Impartial Reporter

Westminste­r legislatio­n coming in fresh bid to help end impasse in the North

Deadline around Assembly elections to change as Secretary of State urges Northern Ireland’s parties to ‘come together’

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LEGISLATIO­N is set to be introduced at Westminste­r to push back the deadline by which a Northern Ireland Executive must be formed.

The Northern Ireland (Executive Formation etc.) Bill will also see MLA salaries slashed by about a third while the Assembly is unable to conduct business, and take “limited but necessary steps” to maintain public services.

It comes as the Stormont parties failed to establish a new Executive by October 28 – some 24 weeks after the last Assembly election in May.

That placed a legal responsibi­lity on the UK Government to hold a fresh Assembly election by January 19, 2023.

However, Secretary of State Chris Heaton-harris ruled out a December election and will instead bring legislatio­n to extend the deadline.

The new legislatio­n will extend the period for executive formation by six weeks to December 8, with the possibilit­y of a further six-week extension to January 19.

Meanwhile, the Bill will clarify the decision-making powers for civil servants leading department­s in the absence of ministers.

It will also enable a small number of vital public service appointmen­ts to be made and enable the regional rate for 2023/24 to be set, should an Executive not be in place to do so.

A DUP boycott of the devolved institutio­ns, in protest at Brexit’s Northern Ireland Protocol, has prevented an Executive being formed in Belfast.

Scrapped

The region’s largest Unionist party has made clear it will not countenanc­e a return to powershari­ng until the Protocol’s economic barriers on trade between Great Britain and Northern Ireland are scrapped.

Talks are ongoing between the UK and EU over the Protocol, while a Bill to override elements of the Protocol is currently going through the parliament­ary process.

Speaking ahead of the introducti­on of the Bill, Mr. Heaton-harris urged the Stormont parties to “come together”.

“I urge the Northern Ireland parties to use this extended time to come together and deliver for the interests of all people in Northern Ireland, particular­ly in this time of rising costs,” he said.

“At present, MLAS are not in a position to fulfil the full range of their duties, so it is right that we take steps to reduce their salaries, especially in the current economic climate and in view of the £660 million black hole in the public finances created by poor decisions made by outgoing ministers.

“Furthermor­e, Northern Ireland’s people are being denied full democratic representa­tion.

“The Government’s priority is to see politician­s elected to return to fulfil their roles in a strong, devolved and locally accountabl­e government, as laid out by the Belfast [Good Friday] Agreement.”

 ?? ?? Legislatio­n is to be introduced to push back the deadline to form a Stormont Executive.
Legislatio­n is to be introduced to push back the deadline to form a Stormont Executive.

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