Belfast Telegraph

Lisburn women turn the heat up on Bradley over Stormont and Brexit deadlock

- BY DAVID YOUNG

KAREN Bradley faced robust questions in Lisburn yesterday as local women voiced anger and frustratio­n about Brexit and the Stormont impasse.

The Secretary of State’s visit to an art class for women’s groups in the loyalist Old Warren estate developed into an intense political grilling as she was challenged on the mounting problems facing communitie­s across Northern Ireland.

Mrs Bradley was forced to defend the Prime Minister’s Brexit deal, rejecting claims from some of the women present that Northern Ireland was set to be treated differentl­y than the rest of the UK.

But while Brexit was the early focus of the exchanges at the Resurgam Trust centre, questions soon shifted to the two-year power-sharing crisis, with Mrs Bradley’s government accused of not doing enough to get Assembly members back to work.

Northern Ireland has been without a functionin­g devolved government since January 2017 when it imploded amid a bitter row between the DUP and Sinn Fein.

All subsequent political efforts to revive the institutio­ns have failed as public services have been left in a limbo land between devolution and direct rule.

Mother-of-four Emma Cairns told Mrs Bradley the situation was “ridiculous”. “Our schools and our education — it all has to continue to suffer,” she said.

Another woman told Mrs Bradley that schools in the area had run out of toilet roll due to budget cuts.

The Conservati­ve MP replied: “That’s why I want the politician­s to do the right thing. I want them to do the right thing by the people who elected them.”

Ms Cairns also responded: “It’s ridiculous. They have been given more than ample opportunit­y to do the right thing and they are not.

“And who else do we go to because we are just played this constant drab of, ‘Yes, we have given them a chance and we can extend it (talks deadlines) and we’re doing this and we’re doing that’ — and nothing is showing, nothing is being done, we’re not feeling it here.”

Afterwards, nurse Stacey McCormick said there was a lot of frustratio­n in the room.

“It started off quite calm and relaxed but towards the end it got really frustratin­g,” she said.

“People started to get angry because obviously they were getting things off their chests and getting to be able to vent things.

“If it had gone on another few minutes it might have got a lot worse.”

She added: “We don’t have anybody that wants to listen to us.

“Politician­s don’t care — they don’t want to know. They only want you when it comes to voting time.

“The health care system is falling apart.

“The waiting lists have just tripled and it’s going to get worse because nurses are leaving the healthcare system because they don’t feel welcome with Brexit coming up. It’s going to get worse”.

Heather Cairns, who asked Mrs Bradley during the visit how long she was going to wait to introduce direct rule, said she hoped the visit had genuine motives.

“I hope it isn’t a PR thing, because in the news Theresa May and Northern Ireland are at the forefront of all this (Brexit),” she said. “And I am hoping it isn’t, ‘Let’s just focus on it for five minutes and then just go away’. I hope she genuinely is listening.”

Afterwards Mrs Bradley said she welcomed hearing the different views.

“What’s really interestin­g to me is the thing that exercises people the most is a lack of devolved government in Stormont and wanting to see those politician­s back at the top of the hill doing what they were elected to do,” she said.

“Of course I understand their frustratio­n — I’m frustrated too.

“The people of Northern Ireland deserve better, they deserve their politician­s doing the right thing.

“It was really interestin­g to hear the views that I heard round the table on, ‘Just get in and run those schools and hospitals, just do the right thing by the people who elected you’.”

 ?? PRESSEYE ?? Clockwise from top left: Secretary of State Karen Bradley meets UK Border Force staff at Belfast City Airport yesterday; with members of the Women in Business group in Belfast, and talking to Stacey McCormick at Resurgum Trust in Lisburn
PRESSEYE Clockwise from top left: Secretary of State Karen Bradley meets UK Border Force staff at Belfast City Airport yesterday; with members of the Women in Business group in Belfast, and talking to Stacey McCormick at Resurgum Trust in Lisburn
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