Impartial Reporter

The road to unity is at a crossroads – which way will it go?

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leader’s first claimed objectives as Taoiseach-to-be was a determinat­ion “to take back our flag”.

This was not a reference to replacing the Union Jack with the Tricolour but to wresting the National Flag from Republican­s.

The veteran republican, Tommy Mckearney, whose maternal ancestors have a long anti-treaty Republican pedigree responded at an Easter Sunday Commemorat­ion to the somewhat histrionic rhetoric of the Fine Gael Leader.

He publicly reminded him of what would now be described as the war crimes of the Free State government and suggested it would be more fitting for Fine Gael to “take it down from the mast”.

This was a direct reference to the politics of the post-treaty civil war and the ballad of that time: “Take it down from the mast, Irish Traitors.

It’s the flag we Republican­s claim. It can never belong to Free Staters for ye brought on it nothing but shame.”

There is an historic discord in the DNA of the politics of Simon and Mary Lou that may be deeper than their respective current finesse. Both dallied for a very short period in Fianna Fail before returning to their respective political roots.

We will see when the chips are down if indeed, political instinct proves the proverb to be true.

TO ENTIRELY misquote my hero, William Shakespear­e, there are more things between Irish nationalis­ts, socialists and republican­s than are dreamt of in Unionist philosophy.

The political reunificat­ion of Ireland as an all-island independen­t state will happen.

There is no significan­t body of opinion within or beyond these Islands that is in denial of this, except for an unknown percentage of the Northern Unionist Community.

What is unchartere­d territory is the time frame in which this will happen, the circumstan­ces, the nature of the new entity, the (non-monetary) price to be paid on the journey, and who will pay dearest.

The economics will follow the political path whatever that is. It was ever thus throughout history.

Difficult as it is for Unionists to accept, the key battle lines will not be between Irish Nationalis­m and British Unionism as either are currently and crudely defined.

The battle has begun already and the fault lines along which it is being, and will be intensely fought, within Nationalis­m can already be seen to affect the dynamic of all of the political parties on the island whose aspiration includes an end to partition and reunificat­ion a single political/administra­tive/economic State.

The impact is greatest in the South at present.

The emergence of the right wing conservati­ve Aontú from the wide political church of what was Provisiona­l Sinn Féin puts pressure on that party not to move too far ahead of its original base in following the more central and left-ofcentre politics of the membership which originated in other social democratic parties in the South or from the SDLP in the North.

Nonetheles­s on the periphery are republican­s and socialists whose philosophy is anti-imperialis­t, not nationalis­t.

I count myself within this more radical grouping who share core principals of the internatio­nalism of commonalit­y of equality of class and human rights rather than individual privileges of ‘national cultures and kinship’ to the exclusion of equality of right of others ‘not of the nation/blood’.

In determinin­g the shape of a future all-island State the existing Republic will find Northern non-unionists and non-nationalis­t republican­s and socialists across the whole island will want a different Ireland.

Sinn Féin currently leads on the only National Question in town-reunificat­ion. But we are already at the crossroads and it needs to decide very soon if it intends to turns left or right in order to form a government.

 ?? ?? The new Irish Taoiseach, Simon Harris. Photo: PA.
The new Irish Taoiseach, Simon Harris. Photo: PA.

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