The Scotsman

Deal seals return of Stormont after two years

- Jane Bradley jane.bradley@scotsman.com

After 726 days of suspension, the devolved government of Northern Ireland finally looks set to resume – potentiall­y as early as this weekend.

When I was in Stormont last February as the UK government announced its plans for a deal with the European Union over trade borders in the Irish Sea, it was eerily quiet.

A stark contrast to the busy Scottish Parliament in Holyrood – corridors were deserted and the canteen was populated by a handful of party staffers.

The deal was not agreed by the main unionist party, the DUP and little further progress was made.

But in a statement in the early hoursofyes­terdaymorn­ing,sir Jeffreydon­aldson,leaderofth­e DUP, announced his party had finally agreed a deal over Brexit. The meeting was shrouded in secrecy for security reasons – yet protesters gathered at the gates and leaks appeared on social media as party members divided over the issue.

The UK government is expected to publish the deal in full today and pass the legislatio­n in Parliament tomorrow. This could then lead to a recall of the Northern Ireland assembly by Friday or Saturday.

First minister of Stormont,

Paul Givan, had resigned weeks before my visit – a year after the DUP walked away over disagreeme­nts surroundin­g the trade of goods after Brexit. Under a power sharing deal agreed in the Good Friday Agreement in 1998, both republican and unionist sides need to take part in the assembly for it to operate. Since then, MLAS have been on full pay – but unable to do their jobs.

Although full details of the agreement have not yet been revealed, Sir Jeffrey has referred to there being zero checks and paperwork for goods moving from Great Britain to Northern Ireland, a significan­t move away from the Windsor framework, the UKEU

agreement that changed the Ireland and Northern Ireland protocol.

How this latest agreement has been agreed with the EU is currently unclear. The fundamenta­l problem of whether there is a border in the Irish Sea – or across the currently unmarked border between Northern Ireland and Ireland – is, on the surface, an insurmount­able problem.

In its latest incarnatio­n, significan­tly, a Sinn Fein politician will be first minister for the first time after winning the most seats in the assembly electionsl­astyear.thedup–which previously held the first minister post from 2007 to 2017 and again from 2020 until 2022 – will offer up a deputy first minister. However, despite the titles, the roles hold equal weight in terms of power.

Perhapsmos­tsignifica­ntlyfor people in the province, normal parliament­ary business can resume. Bills can pass through Parliament, while health and education budgets can be considered again.

However, the devil will be in the detail. Sir Jeffrey is facing opposition from some DUP stalwarts and other unionist voices who believe the party should stand firm on its beliefs. What effect that will have on the long-term future of his political career – and the trajectory of the DUP in Northern Ireland – remains to be seen.

I welcome the fact that we are now beginning to see the delivery of what was promised Sir Jeffrey Donaldson

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