The Herald

DUP backs Labour over pay cap

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MICHAEL MCHUGH

time DUP MPs voted to pressure ministers since their party agreed to a confidence and supply arrangemen­t with the Conservati­ves after the election.

Because the motion was not binding it would not have amounted to a breach of the £1 billion Tory/DUP deal.

North Antrim MP Mr Paisley said: “I’ve already alluded to the fact I’m delighted the Labour Party has brought forward this debate tonight.

“We will support them if this matter goes to a vote tonight, and it’s interestin­g to see if we will actually get to that point. Maybe the House will agree the points that have been raised today are such we should send out a clarion call from this House that we do agree with the points raised all across this chamber today.”

The Government only commands a majority because of its confidence and supply arrangemen­t with the DUP, which has said it will support the Conservati­ves on key legislatio­n.

Mr Paisley added: “To those members of the Labour Party who chide about the £1 billion deal, your party would quite happily have cut a deal that would probably have been better for us.”

“That’s the discussion­s we had in advance of the last election, and to chide us, you only hurt public servants in Northern Ireland who are benefittin­g from that £1bn deal that will allow us to allocate this money to relieve these costs.”

Mr Paisley hit the headlines last week when he referred himself to the parliament­ary watchdog over claims he took an all-expenses paid holiday from the Sri Lankan Government. He called the newspaper report defamatory.

DUP deputy leader Nigel Dodds said the motion was not covered by the confidence and supply arrangemen­t agreed by the two parties.

“Lifting the cap on nurses’ pay and in the public sector generally is our party policy. The Government understood that is the way that we were going to vote,” Mr Dodds told Sky News following the debate.

“It is not part of the confidence and supply arrangemen­ts. We are separate parties, we are not part of the Government and we will make up our own mind on those issues.”

Conservati­ve sources insisted they were “pretty relaxed” about the outcome of the debate, which does not require the Government to change policy. It comes the day after ministers effectivel­y ended the pay cap with the announceme­nt of rises above the one per cent limit for police and prison officers.

PM called the snap election for June 8.

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