one of the latest in a long list. As elsewhere in their empire, the English used the strategy of divide and conquer. After the Good Friday Agreement, he did work with Sinn Fein in government, but his decades of hate-filled speech and the centuries of it from other Protestants, still leave a toxic legacy today. 

When St. John Paul II visited the European Parliament in 1988 (the Pope who brought down communism in alliance with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher), Paisley heckled him saying,

I denounce you, Anti-Christ! I refuse you as Christ’s enemy and Antichrist with all your false doctrine.

When Pope John XXIII died, he said,

This Romish man of sin is now in hell!

When the Queen Mother of England visited the Vatican, he said it “was spiritual fornication and adultery with the Antichrist.”

He said about the Church,

Seed of the serpent … Her clothes reek of the brimstone of the pit. Her words and opinions label her the parrot of Beelzebub, her father.

He was paranoid.  He called the European Union “A beast ridden by the harlot Catholic Church.”

As the peace process inched ever closer, he said:

This year will be a crisis year for our province. The British government, in cahoots with Dublin, Washington, the Vatican and the IRA, are intent to destroy the province. The so-called talks process is but a front. Behind it the scene is set and the programme in position to demolish the province as the last bastion of Protestantism in Europe.

Despite the fact that the IRA (with its Marxist roots) had no relationship with the Vatican, he imagined a troubling connection:

O Father, we can see the great pan-nationalist conspiracy, with the Pope as its head, sending his secret messages to the IRA.

https://www.thefeeherytheory.com/passing-ian-paisley/

"They breed like rabbits and multiply like vermin" - talking about Catholics at a loyalist rally in 1969.

"Catholic homes caught fire because they were loaded with petrol bombs; Catholic churches were attacked and burned because they were arsenals and priests handed out sub-machine guns to parishioners" - at a loyalist rally in 1968 following attacks on Catholic homes.

"Save Ulster from sodomy!" - his slogan in a 1970s and 80s campaign against legalising homosexuality.

"Never, never, never, never..." - outside Belfast City Hall as he addressed tens of thousands of loyalists protesting against the signing of the November 1985 Anglo-Irish Agreement.

"I am not going to sit down with bloodthirsty monsters who have been killing and terrifying my people" - opposing demands to sit down and talk with Sinn Féin.

"The scarlet woman of Rome" - his description of Pope John Paul.

"I don't like the president of the Irish Republic because she is dishonest" - his description of the then Irish president Mary McAleese.

"Talk about dancing at Christmas on the graves of Ulster dead, and to be given the facility so to dance by the British prime minister... Here we saw the godfathers of those who planned the bombing of Downing Street, standing outside there and piously pretending they were engaged in a search for peace" - reacting to the Downing Street meeting of Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams and then prime minister Tony Blair in December 1997.

"I denounce you, Anti-Christ! I refuse you as Christ's enemy and Antichrist with all your false doctrine" - addressing Pope John Paul II on a visit to the European Parliament October 1988.

"This Romish man of sin is now in hell! - on the death of Pope John XXIII.

"The IRA's bishop from Crossmaglen" - describing the then head of the Catholic Church in Ireland, Tomas Ó Fiaich.

"Line dancing is as sinful as any other type of dancing, with its sexual gestures and touching. It is an incitement to lust."

"No surrender. We will never bend the knee" - a regular cry aimed at those he believed were ready to "betray" Northern Ireland.

"Protect us from the shackles of priest-craft" - late 1970s in an attack on the Roman Catholic church.

"The breath of Satan is upon us" - his remark when he entered a Belfast press conference in a smoke-filled, whisky-sodden hall in the mid-1970s.

"Let me smell your breath first, son" - Paisley's regular request to reporters, whom he suspected of drinking, before he would allow them to interview him.

"The devil's buttermilk" - his description of alcoholic drinks, chiefly draught Guinness.

"This is the spark which kindles a fire there could be no putting out" - his criticism of a diversion ordered by the police of a "provocative" Orange Order march.

"Because it would be hard for you to poison them" - when asked why he had chosen boiled eggs for breakfast during a top-level meeting at the Irish embassy in London.

"I will never sit down with Gerry Adams... he'd sit with anyone. He'd sit down with the devil. In fact, Adams does sit down with the devil" - on Adams in February 1997.

"We are not going into government with Sinn Féin" - after the confirmation of IRA's decommissioning of its arms.

"We do not know how many guns, the amount of ammunition and explosives were decommissioned, nor were we told how the decommissioning was carried out. There were no photographs, no detailed inventory, and no detail on the destruction of these arms. To describe today's statement as transparent would be the falsehood of the century" - on IRA decommissioning of weapons, September 2005.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-29171017

 

Sean in Ottawa

If you go back to unrest in Belfast at the end of the 19th and start of the 20th century you can see that opposition to the British was more economic than religious. It predates the presumption of a total split from Britain and comes in a time of demands for home rule. The political demands of the country have been reduced to religious divides but this was not the case. The romantic stories of the catholics being shut out and then fighting for their freedom are only part of the story. The fact that they were shut out is why they were largely ineffective in being able to defeat the English for a long period. Opposition to English rule of Ireland was financed and fouhgt by many Protestants and by formerly people who had been loayl to the crown. This is why resources started to flow against the govenrment. Once the rebellion began as a hopeless stand, the over-reaction of the English changed public opinion and the rebels used a campaign of retribution for cooperation with the English regime. However, what is often missed in this story are the attempts to divide Catholics and Protestants including operations of murder by British agents in order to turn what was becoming more of a class and economic war that the British could not win into a religious war that could allow them to retain the most economically productive part of the island if they could not hold the entire thing.

This recent movement into one of class rather than religion is hardly a break from the past. It is a return to the roots of the struggle.

Religion in Ireland, arguably, has long been a tool of oppression rather than the cause.

Another point people often forget is that the English and Scottish are known for their colonization of the country. However, the English since Cromwell, have rewarded those who would convert to the their preferred religion with lands and royal favours. Some who made these conversions include families that had been in Ireland for 1000 years and many who came with the Normans in the 11th century. Sure the introduction of the Protestent religion is largely by colonizers but the participants long included the original population. The over-simplification of Protestant colonizers and Catholic indigenous people in Ireland is a disservice to history.

Another myth is the issue of identity. The Protestant parts of the north have a long history of loyalty to the crown (this divides the province of Ulster) but they also have an increasingly Irish identity quite distinct from the English. This includes significant interest in the Irish language among people who are in Protestant Ireland many of whom are descended from people who have been there more than half the time (500 years) that many of the most well known families of Ireland have been there. For example, the Dillons of Ireland only got there in the 1100s, just 400 years before some of the Protestant settlers who have now been there for 600 years.

jerrym

Not only has the Republic of Ireland turned to the left in the 2020 election when Sinn Fein won 37 of the 42 seats they ran in (the only problem being they did not think they would do so well and did not run all the possible candidates they could have) on a platform of housing and health care. Now Sinn Fein has won the greatest number of seats in Northern Ireland for the first time in history thanks to demographics in part. At the time of the Partition in Ireland in 1922, Catholics were 20% of the population. Now they are 45% of the population and a majority of school children. It is highly likely that within a generation the North and the Republic will be united and English imperial rule in Ireland will end. 

Sinn Féin has won the largest number of seats in the Assembly election and with it the right to nominate the party’s Northern leader, Michelle O’Neill, as the First Minister of Northern Ireland – the first time in the North’s history that the top position has been held by a nationalist party.

With all 90 seats declared soon after 1am on Sunday, Sinn Féin had retained all its seats to win 27. The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) took 25, the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) took nine and the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) returned a total of eight. ...

The other big success story of the election was that of the cross-community Alliance Party, which more than doubled its tally of eight in the last vote in 2017 to elect 17 MLAs this time around. ...

A question mark remains over whether the DUP – which resigned from the first minister position in February as part of its campaign against the Northern Ireland protocol, which is opposed by unionists – will nominate a deputy first minister when the Assembly meets next week. ...

Mr Lewis said the people of Northern Ireland had “delivered a number of messages” in the election and “were clear that they want a fully functioning devolved government in Northern Ireland, they want the issues around the protocol addressed, and that they want politics to work better”. ...

“The government remains committed to the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement and will continue to work with the Northern Ireland parties and the Irish Government to deliver its vision for reconciliation, equality, respect for rights and parity of esteem,” he said.

Speaking as she arrived at the count centre in Magherafelt, Co Derry, ahead of her acceptance speech as an MLA in Mid Ulster, Michelle O’Neill said “the people have spoken” and there was “no reason for any delay”.

“Our job now is to turn up [at Stormont]. Leadership matters, equality matters, turning up matters,” she said. “We should have an Executive formed now next week. We should agree a programme for government, to put money into people’s pockets. That is what people voted for.”

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/politics/assembly-election-sinn-f%C3%A9i...

jerrym

Sinn Fein's winning the most seats in Northern Ireland is another step toward Irish unification. 

During the election campaign Sinn Féin's deputy leader Michelle O'Neill said that people were not "waking up thinking about Irish unity" and stressed that issues such as the cost-of-living crisis were bigger priorities. 

But Sinn Féin remains committed to holding a referendum on Irish unification, and its manifesto called on the British and Irish governments to set a date for a border poll.

On Friday party leader Mary Lou McDonald said planning for a unity referendum would come within a "five-year framework".

The rules around holding a referendum are set out in the Good Friday Agreement - the 1998 peace agreement which ended the worst of the Troubles and set up the Northern Ireland Assembly. 

It says the UK government's secretary of state for Northern Ireland can hold a referendum at any time. In addition it says he or she should call one if it appears a majority of voters would vote in favour of Irish unification.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-60786728

kropotkin1951

It seems that while unification is a aspirational goal it is not necessarily the biggest issue currently driving Northern Ireland politics. The Northern Ireland Protocol is the biggest political rift. The deal struck has effectively meant that a type of border has gone up between NI and the other members of the UK. It was either that or a hard border to cross into Ireland from NI. Brexit and its unintended consequences are playing a big role.

DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson has said the "long shadow" of the Northern Ireland Protocol is casting its mark over politics in the region.

Speaking at a press conference with his new MLA (Member of the Legislative Assembly) team at Stormont, Sir Jeffrey said: "We want to see this place up and running as soon as possible.

"We want stable devolved government. We are committed to our participation in those institutions."

However, he said that his party's position had not changed.

"We need decisive action by the government to address the difficulties created by the protocol," he said.

https://news.sky.com/story/dup-says-no-return-to-northern-ireland-execut...

kropotkin1951

The other big winner in the election was the Alliance. It is a growing force and more than dopuibles its vote share this time and also has elected EU and UK reps.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-61362593

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-61477844

jerrym

kropotkin1951 wrote:

It seems that while unification is a aspirational goal it is not necessarily the biggest issue currently driving Northern Ireland politics, it is doing the same in Northern Ireland. The Northern Ireland Protocol is the biggest political rift. The deal struck has effectively meant that a type of border has gone up between NI and the other members of the UK. It was either that or a hard border to cross into Ireland from NI. Brexit and its unintended consequences are playing a big role.

Just as Canada and the US demographics are changing the makeup of the population and shifting the political spectrum. I remember a Dutch demographer stating what was going to happen in 1970 and so far it has went pretty much as he predicted. The border dispute may even speed up the process because few want a hard border in the North or South for trade reasons that have developed since the 1997 Agreement. However, it is more likely to take another generation, just like it will take another generation for Canada and the US to have minority white populations. Despite being "founded by moderate unionists" the Alliance "has veered away from non-sectarian unionism towards a more liberal, neutral position on the question of either a united Ireland or continued Union with Great Britain.[49] Alliance supports the Good Friday Agreement as a basis that can be used to manage the conflict whilst working to ultimately create a non-sectarian political system for Northern Ireland. It believes that the consociational power-sharing structure established by the agreement may not be capable of providing long-term stability, citing various reservations such as the entrenchment of pre-existing divisions as well as the inability to adapt to demographic changes." (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alliance_Party_of_Northern_Ireland)

kropotkin1951

One of the Alliances proposals that I like is only having one school system. Integration of communities is essential for long term peace and security.

NorthReport

Well said. Parts of Canada should consider that too. 

kropotkin1951

NorthReport wrote:

Well said. Parts of Canada should consider that too. 


Horgan could start by implementing that policy in BC, where we provide funding for all kinds of schools including many different types of religious ones plus rich peoples academies.

NorthReport

Absolutely. Private school organizations should be allowed to exist but no government money should go to them in any form whatsoever.

kropotkin1951 wrote:
NorthReport wrote:

Well said. Parts of Canada should consider that too. 


Horgan could start by implementing that policy in BC, where we provide funding for all kinds of schools including many different types of religious ones plus rich peoples academies.

kropotkin1951

NorthReport wrote:
Absolutely. Private school organizations should be allowed to exist but no government money should go to them in any form whatsoever.

kropotkin1951 wrote:
NorthReport wrote:

Well said. Parts of Canada should consider that too. 


Horgan could start by implementing that policy in BC, where we provide funding for all kinds of schools including many different types of religious ones plus rich peoples academies.

That would be a good compromise but I like the Finnish model where all extra schools are banned forcing the rich to make the public schools world class.

laine lowe laine lowe's picture

I didn't know that Finland had that policy and it does go far to explain why they have what is considered the best educational system in the world. Very worthy of emulating.

NorthReport

I like the Finnish approach as well, but could there not be a successful charter challenge to it in Canada?

laine lowe laine lowe's picture

Unfortunately there might be, NorthReport. Just trying to get rid of the Catholic-Public School equal funding division (at least for grammer/primary school) has been near impossible in Ontario and Quebec. And I understand the historic reasons for that since the French Catholic population in both those provinces were fiercely protective of their culture and were fearful of being forced to assmiliate into the Anglo Protestant one. They were more successful in fighting that than Indigenous peoples who were just forced into Residential Schools. Our education system is very much impacted by awful historical events and much to everyone's detriment.

jerrym

kropotkin1951 wrote:

One of the Alliances proposals that I like is only having one school system. Integration of communities is essential for long term peace and security.


The Alliance Party is philosophically an offshoot of the classical liberal (free enterprise) party.
Quote:
The Alliance Party is a member of the Liberal International and Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe,[15] and is aligned with the Liberal Democrats in Great Britain who recently formed a coalition government with the Conservatives.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alliance_Party_of_Northern_Ireland
Sinn Fein is much further to the left and despite it being supported primarily by Irish Catholic nationalists, historically has had many important Protestant leaders. In fact, the Catholic Church has often been one of its most outspoken opponents. Here is their policy on education, including the lack of Irish language education under English rule, that as in Canada for its indigenous people, has been disastrous for the indigenous Irish language.
Quote:
Sinn Féin believes in secular education and in multi-denominational schools. However, we be-lieve it would be mistaken to confuse these norms with how the British government handles integrated education in the Six Counties. We have no quarrel whatever with those parents who choose to send their children to these schools, nor with those teachers who teach in them. They do so for the best of reasons. We can see some advan-tages and we are in favour of their being there as an option for parents.

We would like to see the same resources now being given to integrated schools also being given to Irish language-medium schools.

Central to any discussion of integrated education in Ire-land, and indeed of education generally, is the issue of the curriculum: the assumptions underlying it, who controls it and its goals. A shared curriculum must acknowledge our common Irishness and celebrate the diversity which enriches us all.

The past absence of Irish history teaching and the ban-ning and neglect of the Irish language in the school cur-riculum has been at least as responsible for contributing to the problems of society in the North as the absence of integrated education.

https://www.sinnfein.ie/contents/16324

Below is a description of the Sinn Fein's other policies.

Quote:
Sinn Féin is an Irish republican, democratic socialist and left-wing party.[134] In the European Parliament, the party aligns itself with the European United Left–Nordic Green Left (GUE/NGL) parliamentary group. Categorised as "populist socialist" in literature,[135] in 2014 leading party strategist and ideologue Eoin Ó Broin described Sinn Féin's entire political project as unashamedly populist.[136]

Social and cultural[edit]
Sinn Féin's main political goal is a united Ireland. Other key policies from their most recent election manifesto are listed below:

The 18 Northern Ireland MPs who sit or have sat in the Parliament of the United Kingdom to be allowed to sit in Dáil Éireann as full Deputies as well[137]
Ending academic selection within the education system[138]
Diplomatic pressure to close Sellafield nuclear reprocessing plant (in Britain)
A draft Irish Language Bill for Northern Ireland (Acht na Gaeilge),[139] a Bill that would give the Irish language the same status that the Welsh language has in Wales
The "plastic bag levy" to be extended to Northern Ireland
To further Irish-language teaching in Northern Ireland
Same-sex marriage to be extended to Northern Ireland[140] (It was subsequently legalised via an Act of the UK Parliament in 2019.)[141]
Passing a ban on conversion therapy.[142]
Sinn Féin are pro-immigration on the basis of filling up vacancies in employment, if the system can properly integrate new immigrants and has the resources to do so: the party also believes in faster application processing times for refugees. Sinn Féin is against "open borders" and believes in abolishing the Direct Provision system.[143]

Economy[edit]
At the most recent election in the Republic of Ireland,[143] Sinn Féin committed to:

100,000 social and affordable homes over 5 years, along with a ban on rent increases for three years and a tax credit worth up to one month's rent
Tapering out tax credits for workers earning over €120,000
Investing €75 million into creating a Worker Co-operative development fund
Abolishing Universal Social Charge (USC) for workers earning less than €30,000
Establishing a state owned childcare service
Establishment of a government fund to aid small and medium enterprises
An "all-Ireland" economy with a common currency and one tax
Abolishing Property Tax
As of January 2022, Sinn Féin in Northern Ireland have committed to:

100,000 social and affordable homes over 15 years, plus passing a new Private Tenancies Bill.
Abolishing VAT on fuel and energy-related goods
Freezing domestic and commercial rates (outlined by Finance Minister Conor Murphy in the Irish government's 2022/25 budget)
Capping costs of school uniforms and providing Free School Meal payments outside of term time
£55 million to assist households with rises in energy bills
Standardising the minimum wage across all age groups, and introducing a living wage
Banning zero-hour contracts
Introducing a “right to disconnect” from work
One month’s free childcare for unemployed/ low income parents through the Advisory Discretionary Fund
Health
At the most recent election in the Republic of Ireland,[144] Sinn Féin committed to:

An "All-Ireland-Health-Service" akin to the National Health Service of the United Kingdom
Cap on consultants' pay
International relations[edit]

Mary Lou McDonald signing a book of condolences for Fidel Castro at the Cuban Embassy in Dublin in 2016

Niall Ó Donnghaile, Seán Crowe and members of Ógra Shinn Féin at a pro-Palestine rally held by the party in Dublin in 2017

Members of Sinn Féin protesting against Brexit and a "hard border" being implemented between Northern Ireland and Ireland in 2019

Martin McGuinness, Seán Crowe and Gerry Adams in 2014 showing their support for Catalan independence by holding a red Estelada
Sinn Féin has longstanding fraternal ties with the African National Congress[157] and was described by Nelson Mandela as an 'old friend and ally in the anti-apartheid struggle'.[158] Sinn Féin supports the independence of Catalonia from Spain,[159] Palestine in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict,[160] and the right to self-determination regarding independence of the Basque Country from Spain and France.[161] Sinn Féin opposes the United States embargo against Cuba and has called for a normalization of relations between the two countries.[162] In 2016, the Sinn Féin party president, Gerry Adams was invited by the Cuban government to attend the state funeral of Fidel Castro whom Adams described as a 'freedom fighter' and a 'friend of Ireland's struggle'.[163] Sinn Féin is opposed to NATO membership.

European Union
Its policy of a "Europe of Equals", and its critical engagement after 2001, together with its engagement with the European Parliament, marks a change from the party's previous opposition to the EU. The party expresses, on one hand, "support for Europe-wide measures that promote and enhance human rights, equality and the all-Ireland agenda", and on the other a "principled opposition" to a European superstate.[174] This has led political commentators to define the party as soft Eurosceptic since the 21st century.[175]

Since moving to this "soft Euroscepticism" position, Sinn Féin support a policy of "critical engagement with the EU", and have a "principled opposition" to a European superstate. It opposes an EU constitution because it would reduce the sovereignty of the member-states.[176][177] It also critiques the EU on grounds of neoliberalism. Sinn Féin MEP Matt Carthy says that the "European Union must become a cooperative union of nation states committed to working together on issues such as climate change, migration, trade, and using our common strengths to improve the lives of citizens. If it does not, EU disintegration becomes a real possibility."[178] The party supported continued UK membership of the European Union in the UK's 2016 EU referendum[179] and in April 2022, Mary Lou McDonald said in the Dáil that "We strongly support the Ukrainian people's stated desire to join the European Union".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinn_Féin#Policy_and_ideology

kropotkin1951

Indeed the Alliance is a centrist party.

jerrym

Sinn Fein, whose left wing agenda is outlined in post #20, is now way ahead in the polls in the Republic of Ireland with 35% of the vote compared to right wing and historically dominant since the creation of the Republic of Ireland Fine Gael at 21% and Fianna Fail at 17%, with independents at 10% and all other parties at 4% or less. 

https://www.politico.eu/europe-poll-of-polls/ireland/

jerrym

The following article gives a good description of th situation in Northern Ireland and the Republic. Written in May just before the Northern Ireland election, which saw Sinn Fein emerge as the largest party with 29% of the vote compared to the unionist DUP's 21%, it does look at the long-term picture in the north and south. The article notes that "the conditions will be in place in Northern Ireland for a border poll by 2030, noting that there will be a majority of non-Protestants in every electoral age cohort with the possible exception of the over 85s."

Sinn Féin is set to become the largest party in the region’s assembly according to polls — putting Northern Ireland one step closer to breaking away from the United Kingdom and uniting with the Republic of Ireland. But don’t expect most voters to be talking about Irish unity.

Sinn Féin — once the political wing of the militant Provisional Irish Republican Army — has run a campaign focused on bread-and-butter issues like the rising cost of living and problems in the National Health Service. The centrist Alliance party has done the same. “There are two main issues that are coming up again and again: cost of living and health care,” says Nuala McAllister, a candidate for the Alliance party.

Only the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which advocates for staying part of the United Kingdom, has made Northern Ireland’s political status an issue on the campaign trail, warning voters that casting a ballot for Sinn Féin will lead to casting another one in a referendum on Irish unity.

Whether voters acknowledge it or not, the DUP has a point. One hundred years after the partition of the island and Ireland’s tumultuous struggle for independence, Sinn Féin isn’t just in the ascendency in Northern Ireland. The party has been gaining ground across the border in the Republic of Ireland as well, where politicians are starting to grapple with the possibility of absorbing the equivalent of more than a third of its population — many of whose primary loyalty is to the U.K. ...

The party is aware that talk of uniting Ireland could scare off voters; a recent poll by the Institute of Irish Studies at the University of Liverpool found that only 30 percent of citizens would vote for Irish unity “tomorrow.” But Finucane, who witnessed his father being shot to death in the family kitchen when he was just 9 years old, could not deny that the big question looming over Northern Irish politics is whether and when the region should join the Republic.

“I am a firm and unashamed believer that when you look at the evidence, partition has been bad for the island,” he said. “It’s only through unity that we will be able to truly unlock our potential.” ...

A referendum on Irish unity — known as a border poll — is inevitable, he added. “Even those who are the staunchest opponent of any constitutional change on this island, they all accept that there is a border poll coming and we need to be prepared for it. There is already a momentum … people are more open to having the conversation.” ...

But even as bread-and-butter issues dominate the campaign even in what was once the epicenter of the conflict, the dividing line in Northern Irish politics remains centered around the question of national identity. The two largest parties, Sinn Féin and the DUP, are also the most hard-line factions on either side of the Irish unity debate.

To the extent that a vote for Sinn Féin is an expression of a desire to join Ireland, the DUP is not wrong when it argues that a victory by the nationalist party could help pave the way for a referendum on Irish unity. The Good Friday Agreement states that a border poll should be called by the British secretary of state for Northern Ireland “if at any time it appears likely to him that a majority of those voting would express a wish that Northern Ireland should cease to be part of the United Kingdom and form part of a united Ireland.”

The language was kept deliberately vague during the drafting of the Good Friday Agreement to ensure buy-in from all political traditions. In reality, any decision to hold a referendum would likely be taken by London in consultation with the government in Dublin — but a strong showing by Sinn Féin would add to the pressure to call a vote. ...

Northern Ireland’s demographic profile is changing, adding to the momentum. The last census a decade ago put the Protestant population at 48 percent, with Catholics at 45 percent (though coming from a Catholic or Protestant community background does not necessarily equate to support for remaining part of Britain or not).

The ultra-conservative stance of some DUP members on issues like marriage equality is also problematic for young voters, while unionists feel that the Brexit deal, which leaves Northern Ireland effectively part of the EU single market, threatens their British identity. ...

South of the border 

The rising momentum has not gone unnoticed across the border, where Sinn Féin has also been growing as a political force and cultivating a new generation of candidates like its leader, Mary Lou McDonald, as it tries to distance itself from its past terrorist links. Sinn Féin is now the most popular party in the Republic of Ireland, according to polls. Having tapped into voters’ concerns about health and housing, it is eclipsing the main parties Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael.

Though Sinn Féin would most likely need coalition partners in order to form a government in the Republic — so far the main political parties have shied away from this — they are closer to power than ever before. A favorite talking point of the party’s representatives in the United States, where it has long had support from the Irish-American community, is that Ireland is poised to elect a Sinn Féin first minister in the North and taoiseach, or prime minister, in the South.

Even if that never comes to pass, the conversation in the Republic is changing. Propelled in part by Sinn Féin’s meteoric rise, the other main political parties are beginning to formulate their own policy positions on a possible border poll. Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney surprised many in 2017 when he said he hoped to see a united Ireland in his lifetime. Prime Minister Micheál Martin has proposed the idea of a citizens’ assembly to discuss the issue.

The debate in the Republic matters because unification would need to be approved in a referendum in the South as well as the North. And it’s becoming increasingly evident that joining the two countries would be infinitely more complex than the stuff of Irish ballads sung in the bars of Boston.

A recent Irish Times poll found a majority of voters in the South favor a united Ireland in the long term, but oppose some of the measures that could be necessary to facilitate it, such as a new national anthem or increased public sector spending.

Brendan O’Leary, professor at the University of Pennsylvania and author of a forthcoming book on Irish unity, “Making Sense of a United Ireland,” predicted that the conditions will be in place in Northern Ireland for a border poll by 2030, noting that there will be a majority of non-Protestants in every electoral age cohort with the possible exception of the over 85s. ...

But he points out that, rather than a simple yes or no question on unification, citizens in the North and South will more likely be asked to vote on a specific model of reunification. “More likely the Southern government, having prepared the public through assemblies, meetings of the parliament, detailed research would articulate a specific model of reunification before the first referendum, which would have to be in the North.” ...

In other words, the possibility that Northern Ireland would slot into the Republic the way it currently sits as part of the United Kingdom would be unlikely. Instead, the concept of Irish nationhood would have to be reimagined — on both sides of the border, said O’Leary. “The question will be how and whether Southern institutions change. Many questions will have to be considered — from the Irish flag, to the role of the queen, to the issue of dual citizenship.”

One of the main challenges for the Republic would be the economic consequences of absorbing Northern Ireland. The region is one of the most economically challenged parts of U.K., with an underdeveloped private sector, many young people unemployed, and a heavy dependence on an annual grant from London.

Still, O’Leary thinks the idea of an insuperable economic obstacle is overplayed, pointing out that current calculations about how much the North costs Britain are based on flawed understandings of how expenditure and taxation are calculated. 

“The Republic of Ireland is richer per head today by some significant margin than West Germany was in 1989. Northern Ireland is richer today with or without support from the British economy than East Germany was in 1989. German unification has taken place — it’s not perfect but it certainly is not a disaster.” ...

Neale Richmond, a Fine Gael member of the Irish parliament, believes that Brexit has brought the prospect of a unified Ireland closer, but says the rights of those who identify as British must be respected. “The challenge for those who believe in unity is to reach out to the unionists and other communities to convince and reassure. We need a new Ireland that is genuinely inclusive of a minority British population, one whose identity will be respected and who will see no diminution of their rights.”

Privately, officials in Dublin say the Irish government will not push for a vote if there are any signs of a resurgent loyalist paramilitarism in the North or South. ...

Ironically, many analysts believe that Sinn Féin is one of the biggest obstacles to Irish unity. Most Northern unionists would balk at the prospect of a referendum pushed by a party still associated with figures like Gerry Adams, the former Sinn Féin president who served time in prison and was banned from visiting the United States for years. The party is also viewed with similar suspicion by many in the South, especially given that some of its politicians and advisers are former prisoners released as part of the Good Friday Agreement (though the popularity of the party among younger voters shows that this is not a concern for those who did not live through the Troubles).

Privately, some at the highest levels of leadership in Sinn Féin worry that if they were to get into government in the South at the next election, they would come under enormous pressure from their own base to push for an Irish unity referendum. The risk is that a vote could be held before popular support has time to build — with the failed 2014 Scottish independence referendum offering a cautionary tale.

https://www.politico.eu/article/northern-ireland-election-2022-referendu...

jerrym

Around the world the right wing is in the ascendent, especially right wing populism. One country that is going in the opposite direction is the Republic of Ireland where left wing Sinn Fein at 35% is leading in the polls by a wide margin over the two totally dominant for a century right wing parties Fine Gael at 21% and Fianna Fail at 17% and a host of other parties. In Northern Ireland, Sinn Fein for the first time in history has also become the dominant party.  Kevin Callahan argues that there are lessons to be learned from Sinn Fein's popularity, with its focus on "good health care, access to decent housing and education", for the Canadian left. 

Last May, a political earthquake shook Ireland. Sinn Féin became the largest party in the Northern Ireland Assembly and won the First Minister position. The Northern Ireland state was created a century ago to copper-fasten the political hegemony of Unionists (those wanting to remain part of the United Kingdom) and exclude the Irish Nationalist minority from any meaningful participation in politics. The minority community endured discrimination in housing and employment and frequently suffered physical repression from the sectarian police. That Sinn Féin can now win the largest number of seats in the Assembly is a stunning reversal of the established order.

On May 26, Quebec Solidaire international affairs critic MNA Andres Fontecilla formally welcomed Sinn Féin MP Órfhlaith Begley to the Quebec National Assembly and called for support for Sinn Féin’s demand for a vote on Irish unity. Ms. Begley also met with NDP deputy leader Alexandre Boulerice MP during her visit to Montreal. Nonetheless, Canadian progressives remain largely unaware of the Sinn Féin phenomenon, and it is past time they started paying attention. 

Sinn Féin is both the oldest and the newest political actor on the Irish scene. Founded in 1905, the party won 75 per cent of seats in Ireland in the 1918 UK election but refused to go to Westminster. Instead, Sinn Féin MPs set up an Irish parliament in Dublin and declared a Republic. The British government tried to crush this initiative, which led to a bloody guerrilla war between the Irish Republican Army and the British Army. Finally, in 1922, Ireland was divided with the northern six counties kept by the UK, while the South became largely independent. The peace settlement was divisive, and a civil war followed. The two opposing parties in this violent conflict are both splits from the original Sinn Féin and became the establishment parties that have exchanged power back and forth for the last century. Fianna Fail and Fine Gael detest each other but now form a coalition government because Sinn Féin has emerged as the largest party in the Republic and is the official opposition. Moreover, Sinn Féin is largely favoured to form the Irish government after the next general election. This is the incredible progress from the bad old days of the 30-year armed conflict (1968 -1998) when Sinn Féin members were heavily censored by the media, harassed by British security forces, and were targets of assassination by Loyalist paramilitaries in collusion with British intelligence agencies. At that period, the party was labeled a one-issue party, that being Irish unity.

Today, Sinn Féin still advocates for a vote on Irish unity as provided for by the Good Friday Agreement (GFA) that brought an end to the 30-year conflict. However, it does not simply want to attach the North to the South and call it a day. Sinn Féin calls for a citizen’s assembly where the people of the island will be invited to discuss what a new progressive, inclusive united Ireland would look like. As Paul Maskey, Sinn Féin MP for West Belfast said recently at a conference of progressive European parties: “We want to build a just, fair, and equal Ireland, an economically prosperous and socially and culturally inclusive Ireland. We want to protect our most vulnerablethe elderly, children, the ill, the ethnic minorities, those with disabilities – and ensure that equality is the touchstone upon which all policies are formulated. The Sinn Féin vision of a united Ireland is based on the principles of equality, inclusion, and sovereignty.” 

Sinn Féin’s message of a new united Ireland where people have good health care, access to decent housing and education, and cultural affirmation is resonating with voters, and particularly with the young. Under the dynamic leadership of its president Mary Lou McDonald and vice-president Michelle O’Neill, the party is promoting a progressive agenda and attracting support. Gender equality is a core value in the party as evidenced by its two female leaders and that, for the first time for any party, a majority of the successful Sinn Féin candidates in last May’s Northern election were women. 

A successful progressive party should be of interest to the left in Canada in these days of increasing far-right threats to democracy. However, there is another reason why people should pay attention to the rise of Sinn Féin and a likely vote on Irish unity. Canada is home to many people of Irish origin and Canada played an important role in the Irish peace process. Among others, General De Chastelain oversaw the decommissioning of paramilitary weapons and the late Warren Allmand, OC, led several observer missions to defuse provocative Orange Order marches through nationalist communities. These days, the Good Friday Agreement is being threatened by the increasingly rogue British Tory government. Brexit could lead to a hard border between the Republic of Ireland and the six-counties which would violate the legally binding Good Friday Agreement. This catastrophe has so far been avoided because the European Community negotiated and signed the Northern Ireland Protocol with Boris Johnson in December 2019. Almost immediately, Johnson began to claim he had not understood the implications of the Protocol and threatened to tear it up (despite it being a negotiated treaty). His  successor Liz Truss has also indicated that she might simply scrap the Protocol, thus provoking a trade war with the EU and violating the GFA. 

The Canadian government is currently negotiating a new trade agreement with the UK. It is essential that any such agreement reinforce and not undermine the Good Friday Agreement. Furthermore, progressives should support what is the logical solution to the current crisis – a vote on Irish unity. Friends of Sinn Féin Canada is holding a cross-country Irish unity road show this year, which will finish in October with Sinn Féin MP for North Belfast John Finucane meeting Canadian politicians on Parliament Hill. Finucane will be bringing the message of a united Ireland in the making. Canadian progressives should listen to this message and support making it a reality.

https://rabble.ca/politics/world-politics/why-canadian-progressives-shou...

epaulo13

jerrym

Left wing Sinn Finn continues to lead in the Irish Republic polls with 31% of respondents after its stunning 24.5% showing in the 2020 election. With quite a number of small left-wing parties also running, Sinn Fein might be able to form the government in the next election.  

March 22, 2023 Red C/Business Post Poll 

Sin Fein 31%

Finn Gael (right wing) 22%

Finna Fail (right wing) 15%

Social Democrats 6%

Labour Party 4%

People Before Profits - Solidarity Party 3%

Green Party 3%

Aontu Party (left wing economics and social conservatism) 2% 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Next_Irish_general_election

Here is Sinn Fein's Irish Republic policy platform that caused its sudden rise in the polls in the 2020 election: 

At the most recent election in the Republic of Ireland, Sinn Féin committed to:

  • 100,000 social and affordable homes over 5 years, along with a ban on rent increases for three years and a tax credit worth up to one month's rent
  • Tapering out tax credits for workers earning over €120,000
  • Investing €75 million into creating a Worker Co-operative development fund
  • Abolishing Universal Social Charge (USC) for workers earning less than €30,000
  • Establishing a state owned childcare service
  • Establishment of a government fund to aid small and medium enterprises
  • An "all-Ireland" economy with a common currency and one tax
  • Abolishing Property Tax

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinn_Féin

 

jerrym

Sinn Fein continued its winning streak in Ireland, making record gains in local elections in Northern Ireland, thereby becoming the largest party in municipal councils for the first time in the North, just as it became the largest party in Northern Ireland's assembly for the first time last year. It has also continued to grow in the Republic of Ireland and now is the largest party their according to polling (see last post).  It combines left wing policies with the reunification of Ireland. 

Sinn Féin, once the party of the Irish Republican Army, made record gains in the Northern Ireland local elections this weekend, something made possible by voters’ growing frustration with the opposing Democratic Unionist Party’s (DUP's) blocking of a power-sharing government at Stormont for more than a year.

The semi-autonomous Belfast government has been suspended since the DUP walked out to protest a post-Brexit customs border between Northern Ireland and Great Britain.

With counting completed late Saturday, Sinn Féin, which seeks unification of Northern Ireland with the Republic of Ireland, took 144 of 462 local government seats — an increase of 39 from the last local government elections in 2019. Its main rival, DUP, which wants Northern Ireland to remain a part of the UK, captured 122 seats, while the centrist Alliance Party had 67.

Sinn Féin became the largest party for the first time after last year's May 2022 assembly election, beating out DUP, which had dominated the legislature for two decades.

Sinn Féin Vice President Michelle O’Neill, who should have become first minister after last year’s historic assembly election, called the local election victories "momentous."

"The onus is now on the British and Irish governments to get together and focus their efforts on the immediate restoration of the executive and assembly," she said, according to Sky News. "All the while when the DUP stay out of the executive and the assembly public services are suffering, the public are suffering because of austerity, because of cuts that are coming directly from London."

Social Democratic and Labour Party leader Colum Eastwood, whose party was one of the architects of the Good Friday Agreement 25 years ago, attributed heavy losses in the recent elections to more moderate voters’ growing frustration with the DUP-induced deadlock.

"They’re very annoyed that Michelle O’Neill hasn’t been able to become first minister," Eastwood said, according to Politico. "They want politicians to get back to work and deal with the issues besetting our community. Now it’s over to the DUP to get on with it."...

Northern Ireland is the only part of the U.K. that shares a border with an EU member – the Republic of Ireland. 

That border is particularly sensitive because of the history of sectarian violence on the island of Ireland, and Britain and the EU agreed to keep the border free of customs posts and other checks to honor Northern Ireland's peace process. Instead, there were checks on some goods entering Northern Ireland from the rest of the U.K. 

That angered the DUP, which maintained that the new trade arrangements undermine Northern Ireland’s place in the U.K. In February, the U.K. and the European Union agreed to a deal to overcome the political crisis. The so-called Windsor Framework aimed to ease customs checks and other hurdles for goods moving to Northern Ireland from the rest of the U.K.

The U.K. and the EU hailed their deal as a decisive breakthrough in their often fractious relationship. The agreement also gives Northern Ireland politicians a mechanism, known as the Stormont Brake, to challenge new EU trade rules that could apply — a key unionist demand. However, the DUP rejected the deal, refusing to take part in the power-sharing government.

"Jeffrey Donaldson has become the greatest recruiting sergeant possible for republicans. The longer Michelle O’Neill is blocked from becoming first minister, the more voters are driven into the arms of her party," wrote Suzanne Breen, a political editor for the Belfast Telegraph.

https://news.yahoo.com/sinn-f-gains-record-wins-131749449.html

jerrym

As of May 9th, left wing Sinn Finn lead in the Irish Republic polls continues to with 33% of respondents supporting it compared to 19% each for the two tradionally dominant parties for the last century.

Sin Fein 33%

Finn Gael (right wing) 19%

Finna Fail (right wing) 19%

Independents and others 12%

Social Democrats 4%

Labour Party 4%

Green Party 4%

People Before Profits - Solidarity Party 1%

Aontu Party (left wing economics and social conservatism) 1% 

https://www.politico.eu/europe-poll-of-polls/ireland/

JKR

Those numbers would be great for Sin Fein if Ireland used FPTP. Under STV they won't get any unfair bonuses for coming in first place.

Pogo Pogo's picture

Second preferences for all parties are very important. So finishing first is great but if the supporters of other parties don't want anything to do with that party then it will likely not end up with the most seats (like 2020). In essence you need to be liked and you need to be not hated.

Ken Burch

Pogo wrote:

Second preferences for all parties are very important. So finishing first is great but if the supporters of other parties don't want anything to do with that party then it will likely not end up with the most seats (like 2020). In essence you need to be liked and you need to be not hated.

At this point, it's probably that Sinn Fein ISN'T hated.

If anybody's hated in Irish politics these days other than FF/FG- those parties used to win better than 60% of the vote between them, that poll has their cumulative first-preference vote at 38%- if is probably Irish Labour.

The voters have never forgiven Labour for not taking the chance to sit as the official opposition after the 2011 election, when they finished second with 37 seats, but instead agreeing to be an essentially powerless and irrelevant junior partner in a Fine Gael government that implemented a brutal and probably unnecessary series of austerity budgets. Labour's support collapsed after the next election and has never recovered- they've spent eight years now at single-digit strength in the polls and a single-digit group of deputies in the Dail.

It's also mystifying that Labour and the Social Democrats haven't merged or even, as far as I know, worked out a preference arrangement between them by now- their policies are almost identical and they seem to care about nothing but trying to appeal to the same dwindling group of voters who identify as "socially progressive but fiscally conservative"- you'd think they'd realize that they need to work together simply to survive.

It's also bizarre that the Greens keep letting themselves get roped into backing FF and FG-and now an FF/FG coalition, of all things-governments and support for the kind of cuts that has caused their popular support to nearly vanish in several recent elections.

As to second preferences, I'd hope SF voters gave theirs to People Before Profits and the large contingent of left-wing independents that would probably give a SF government some sort of support.

jerrym

Pogo wrote:

Second preferences for all parties are very important. So finishing first is great but if the supporters of other parties don't want anything to do with that party then it will likely not end up with the most seats (like 2020). In essence you need to be liked and you need to be not hated.

In 2020, Sinn Fein did not lose seats because people hated it but because it made a strategic error. Based on its past history it chose to run one candidate in Ireland's three member ridings in order to maximize the votes for its sole candidate, because in the past it had typically finished as the third, fourth or worse party in terms of the share of the vote. Sinn Fein did not realize how popular its left-wing policies were, especially its housing policies, in an era of austerity created by Fine Gael and Fianna Fail, the two major right-wing parties. Had they run more candidates they would definitely have won more seats. They won't make the same mistake in the next election. In the 2020 election Sinn Fein got 24.5% of the vote; the latest poll (May 9th) has them at 33% of the vote in the Republic of Ireland.

Quote:
Journalists commented on the effects of Sinn Féin's late surge and unexpectedly high first-preference vote. John Drennan listed eleven constituencies where it might have won another seat had it run an extra candidate.[77] Marie O'Halloran observed that Sinn Féin transfers affected the outcome of 21 constituencies, favouring other left-wing parties.[78] Sean Murray noted that Solidarity–People Before Profit benefited most from Sinn Féin transfers.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinn_Féin

Here are the social policies it ran on in the 2020 election.

Quote:
At the most recent election in the Republic of Ireland, Sinn Féin committed to:

100,000 social and affordable homes over 5 years, along with a ban on rent increases for three years and a tax credit worth up to one month's rent
Tapering out tax credits for workers earning over €120,000
Investing €75 million into creating a Worker Co-operative development fund
Abolishing Universal Social Charge (USC) for workers earning less than €30,000
Establishing a state owned childcare service
Establishment of a government fund to aid small and medium enterprises
An "all-Ireland" economy with a common currency and one tax
Abolishing Property Tax


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinn_Féin

Ken Burch

Pogo wrote:

Second preferences for all parties are very important. So finishing first is great but if the supporters of other parties don't want anything to do with that party then it will likely not end up with the most seats (like 2020). In essence you need to be liked and you need to be not hated.

I suppose I should have asked this the first time I responded to this post, but...ok...here goes...do YOU assume that Sinn Fein is hated by most Irish voters?

Pogo Pogo's picture

No I was just looking at their vote and how it didn't translate into seats. STV typically provides bumps to everyone's second choice. So I made the logical leap that for people who voted for other parties, they were not their second choice. However, JerryM pointed out their foot in door strategy of running fewer candidates in multi-party districts, and therefore they did not give voters the option to choose them.

Ken Burch

Pogo wrote:

No I was just looking at their vote and how it didn't translate into seats. STV typically provides bumps to everyone's second choice. So I made the logical leap that for people who voted for other parties, they were not their second choice. However, JerryM pointed out their foot in door strategy of running fewer candidates in multi-party districts, and therefore they did not give voters the option to choose them.

Thank you for clarifying where you were going for that. The other way you can look at SF's performance at the last election is that they had a remarkable degree of vote effeciency- They nominated 42 candidates and elected 37. Fine Gael nominated 82 and elected 35; Fianna Fail nominated 84 and elected 38- which is why Ireland is currently in the bizarre position of having a government which is led by the country's third-largest party.

My guess is...it simply never occurred to SF that they the dramatic breakthrough they made in 2020 was even a remote possibility- in particular, they seem to have assumed they'd have great difficulty electing anyone in any constituency that was not near the border with NI.

jerrym

Pogo wrote:

No I was just looking at their vote and how it didn't translate into seats. STV typically provides bumps to everyone's second choice. So I made the logical leap that for people who voted for other parties, they were not their second choice. However, JerryM pointed out their foot in door strategy of running fewer candidates in multi-party districts, and therefore they did not give voters the option to choose them.

I think you meant multi-member districts - not multi party districts.
As to Northern Ireland, Sinn Fein not only won the most seats in the Northern Ireland FPTP system this year in the local elections, but last year in the Northern Ireland Parliament election of this English colony. Their growing vote share there is in part due to Sinn Fein's left-wing social policies, but also to the growing frustration that the NI Parliament is not meeting because the largest and most militant Unionist Party, the DUP, has refused to sit in a Parliament where they are outnumbered by Sinn Fein.
How far out on the right is the DUP? Its founder, Protestant fundamentalist Ian Paisley, claimed that the Pope was the AntiChrist and in league with the Communists to rule the world, with their first target being Northern Ireland. However, Paisley is dead now and even their current leader admitted the public was sending them a message with the DUP's decreasing vote share about doing something besides boycotting the NI Parliament.
Catholics already outnumber Protestants in NI according to the 2021 census with Catholics being 45.7% of the population to Protestants 43.5%, with the rest being other religions or no religion (https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-62980394). In the 1920s Catholics were just 33% of the population while Protestants were 66%, but higher birth rates and lower emigration rates have slowly changed that. Since 69% of those over 90 are Protestant and children are now over 50% Catholics, the percent of the population that is Catholic will increase making reunification with the Republic increasingly likely over time.

Quote:
In the past 20 years, the number of people from a Protestant background has dropped by more than ten per cent.
A decline which has been linked to an ageing Protestant population with high mortality.
By contrast, the profile of the population from a Catholic background is much younger and in the same 20-year period has risen by around three per cent.
Those pushing for a border poll and united Ireland will be energised by the census figures.
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-62980394

jerrym

Left wing nationalist Sinn Fein continues to lead in Irish Republic polls for 73rd consecutive poll since June 2021

Ireland Thinks/Sunday Independent Poll September 1st 2023

Sin Fein 33%

Finn Gael (right wing) 21%

Finna Fail (right wing) 18%

Independents and others 10%

Social Democrats 6%

People Before Profits - Solidarity Party 3%

Labour Party 3%

Green Party 2%

Aontu Party (left wing economics and social conservatism) 2% 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Next_Irish_general_election

jerrym

Northern Ireland is on the verge of a historic event. The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) is on the verge of returning to the power sharing agreement with the Republican Sinn Fein Party which would be under the leadership of a Republican Sinn Fein Prime Minister for the first time in Northern Ireland's 100 year history. Demographic shifts and Brexit are playing a major role in the change. For the first time in the history of Northern Ireland since the Protestant Plantation settlement from Scotland and England of the 1600s, the number of Catholics in Northern Ireland outnumbered the number of Protestants in the 2021 census. Reflecting this demographic shift, the Republican Sinn Fein party, whose goal is unification with the Republic of Ireland, won the most seats in the legislature in the 2022 Northern Ireland election. Because of the DUP's loss of power and the restrictions in Northern Ireland trade created by Brexit (which the Northern Irish voted against), the DUP has refused to power share with Sinn Fein for two years. However, the DUP is now saying it has "reached a deal with the British government on the operation of post-Brexit trade rules that would allow it to return to the region's power-sharing government".

 The leader of Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) said it had reached a deal with the British government on the operation of post-Brexit trade rules that would allow it to return to the region's power-sharing government.

Northern Ireland has been without a devolved government for almost two years after the DUP walked out in protest over the trade rules, which it said created barriers with the rest of the United Kingdom and undermined Northern Ireland's place in it.

A return to government by the region's largest pro-British party offers a way out of a crisis that posed an existential threat to the political settlement underpinning Northern Ireland's 1998 peace deal, and also puts an end to one of the most difficult aspects of Britain's withdrawal from the European Union.

"I am pleased to report that the party executive has now endorsed the proposals that I have put to them," Jeffrey Donaldson told a news conference in the early hours of Tuesday morning after an hours-long briefing to DUP lawmakers and party members.

"Subject to the binding commitments between the Democratic Unionist Party and the UK government being fully and faithfully delivered as agreed... the package of measures in totality does provide a basis for our party to nominate members to the Northern Ireland executive," he added.

Any deal risked a split in the DUP while also providing ammunition to rivals including the much smaller Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV) party, who oppose any compromise, ahead of a UK general election due by late January next year.

Earlier around 50 protesters, some holding Union Jack flags and signs saying "Stop DUP sellout", gathered outside the hotel where Donaldson briefed party members after months of closely guarded talks.

The DUP leader said the party made a decisive decision and that the result of a vote was "very clear".

SINN FEIN LEADER

Donaldson said the measures, which will be underpinned by new UK laws, will remove checks for goods moving within the UK and remaining in Northern Ireland, guarantee unfettered access for Northern Ireland businesses to the UK market and safeguard the region's place in the UK.

He said London would publish details "in due course" and could move quickly to enable the DUP to take its place back in Belfast's Stormont Assembly.

Irish nationalists and pro-British unionist politicians are obliged to share power under the terms of the 1998 Good Friday peace accord that ended three decades of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland.

Britain's Northern Ireland Minister, Chris Heaton-Harris, said on social media platform X that the parties entitled to form an executive would meet later on Tuesday and that he hoped the assembly would return "as soon as possible."

Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald, whose Irish nationalist party became the largest in the British-run region for the first time at elections shortly after the DUP walkout, said she was optimistic that the assembly would be restored by Feb. 8.

That will allow Sinn Fein to assume the role of Northern Ireland first minister, the latest political milestone for the former political wing of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) who want to leave the United Kingdom and form a united Ireland.

https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/northern-irelands-dup-strikes-deal-retu...

jerrym

The British Parliamen passed legislation to simplify Brexit trade rules in Northern Ireland Thursday. This will allow Northern Ireland’s Stormont power-sharing executive to reconvene as early as Saturday with the Republican Sinn Fein leader as the First Minister for the first time in the 100 year history of Northern Ireland. The Sinn Fein Party wants unification with the Republic of Ireland and with Catholics now outnumbering Protestants, since the 2021 census, Sinn Fein have won the most seats in the legislature. The Unionist pro-English parties had objected to the trade rules and voted against Brexit. So with the new trade rules modified for Northern Ireland, the largest Unionist party says it is willing to be the junior partner in the Northern Ireland legislature for the first time in history, after two years of baulking at the old Brexit trade rules and the fact that Republican Sinn Fein would be the senior partner in government. Even their the Unionists own supporters were demanding the return of the legislature to deal with societal problems.

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https://www.ft.com/content/281d3630-020b-4673-965c-6bae879dad0a

Legislation to simplify crucial Brexit trade rules for Northern Ireland and reaffirm its position as part of the UK was approved by MPs in Westminster on Thursday, paving the way to end two years of political paralysis in the region. The government had drawn up the changes — outlined in a 76-page Command Paper called “Safeguarding the Union” — together with Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist party to address its objections to a customs border in the Irish Sea that it said inhibited trade with the British mainland and undermined the region’s place in the UK. The vote in the House of Commons will allow Northern Ireland’s Stormont power-sharing executive to reconvene as early as this weekend. This will end a nearly two-year hiatus triggered by bitter unionist divisions over the trade border in the Irish Sea created by the UK’s Brexit deal with the EU. Ireland’s Taoiseach Leo Varadkar said in Brussels on Thursday that the EU had some questions about the deal but added that nobody at this stage had raised “any red flags or anything that gives us major concern”. After the vote, DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson signalled he would back a recall of Stormont on Saturday ending a near two-year boycott by his party. The resumption of the power-sharing executive will be a historic moment. Michelle O’Neill will become the first pro-Irish unity nationalist first minister in a region partitioned from the rest of the island more than a century ago for the then protestant unionist majority. O’Neill, who is deputy leader of Sinn Féin, which is now the largest party on both sides of the Irish border, has vowed to be a “first minister for all”. Under the power-sharing agreement, created by the 1998 Good Friday peace deal that ended three decades of conflict in the region, the post of deputy first minister, which has equal legal status, will now go to the DUP, after the region’s largest unionist party came second in the last elections. Nevertheless, O’Neill’s appointment remains a symbolic blow to hardline unionists. Some of them remain unconvinced by this week’s deal. DUP MP Sammy Wilson said he did not support it and warned that key details still needed to be finalised. Under last year’s Windsor framework, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak secured key changes to the original Brexit trade rules in agreement with the EU. He said Northern Ireland would enjoy privileged access to the EU’s single market, making it the “world’s most exciting economic zone”. But the DUP — which objected to customs checks on goods entering Northern Ireland from Britain and staying in the region — held out for more. As it maintained its boycott of Stormont during the negotiations with British ministers, Northern Ireland’s public finances sank deep into the red, hitting public services and triggering swept by strikes. The financial pressures will be eased by Stormont’s return, which will unlock a £3.3bn financial rescue package from the UK government. But there were more strikes this week as workers pressed for immediate pay rises.

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The two pieces of secondary legislation passed by MPs on Thursday will guarantee unfettered trade access for goods moving from Britain to Northern Ireland and validate the region’s status as part of the UK. Donaldson said the measures to ease customs checks would deliver real change. But the reaffirmation of Northern Ireland’s place in the UK “is lots of unionist words that change nothing”, said one former senior UK official. By law, Northern Ireland will remain a part of the UK until a majority of the region’s population decides otherwise — something that polls show remains a distant prospect. Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald said this week in Belfast that conversations about a “new Ireland” were gaining traction and Irish reunification was “within touching distance”.

https://www.ft.com/content/281d3630-020b-4673-965c-6bae879dad0a

epaulo13

..the globalization of the palestinian struggle is striping the clothes off emperors. 

To stand with Gaza, Ireland's Sinn Féin must boycott Biden for St Patrick's Day

In just a few weeks time, Sinn Féin’s leadership will be jetting off to the White House to celebrate St Patrick’s Day with US President Joe Biden.

Every year, the US president hosts a reception marking Saint Patrick’s Day (17 March), where he poses with shamrocks beside leading Irish politicians embarrassingly blushing in his presence. 

But this year, Biden has been sued in federal court over his blanket support and complicity in Israel’s unfolding genocide in Gaza, which has killed more than 27,000 Palestinians.

Palestinians, including Omar Barghouti, the founder of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, have called on Irish political parties and leaders to boycott this year’s ceremony, but Sinn Féin, the largest all-Ireland party, has ignored these calls.

Sinn Féin has been facing increased scrutiny over their politically calculated response to the massacre of Palestinians in Gaza. The party has a long history of solidarity with Palestine, built on decades of solidarity between Palestinian and Irish anti-colonial resistance.

Sinn Féin has been calling for a ceasefire, but since 7 October has been playing politics when it comes to Gaza and has failed to take any meaningful measures to challenge the Israel’s US-sponsored genocide. 

At a protest for Gaza in Belfast, Sinn Féin speakers were met with deafening boos from protesters. Countless Sinn Féin supporters were left puzzled by the party’s decision to abstain from multiple council votes to expel the Israeli ambassador from Ireland.

Now, the party has voted against a motion in Derry Council calling to boycott the White House. 

quote:

After having her membership terminated from Sinn Féin without explanation, Farrah Koutteineh explores the Irish party's evolution from a revolutionary one that stood with Palestine to one that prioritises election results over Palestinian voices https://t.co/vuHDFEVIBj

 

Even more outrageously, former Sinn Féin Leader Gerry Adams recently stated that the party jetting off to the White House is paramount to the Irish struggle for a united Ireland, and that “Palestinian’s should understand” that “your own struggle…has to be your primary focus”.

This is an absolutely tone deaf remark that disregards the polar opposite realities of genocide in Gaza, and him celebrating at the White House with no warplanes or drones flying overhead.

Adam’s preposterous speech also undermines the importance of true solidarity, and that no struggle takes priority over another; all of our struggles are vehemently interconnected.....

jerrym

As someone whose family farm on my mother's side in Ireland still contains the ruins of farmhouses of families that did not survive the Irish famine of 1845-1853 in a country where one quarter of the population starved to death and one quarter of the people, including my great-great-grandparents on my father's side, had to emigrate in order to survive, I find the trivialization of famine is exactly what those opposed to dealing with famine do in order to excuse doing nothing about it and even supporting the acts bringing on the famine. I don't see anythng funny about 500,000+ people starving to death that are already at risk of starving to death with even more potentially at risk of starving if food aid does not quickly arrive. Twenty relief agencies have warned that there is no organization or group of organizations that can replace UNRWA. On CBC News Network's Power and Politics, Danny Glenwright Executive Director and President of Save the Children Canada, said that "80% of aid in Gaza is provided by UNRWA. Simply put, no other organization, inlcuding ourselves, can do that job." Yet Israel continues to block all but a trickle of food into Gaza, and 15 western countries, including Canada, the US, and Britain, have cut funding to UNRWA knowing damn well the consequences that entails. Ireland, has opposed the war and famine because it knows exactly what famine is and that it is always a political act of violence and genocide.

The Minister of Foreign Affairs for the Republic of Ireland, Michael Martin, as a representative of the only Western government supporting the Palestinians, made this comment in the Irish Parliament about Gaza, the war and the resulting famine, noting the support of all members, of all political parties of the right, centre and left, of the Irish Parliament for his statement:

Quote:
"All of us in this House are united in our view that what is happening in Gaza must stop. There should and must be a ceasefire. All of us here – and all of the Irish people – are appalled by what we see unfolding. 1.9 million people have been displaced from their homes and have nowhere safe to go. At least 10,000 of the 26,000 Palestinians that have been killed in Gaza since October are children. 90% of the 2.3 million people in Gaza are now acutely food insecure and that the UN is warning of a real risk of famine. No one in this House believes that any of this is acceptable."

(https://www.gov.ie/en/speech/af84b-tanaiste-dail-statement-on-south-afri...)

jerrym

A new poll in Northern Ireland asked if Northern Irelanders thought Ireland would unite with the Repbulic of Ireland ten years after the 2021 centary English government split it off from the Republic of Ireland, that is by 2031, or 25 years after the 2021 centary by 2046, or ever. While a majority said they did not feel the two would unite by 2031, a majority felt it would happen by 2046. This reflects a ongoing demographic shift that saw the Catholics become more numerous than the Protestants for the first time in the one hundred year history of Northern Ireland in the 2021 census and with Catholics having far more school age children while Protestants forming a far greater percentage of senior citizens, it seems that the demand for unification will increase over time. 

NDPP

Watch

https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1755654551711998258

"The Irish basketball team declined to shake hands with the Israeli team or join them at center court for the national anthems in protest against the Israeli crimes in Gaza and the inflammatory comments made by Israeli players and staff about the Irish players."

NDPP

President of Sinn Fein says Palestinians Have Endured 'Generational Injustice' (&vid)

https://twitter.com/DalrympleWill/status/1755999447064993976

"Sinn Fein making more sense and speaking with more humanity than all the pathetic English politicians put together."

Why am I not surprised. Funny, even here, those who have lived under colonialism get it about others similarly suffering under it.

Conversely, those who identify with the colonizers or who live/profit off the avails of settler-colonization don't.

Hence Canadian complicity of all parliamentary parties. Watch their adherents effortlessly and shamelessly redouble support to these disgusting pro-Zionist genocide fellow-travellers once this 'ends'.

We need to change this picture and stop settling for a lesser evilism which becomes ever more evil than lesser, by the day.

jerrym

Left wing nationalist Sinn Fein continues to lead in Irish Republic polls for 85th consecutive poll since June 2021

Ireland Thinks/Sunday Independent Poll Feb. 6 2024

Sin Fein 28%

Finn Gael (right wing) 20%

Finna Fail (right wing) 19%

Independents and others 17%

Green Party 6%

Social Democrats 4%

Labour Party 4%

People Before Profits - Solidarity Party 2%

Aontu Party (left wing economics and social conservatism) 1%

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Next_Irish_general_election

jerrym

wrong thread

epaulo13

Irish Leader Leo Varadkar Resigns: “The Time Has Come to Pass on the Baton”

In a surprise move, Ireland’s leader, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, announced Wednesday he is resigning, stating simply, “The time has come to pass on the baton.”

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar: “I know inevitably there will be speculation as to the, quote-unquote, 'real reason' for my decision. These are the real reasons. That’s it. I have nothing else lined up. I have nothing in mind. I have no definite personal or political plans. But I’m really looking forward to having the time to think about them.”

At 45, Varadkar is Ireland’s youngest-ever taoiseach. He’s also Ireland’s first openly gay leader and first Indian and mixed-race leader. On Sunday, he called for a Gaza ceasefire as he joined President Biden at the White House for a St. Patrick’s Day celebration.

epaulo13

No, Leo Varadkar Was Not a “Progressive”

quote:

However, for many people who have lived through Varadkar’s almost two decades in public life — including his stints as taoiseach and tánaiste (deputy prime minister) in coalition governments over the past seven years — he will be remembered differently. He represented a politics that deepened inequalities in the name of market sovereignty and social privilege, a politics in which progressive reforms could indeed be granted by public representatives, albeit seemingly on the basis of personal expediency and very often with strings attached. There was always a clear neoliberal edge to Varadkar’s pronouncements and reforms.....

JKR

The per capita GDP of Ireland is over US$100,000! Amazing progress there! Of course more can be done.

jerrym

Per capita income in Ireland is $104,000 according to World Bank data (https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.PCAP.CD?locations=IE) and Ireland has made a remarkable economic recovery since the 2008 global financial crisis when the government bailed out the private Irish banks debt to save them at the cost of severe hardship for many Irish people. However, the result has been extreme economic inequality built on extremely low tax rates attracting corporations to put their financial centres in Ireland while enabling them to do business in the EU and hide profits in Ireland. That inequality led to the emergence of the left-wing Sinn Fein party from almost one hundred years in the political doldrums with low single digit support. Sinn Fein had orginally  emerged as the political arm of the IRA in the fight for Irish independence to capture 75% of seats in the 1917 election when it refused to pay taxes to the English government and to oppose conscription of Irishmen to die in the battlefields of the British Empire in WWI. Sinn Fein did not want to give up Northern Ireland or swear an oath of allegiance to the English king as part of the peace treaty which its more right-wing members agreed to. Sinn Fein lost popularity over time as people got tired of fighting over five years and faced the prospect of the English bringing in massive forces to destroy the movement for independence now that WWI was over and England could concentrate its forces on Ireland.
So why did this sudden revival of Sinn Fein happen in 2020? Because while a well educated elite rolled in money, many, many people couldn't afford housing and they turned in 2020 to the one party that had a major housing platform, Sinn Fein, while it also deemphasized its struggle for unification with Northern Ireland. Even Sinn Fein did not see this coming as they only put up one candidate in each of the three member electoral districts in the hopes of maximizing their voting efficiency, but instead found themselves missing the opportunity to pick up many more seats. Despite running only one third of the possible candidates possible, Sinn Fein tied for the most seats against a party that won almost an entire slate of candidates. The fact that Sinn Fein has continued to lead in the polls non-stop since November 2020 shows that many people not only don't trust the two right wing parties, Fine Gael and Fianna Fail, that have ruled Ireland since independence because they precipatated the financial crisis in Ireland (the massive debt came not from the government but from the government bailing out a corrupt banking system) and the extreme inequality, in which the elite that were bailed out by the government now do extremely well while many have trouble finding a home. Another important event occurred in 2020 with the census showing in Northern Ireland showing that for the first time in the history of Northern Ireland the number of Catholics outnumbered the number of Protestants, and the demographic picture there is one with an aging Protestant population and a young Catholic population, meaning that population trend will continue. So now what seemed unlikely in the forseeable future, a united Ireland, seems increasingly possible with the major two right wing parties now saying for the first time that they would support a referendum for unification when that seems likely to succeed, a position that Sinn Fein has had for years. The next election must be held by March 2025.

kropotkin1951

JKR wrote:

The per capita GDP of Ireland is over US$100,000! Amazing progress there! Of course more can be done.

The Irish get a lot of things right and then vote in politicians that are proactive.

"New polling shows that 71% of people in Ireland agree that Palestinian people live under a system of apartheid implemented against them by Israel.

The polling was carried out by Ireland Thinks on behalf of the Irish Anti-Apartheid Campaign for Palestine (IAACP).

When asked: “The UN defines apartheid as involving systematic oppression, domination and discrimination by one racial group over another racial group. To what extent do you think this applies to the situation facing Palestinians?”, 71% agreed.

When broken down by political party support, all parties in Government had a majority in agreement, with 85% of Green Party, 71% of Fianna Fáil, and 56% of Fine Gael supporters agreeing with this statement.

Among opposition parties, 100% of Solidarity PBP, 90% of Labour, 86% of Social Democrats, 80% of Sinn Féin, and 41% of Aontú supporters agreed.

The twenty-three member organisations of the IAACP have been calling on the Irish Government to officially recognise that Israel is committing the crime of apartheid against Palestinians."

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