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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
: 2001
Election
British general election: Northern Ireland vote deepens instability
By Robert Stevens
12 June 2001
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The June 7 general election saw a sharp polarisation in the
vote between the more extreme pro-British unionist and Irish republican
parties in Northern Ireland.
The main casualty was the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) led by
David Trimble, First Minister in the devolved Northern Ireland
Assembly's. The extreme right wing Democratic Unionist Party (DUP)which
is opposed to power-sharing with the Irish nationalist Sinn Fein
in the Assembly established through the 1997 Good Friday Agreementwas
the main beneficiary of the collapse in the UUP vote. The DUP
made gains against the UUP in every constituency it contested.
In total, 810,383 people voted in Northern Ireland to return
18 Members of Parliament to Westminster. Overall turnout was 68
percent, a 0.9 point increase compared with the 1997 general election.
Trimble's UUP, which previously held 10 seats, gained one and
lost five, leaving it with six MPs. The UUP received 26.8 percent
of all votes cast in Northern Ireland, a decline of nearly six
percent. There was a recount in Trimble's own constituency of
Upper Bann before he was declared the winner. Trimble, who is
widely regarded as the central unionist pillar of the Agreement,
saw his own vote fall by 10.1 percent, as his 15,000 majority
in 1997 was slashed to just over 2,000. David Simpson, the DUP
candidate contesting the Upper Bann seat, saw his vote increase
by 18 percent. During his victory speech, Trimble was heckled
and booed by DUP supporters, and he was jostled outside the counting
hall, requiring a police escort as he left the building.
On June 10, immediately following the election, Trimble insisted
that he would not resign the UUP leadership but stated that if
any member wanted to challenge his position, then they were free
to do so. He said that the issue of the UUP leadership would be
discussed at its Annual General Meeting within the next two weeks.
The pro-unionist London-based Daily Telegraph quoted one
Trimble opponent within the UUP who said, To lose Fermanagh
and South Tyrone, Strangford and East Londonderry is an incredible
defeat and the knives are out. People smell blood. Any challenge
to Trimble's leadership would probably include Jeffrey Donaldson,
the MP for Lagan Valley who is opposed to the Good Friday Agreement
and is seen as a strong candidate to replace him.
The DUP, which is led by the Reverend Ian Paisley, won a further
two seats, taking its total to five. The party's share of the
popular vote was 22.5 percent, an increase of nearly nine percent,
the largest increase of all the participating parties, and represents
the DUP's best ever showing in a general election.
Paisley proclaimed the election result as a vindication of
his party's opposition to the Good Friday Agreement and Sinn Fein
being allowed into the devolved government institutions before
the Irish Republican Army (IRA) had decommissioned its weapons.
Paisley said, "The message is for Mr Trimble to quit: he
has destroyed our country by making concession after concession
to the IRA."
In the republican/nationalist camp, Sinn Fein doubled its seat
tally from two to four, overtaking the Social Democratic Labour
Party (SDLP), which retained its three seats. Sinn Fein is now
the largest republican party in Northern Ireland, with 21.7 percent
of the votean increase of 5.6 percent. The SDLP's share
decreased by 3.1 percent to 21 percent.
Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams won his West Belfast seat and
increased his majority against the SDLP's Alex Attwood whose vote
fell by 10,000 compared with 1997. In Mid-Ulster, Martin McGuinness,
the Sinn Fein Education Secretary in the Northern Ireland Assembly
increased his majority by 5,000, while the SDLP vote decreased
by about 3,000.
SDLP leader John Hume managed to hold his own seat for the
Foyle constituency, which includes Northern Ireland's second largest
city of Derry, but saw his lead over Sinn Fein cut. Deputy leader
Seamus Mallon also retained his seat, but his majority was reduced
substantially by the increased vote for Sinn Fein candidate Conor
Murphy.
The two new seats that Sinn Fein wonWest Tyrone and Fermanagh
& South Tyronewere both at the expense of the Ulster
Unionist Party. Ken Maginnis, the former Ulster Unionist MP and
security spokesman, had held the Fermanagh & South Tyrone
seat for the previous 18 years, but lost to Sinn Fein by only
53 votes after a recount.
UUP candidate James Cooper said that he would contest the election
of the successful Sinn Fein candidate Michelle Gildernew, because
there had been clear and irrefutable evidence of electoral
malpractice.
Traditionally, Sinn Fein candidates elected to Westminster
do not take up their seats.
There are similarities between the increased vote for the DUP
and Sinn Fein, but there are also important differences. Both
parties have benefited from the way in which the Northern Ireland
Agreement made sectarian divisions the basis for the functioning
of the Assembly and its supporting structures. Policy making within
the Assembly requires a majority of votes from parties designated
as either Unionist/Protestant or Republican/Catholic.
The votes of any parties designated as otheri.e.
which do not openly accept such sectarian labelsare largely
inconsequential. Portrayed as a means of overcoming traditional
hostilities through balance and compromise, the Good Friday agreement
has ensured that political life continues to be characterised
by the division of the working class along religious lines.
This was a central aim of the British, Irish and US governments.
They wanted to end armed conflict on the streets, but did not
want a united movement of working people to emerge, so that no
effective challenge would be mounted to their efforts to reshape
the economy of Northern Ireland as a profitable investment location
for the major transnational corporations, hoping to emulate the
economic successes of the southern Irish Republic.
Relying on keeping sectarian tensions within a more manageable
framework, without addressing any of the historical and social
issues that gave rise to them, was never a viable basis for political
stability. Though the IRA has demonstrated a reluctance to decommission
its weapons, the Agreement's efforts to incorporate Sinn Fein
into the new governmental structures in Northern Ireland have
been largely successful, with the organisation enjoying two ministerial
posts in the all-party Executive under First Minister Trimble.
Sinn Fein continues to exploit the legitimate grievances of Catholic
workers, who face routine discrimination in all spheres of life
as well as repression by the British armed forces and the largely
Protestant Royal Ulster Constabulary. But they are fully behind
the Agreement, because it gives them the possibility of achieving
the power and privilege hitherto denied them. Speaking on the
election results, Martin McGuinness, Sinn Fein MP for Mid Ulster
and Education Minister in the Assembly, called on all the parties
to work together. He said, "I think many of the difficulties
and problems that are out there, whether it be the need to bring
about a new beginning to policing, the issue of demilitarisation
and how we get armed groups to put weapons beyond use can be resolved.
I think all of these difficulties, if there is a will, can be
resolved.
The DUP's increased vote at the expense of the UUP is by far
the most problematic for ruling circles in Britain, Ireland and
the US. It confirms the growing disaffection amongst a section
of northern Protestants since the Assembly was set up. The DUP
has made the accusation that the IRA has failed to disarm central
to its propaganda, accusing the UUP of selling out to the
terrorists. But it also exploits fears amongst Protestant
workers who face declining living standards and the fact that
the growing numerical and political strength of Catholic-based
parties will further undermine their own social position. Should
Trimble fall and the UUP be plunged into a leadership contest,
it is difficult to see how the Agreement could be preserved.
The day the election results were announced, British Prime
Minister Tony Blair telephoned the Irish Taoiseach Bertie Ahern
to discuss a crisis meeting at the upcoming European summit in
Gothenburg in Sweden this week. The implementation of the Good
Friday Agreement has a deadline of July 1, by which date all paramilitary
weapons are to be decommissioned. Trimble is on record as saying
that if IRA decommissioning does not take place by that date,
then he would resign as First Minister. The Secretary of State
for Northern Ireland, John Reid, is to contact all of the main
parties this week in order to arrange new talks.
See Also:
Election Statement by the
Socialist Equality Party of Britain
The disenfranchisement of the working class and the need for a
new socialist party
[17 May 2001]
Ireland
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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