DUP leader threatens to collapse Stormont over Northern Ireland protocol
Democratic Unionist Party leader Jeffrey Donaldson has threatened to trigger an election at Stormont within weeks unless there are changes to the Northern Ireland protocol.
Mr Donaldson said it was not sustainable for his party to remain in the powersharing administration under the current post-Brexit arrangements.
âIâm prepared to go to the country and seek a fresh mandate,â the Laggan Valley MP said during a speech in Belfast.
âIf we canât get action taken quickly to address the harm, the damage on a daily basis that this protocol is doing to Northern Ireland, then I think the people of Northern Ireland should have a say in this.â
Sinn Féin criticised Mr Donaldsonâs comments as ârecklessâ and âirresponsibleâ while the SDLP accused the DUP leader of âplaying indulgent gamesâ.
Mr Donaldson made his remarks as European Commission vice-president Maros Sefcovic began a two-day visit to the North.
Mr Donaldson said âconsequences will followâ unless solutions were found to âprevent the situation in Northern Ireland spiralling out of controlâ.
The DUP leader said his party will âimmediately withdrawâ from the North-South political institutions established under the Belfast Agreement. However, he added that âimportant health based matters would continue to be addressedâ.
He said his party wanted to block any additional checks on the Irish Sea for goods travelling between Britain and the North but the legal advice was that they had âvery little room to manoeuvreâ under the protocol arrangements.
If DUP ministers cannot prevent the checks then their position in the power-sharing Executive âwill become untenableâ, Mr Donaldson said.
Mr Donaldson said the timeframe for resolving issues âis weeks, not months or yearsâ.
Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald described Mr Donaldsonâs warnings as a âreckless, irresponsible and short-sighted election stuntâ.
She said: âThe DUP is clearly in panic mode, driven by poor opinion polls, they are focused on their own narrow self-interest ahead of the interests of workers, families and local businesses,â she said.
âUnionism has lost its political majority, the DUP is in disarray and their vote is in decline.â
Ms McDonald said her party would tell Mr Sefcovic, the EU executiveâs chief interlocutor with Britain, that the DUP âdo not represent or speak for the majority of people in the Northâ.
She added: âJeffrey Donaldson and his party championed a hard Brexit along with the Tories regardless of its consequences for jobs, for workers and business... The protocol is a result of this which aims to mitigate the impact of Brexit on business and people of this island.â
Sinn Féin TD Matt Carthy defended the protocol as being in the best interests of workers, businesses, farmers and society in the North and across the island. He accused the DUP of favouring a Brexit scenario that they hoped would lead to a reinforcement of the Border in Ireland.
âThe protocol was the result of many months and years of careful negotiation to try and ensure that that wasnât the case,â the Cavan-Monaghan TD said.
Ulster Unionist Party leader Doug Beattie accused Mr Donaldson of making âthreats leading to instability and further harming our people here in Northern Irelandâ.
âI certainly wonât be asking my party to withdraw from the Executive when we are still dealing with a Covid-19 pandemic and its consequences on a health service which is facing challenges on an unprecedented scale,â he said.
SDLP leader and Foyle MP Colum Eastwood told the BBC the DUP was âplaying indulgent games that are more about polls than protocolsâ.
He said : âWhat Jeffrey really wants is to look at a border on the island of Ireland and that is not acceptable.â
An opinion poll two weeks ago suggested electoral support for the DUP had slumped to 13 per cent, making it the Northâs fourth most popular party, behind Sinn Féin, the UUP and Traditional Unionist Voice.
Mr Sefcovic will meet business and civic leaders and politicians in the North on Thursday, and is due to deliver a speech at Queenâs University, Belfast on UK/EU relations and to meet the North-South Ministerial Council on Friday.
0 Response to "DUP leader threatens to collapse Stormont over Northern Ireland protocol"
Post a Comment