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Sinn Fein dares foe as power play stalls

Irish voters may return to ballot box

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DUBLIN: Sinn Fein’s bid to form a new Irish government appears to have stalled after the leader of the centrist party it has been holding talks with said they had “irreconcil­able difference­s”.

With no party in the next parliament having secured a majority in Ireland’s general election last Saturday, talks to thrash out a deal started soon after the results were announced.

But Micheal Martin, who heads the centre-right Fianna Fail, said his party’s 38 lawmakers elected had now agreed not to enter into government with republican­s Sinn Fein.

He added the party, which won the most seats in the poll but finished narrowly behind Sinn Fein in the popular vote, would now talk with other “likeminded parties”.

However, Mr Martin heightened speculatio­n that Irish voters may have to head back to the ballot box amid the faltering efforts at forming a government. “I wouldn’t rule out another general election,” he said.

Earlier, Sinn Fein had challenged Mr Martin to do a deal, after its dramatic election surge brought it to the threshold of power — ending up with just one seat less than Fianna Fail.

With its 37 seats, the left-wing party long tarnished by its associatio­ns with nationalis­t paramilita­ries, broke the strangleho­ld of two-party politics in Ireland.

The other centre-right party that has dominated Irish politics, Prime Minister Leo Varadkar’s Fine Gael, finished third with 35 seats.

Eighty seats are required for a majority in the Dail, Ireland’s lower house of parliament, making a multiparty coalition inevitable without another election.

The results capped a remarkable transforma­tion for Sinn Fein, once shunned for its links to the IRA but whose policies to tackle a housing and health crisis now have popular appeal.

Leader Mary Lou McDonald on Thursday told party lawmakers she had met representa­tives from smaller parties the Greens (12 seats) and Solidarity-People Before Profit (five), and had spoken to Labour (six).

Further meetings were planned with the Social Democrats (six seats), she added in a speech in Dublin. “Those talks will continue. Last night [Wednesday], I also wrote to the Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin to seek a meeting,” she said.

While acknowledg­ing “big policy incompatib­ilities” between the two parties, she had said a “government of change” was needed in Ireland to address the country’s most pressing issues.

“The question is this: will Fianna Fail sign up for that type of change? The type of change that people voted for? Can Fianna Fail be part of that change? That is a big question.”

Mr Martin has previously said he would not join forces with Sinn Fein, which is also the second-largest party in the power-sharing government in Northern Ireland.

Sinn Fein’s flagship policy is a reunited Ireland and it wants to call a referendum on sovereignt­y within five years, potentiall­y creating another constituti­onal headache for Britain. London is already under pressure from Scottish nationalis­ts, who want a new referendum on independen­ce.

Ms McDonald said she could become Ireland’s first female prime minister, and might even try to govern without the support of Fine Gael and Fianna Fail if she secures the support of smaller parties.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Mary Lou McDonald, leader of Sinn Fein, arrives to address her newly elected party members.
BLOOMBERG Mary Lou McDonald, leader of Sinn Fein, arrives to address her newly elected party members.

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