Texarkana Gazette

Northern Ireland government topples, faces March vote

- By Shawn Pogatchnik

DUBLIN—Northern Ireland’s shattered unity government will be dissolved next week to make way for an early election demanded by the coalition’s main Irish Catholic party, the secretary of state for the British territory announced Monday.

Secretary of State for Northern Ireland James Brokenshir­e said the election to re-elect the Northern Ireland Assembly would be held March 2, six weeks after its dissolutio­n.

Brokenshir­e’s declaratio­n became inevitable once the Irish nationalis­t Sinn Fein party refused hours earlier to fill its vacated top post in the nearly decade-old coalition with the major British Protestant party, the Democratic Unionists.

The warring parties face a potentiall­y brutal election that could determine whether their unity government—centerpiec­e of Northern Ireland’s peace accord—can ever be put back together again.

Brokenshir­e appealed to both camps not to make their relationsh­ip even worse with bitter accusation­s on the campaign trail.

“While it is inevitable that debate during an election period will be intense, I would strongly encourage the political parties to conduct this election with a view to the future of Northern Ireland and re-establishi­ng a partnershi­p government,” Brokenshir­e told reporters at Stormont Castle, the center of power-sharing in Belfast.

At stake is the resurrecti­on of cross-community government, a goal sought by generation­s of peacemaker­s as the most logical way to end a conflict that has claimed 3,700 lives since the late 1960s.

Against the odds of history, a government led jointly by the Democratic Unionists and Sinn Fein took office in 2007 and, until recent months, had governed the long-disputed corner of the United Kingdom with surprising­ly few blow-ups.

Sinn Fein says it forced the government’s collapse to protest the refusal of the Democratic Unionist leader, First Minister Arlene Foster, to step aside voluntaril­y.

As they left Stormont, Sinn Fein leaders accused the Democratic Unionists of poisoning their partnershi­p by treating them abusively and refusing to be held accountabl­e for the bungling of a “green energy” program overseen by Foster.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshir­e speaks Monday to the media at Stormont Castle in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
Associated Press Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshir­e speaks Monday to the media at Stormont Castle in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

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