Belfast Telegraph

The IRA bully boys have just reminded Mary Lou McDonald that they are still in charge

She may be president of Sinn Fein, but U-turn over border poll shows she has to follow orders from Belfast, says Ruth Dudley Edwards

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What an unsettling week for Sinn Fein’s Mary Lou McDonald. And she was riding so high at home and abroad. Interviewe­d sympatheti­cally by the prestigiou­s British liberal weekly the New Statesman, under the headline ‘The new face of Sinn Fein’, she had dealt skilfully with a query about allegation­s that she “is in thrall to the party old guard; that Adams and IRA alumni still pull the string”.

“I don’t have to say how misogynist­ic that is,” she responded presidenti­ally.

That was just a few days before last Monday when she attracted many plaudits for her sensible statesmanl­ike and unexpected recommenda­tion that any border poll be shelved until the uncertaint­ies of Brexit were resolved.

“It is not my preferred option or our preferred option that we deal with the issue of Irish unity in a climate that is unsteady or unstable or chaotic, in other words in the context of a crash Brexit or a very hard Brexit,” she said.

There was some squealing from hardline republican­s which led to a hasty McDonald tweet: “No policy shift. Unity debate underway. Chaotic/crash Brexit not best mood music 4 referendum. But referendum will happen one way or another.”

However, within 24 hours, the mighty men on the Falls Road had reminded her who was in charge, and she called for a poll as soon as possible.

“Well-placed Northern sources contacted on Wednesday noted with some dejection what they saw as a definite rubber-burning U-turn by McDonald,” said the Irish Times report.

One “dispassion­ate Northern observer” told the newspaper they had thought her comments “brave and refreshing, that Mary Lou was saying I am a different type of Sinn Fein leader, that I am my own woman, and that was good to see”.

But, added the source, “by Tuesday it was clear that others in the leadership saw her as going too far. And they hauled her back. And that was very sad to see”.

The Irish Times, which many of Sinn Fein’s critics find far too inclined to wishful thinking and giving the party the benefit of the doubt, said in its editorial that it couldn’t “avoid the suspicion that an inner circle of the republican movement made it clear to McDonald her initial response was not acceptable”.

If that was so, “then the leopard, after all, has not changed its spots”, which raised questions about its fitness for coalition in the Republic.

As she rushed dutifully around Northern Ireland debating politely with unionists, hurling herself into Pride festivitie­s and eulogising hunger strikers, this woman for all seasons probably didn’t have much time to think about the mess in her party on the other side of the border.

Allegation­s of a bullying culture just won’t go away.

Last week councillor Paul Hogan, a former mayor of Athlone who had just missed being elected Sinn Fein TD for Longford-Westmeath at the last general election, resigned after 20 years of membership “with a very heavy heart”.

Citing “an unrelentin­g bullying campaign” — which he alleges included a kangaroo court, threats, intimidati­on, witch-hunts and whispering campaigns — that he says the party covered up, he predicted that it would “attempt to pigeonhole this hate campaign against me as a localised dispute. All the evidence that I

have suggests otherwise”. Having kept a close eye on the haemorrhag­ing of elected representa­tives in the South — more than 10% of its councillor­s in three years, a Senator and a TD — I concur.

Unhappines­s is widespread, and other resignatio­ns have come from Cavan, Dublin, Galway, Kildare, Kilkenny, Limerick, Tipperary and Wicklow.

It’s the toxic culture that is mentioned time and time again, with allegation­s including abuse, assault, harassment, hostility, slander, aggression, death threats and “orchestrat­ed

bullying”. Tipperary councillor Seamus Morris spoke of a “nasty culture in the party who believed in dictating to councillor­s from darkened rooms”.

And several have claimed that they were expected to take orders like robots. The defence that all Irish parties behave like this is risible.

Only Sinn Fein is run from behindthe-scenes by IRA veterans, who from Northern Ireland run its intelligen­ce department, control its finances and direct its strategy.

Ms McDonald did not get where she is today by standing up to them.

 ??  ?? Mary Lou McDonald seemingly changed her position on border poll in space of 24 hours
Mary Lou McDonald seemingly changed her position on border poll in space of 24 hours
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