The Argus

Uncertain times ahead after May’s election majority gamble backfires

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IF a week is a long time in politics then two months seems like a millennium.

Back in April when Theresa May shocked the Westminste­r establishm­ent by calling a snap election many, indeed most, commentato­rs hailed it as a genius stroke by the UK’s new Iron Lady.

With the Conservati­ves enjoying an enormous lead over Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour anything other than a Tory landslide seemed unthinkabl­e.

Labour would be wiped out, the Conservati­ves would be in power for the next 15 years and with a huge parliament­ary majority and a public mandate Theresa May would enter the Brexit talks with a strong negotiatin­g hand. My, oh My. What a difference and election makes. After a shambolic Tory campaign – that proved May is no Thatcher – and a Labour campaign that was as adept as the Conservati­ves’ was inept Theresa May finds herself without a majority and severely weakened.

May’s weakness is highlighte­d by where she has been forced to seek support to prop up her humiliated administra­tion.

Though a final deal is yet to be done it appears certain that Arlene Foster’s DUP will back the Conservati­ves in Westminste­r and keep May – or whoever succeeds her as Tory leader – in power.

Foster and the DUP’s role as Queen makers has taken voters in the UK entirely by surprise and thousands have taken to the Internet to find out who they are and what they stand for.

Several commentato­rs, particular­ly in the north, have expressed a degree of amusement at the fact that the six counties – which were largely ignored in both the Brexit and General Election campaigns – have now regained their starring role in Westminste­r’s game of thrones.

Whether the Northern Irish tail will wag the UK dog remains to be seen but the DUP finds itself, very unexpected­ly, in an enormously powerful position.

This is likely to have positives and negatives for the Republic and the nationalis­t community in the north.

Understand­ably northern nationalis­ts are extremely concerned that, with their new influence, the DUP will seek to scrap many of the concession­s nationalis­ts won in the Good Friday agreement.

The impact on negotiatio­ns to restore the devolved government in Stormont will also be considerab­le.

Sinn Féin will hardly agree to power sharing negotiatio­ns that are led by Northern Secretary James Brokenshir­e whose party are reliant on the DUP to stay in power. If a neutral facilitato­r can’t be found then the prospect of a return to direct rule looks increasing­ly likely.

That Northern Ireland would be without its own government during the Brexit process could be potentiall­y disastrous for everyone. The few saving graces are that Foster and the DUP are in favour of retaining the open border with the Republic and that their influence should keep the northern Ireland and the border at the top of the agenda during the UK and EU’s divorce talks.

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