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Northern Ireland Assembly Election 2022


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18 minutes ago, welshbairn said:

The Alliance party has no powers to amend or scrap the protocol, nor to force either the DUP or Sinn Fein to nominate a leader in Stormont. 

The DUP can’t amend the protocol either, yet they can still use the levers of pressure and influence at their disposal.

Alliance could promote a compromise, like they did in 2017.  It would be common sense.

The idea of trade barriers within a country is ridiculous, especially when it goes against the GFA principle of consent.

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It seems to me that withdrawing from a power sharing arrangement during the course of a five year administrative period, whilst bad, has a level of credibility.  Refusing to enter into one immediately after a democratically held election is far less credible unless it was explicitly stated during the campaign that this action would be taken.

 

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53 minutes ago, Duries Air Freshener said:

There’s no way SF would have pulled a stunt like that without the tacit approval of the Alliance Party.

Are they viewed as part of the "pan-nationalist front" now? Think the only people SF would need tacit approval from before any major policy decision are the ones that haven't gone away you know.

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50 minutes ago, LongTimeLurker said:

Are they viewed as part of the "pan-nationalist front" now? Think the only people SF would need tacit approval from before any major policy decision are the ones that haven't gone away you know.

Political parties always have to consider other parties’ actions and their effect on their voters both present and future.

It’s literally what politics means.

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1 hour ago, Granny Danger said:

It seems to me that withdrawing from a power sharing arrangement during the course of a five year administrative period, whilst bad, has a level of credibility.  Refusing to enter into one immediately after a democratically held election is far less credible unless it was explicitly stated during the campaign that this action would be taken.

 

Tbf they collapsed Stormont in February over the protocol, so that has just carried on. What they've refused to say is if they're prepared to nominate a Deputy to serve alongside a Sinn Fein First Minister even if the protocol is resolved. The powers of the positions are identical, so if they refuse it's about their obsession with symbolism, as it was with the Irish Language Act. Anyone might think they prefer being governed by London because they know they're not capable of it themselves. Look at Cash for Ash, which also collapsed Stormont.

Edited by welshbairn
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3 minutes ago, welshbairn said:

Tbf they collapsed Stormont in February over the protocol, so that has just carried on. What they've refused to say is if they're prepared to nominate a Deputy to serve alongside a Sinn Fein First Minister even if the protocol is resolved. The powers of the positions are identical, so if they refuse it's about their obsession about symbolism, as it ever was.

It really just amounts to begging the very people who shafted them to now turn around and save them. It's craven.

People who can be bought, can be sold, then bought and sold again. 

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40 minutes ago, welshbairn said:

Tbf they collapsed Stormont in February over the protocol, so that has just carried on. What they've refused to say is if they're prepared to nominate a Deputy to serve alongside a Sinn Fein First Minister even if the protocol is resolved. The powers of the positions are identical, so if they refuse it's about their obsession with symbolism, as it was with the Irish Language Act. Anyone might think they prefer being governed by London because they know they're not capable of it themselves. Look at Cash for Ash, which also collapsed Stormont.

The Irish Language Act was more about long-term constitutional strategy IMO.

'Giving in' to things like that has consequences in the long run.

Edited by Duries Air Freshener
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4 hours ago, LongTimeLurker said:

Are they viewed as part of the "pan-nationalist front" now? Think the only people SF would need tacit approval from before any major policy decision are the ones that haven't gone away you know.

I've heard Alliance referred as nationalist and unionist by various figures recently, which of course means that they are neither. 

Is there a way that the DUP could just be ignored in the formation of a government and just make the UUP leader deputy FM?

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5 hours ago, Duries Air Freshener said:

The DUP can’t amend the protocol either, yet they can still use the levers of pressure and influence at their disposal.

 

They were in that exact position at UK level in 2017 after the general election and ended up with them signing up to a border in the Irish Sea. They are hopeless. They'll probably manage to bumble their way to a border poll with their 'levers of pressure and influence'. 

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20 minutes ago, sparky88 said:

I've heard Alliance referred as nationalist and unionist by various figures recently, which of course means that they are neither. 

Is there a way that the DUP could just be ignored in the formation of a government and just make the UUP leader deputy FM?

Only if the UUP get more seats than the DUP. I'm beginning to think they should go back to 2006 when the leader and deputy were elected by the Assembly rather than appointed by the top parties from either side.

Edited by welshbairn
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1 minute ago, sparky88 said:

They were in that exact position at UK level in 2017 after the general election and ended up with them signing up to a border in the Irish Sea. They are hopeless. They'll probably manage to bumble their way to a border poll with their 'levers of pressure and influence'. 

The DUP did not sign up to a border in the Irish Sea 😂

There’ll be no border poll any time soon.

The conditions for one are nowhere near to having been met.

 

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2 minutes ago, Duries Air Freshener said:

The DUP did not sign up to a border in the Irish Sea

They made it inevitable by backing the ERG terms for Brexit instead of May's, they were just too thick to realise it.

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24 minutes ago, sparky88 said:

I've heard Alliance referred as nationalist and unionist by various figures recently, which of course means that they are neither. 

Is there a way that the DUP could just be ignored in the formation of a government and just make the UUP leader deputy FM?

 

They officially designate as "other", however, surely if you don't actively back an alternative to the status quo then you're de facto unionist?

 

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7 minutes ago, welshbairn said:

They made it inevitable by backing the ERG terms for Brexit instead of May's, they were just too thick to realise it.

If only they had your intelligence.

They didn’t back any terms that included backstops or protocols which could cause trade barriers to be created within the UK.

Where are you getting this from?

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6 minutes ago, Donathan said:

 

They officially designate as "other", however, surely if you don't actively back an alternative to the status quo then you're de facto unionist?

 

Did this make the Tories pro EU up until June 23rd 2016? Not sure I would call the Tories that, even then. 

There's quite a few example of Nationalists in Alliance, Anna Lo for example. Personally a big fan of parties that don't obsess over constitutional issues, which narrows electoral choice down even in Scotland. 

 

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15 minutes ago, sparky88 said:

Did this make the Tories pro EU up until June 23rd 2016? Not sure I would call the Tories that, even then. 

There's quite a few example of Nationalists in Alliance, Anna Lo for example. Personally a big fan of parties that don't obsess over constitutional issues, which narrows electoral choice down even in Scotland. 

 

 

Were the Conservative Party not officially neutral on Brexit? Cameron campaigned for remain but allowed his MPs to campaign for either side.

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9 minutes ago, Duries Air Freshener said:

If only they had your intelligence.

They didn’t back any terms that included backstops or protocols which could cause trade barriers to be created within the UK.

Where are you getting this from?

The backstop would have prevented any trade barriers for NI, either with the EU or the UK, until the UK wanted to divert from single market rules, which they've shown no intention of doing. The DUP loved all the attention they got from the ERG and went along with them, but they got dumped as soon as they'd got their votes. I wouldn't call that astute politics.

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