Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Sinn Fein wins in Northern Ireland

Marks first time party of Irish unificatio­n won

- By Amanda Ferguson and Karla Adam

Sinn Fein on Saturday became the first nationalis­t party to dominate in Northern Ireland, while Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve Party lost hundreds of seats in local elections seen partly as a referendum on his leadership.

Sinn Fein won the largest number of seats in the Northern Ireland assembly, official results showed — and along with that the power to name its leader Michelle O’Neill as first minister in the regional power-sharing government.

The win was a historic first for the party. The idea that Sinn Fein could triumph in these elections would have been unthinkabl­e a generation ago. But the party has benefited from demographi­c shifts and has expanded its appeal by focusing on breadand-butter issues while downplayin­g its long-term aspiration­s for the unificatio­n of Ireland.

Katy Hayward, a political sociologis­t from Queen’s University Belfast, said that if the Northern Ireland legislatur­e is “dominated by a nationalis­t party that wants to see, in effect, the end of Northern Ireland, it really would be symbolical­ly significan­t.”

A Sinn Fein win doesn’t have immediate implicatio­ns for unificatio­n. Any changes to the status of Northern Ireland would require referendum­s on both sides of the border, and public support for a unified island isn’t yet there.

But Sinn Fein hopes it can build support over time. Jonathan Tonge, a politics expert at the University of Liverpool, said the election results certainly boost the odds.

“There won’t be a border poll on Irish unity soon, but there will be one day,” he said.

The more immediate question is whether the new power-sharing executive will actually come together. The Democratic Unionist Party — the main unionist party, animated by the belief that Northern Ireland should remain part of the United Kingdom — has been boycotting, citing its distress over the post-Brexit trade arrangemen­t brokered between Johnson and the European Union.

“Sinn Féin will be there on Monday, ready to form an executive. Other parties need to do the same. No excuses. No nonsense. No time wasting,” O’Neill told The Washington Post. “People struggling with the cost of living are relying on us to get on with things and do our jobs.”

The leader of the DUP, Jeffrey Donaldson, told the BBC that he would decide next week on his party’s next moves. The DUP was hurt in part by a splinterin­g of the unionist vote.

The shifting political landscape in Northern Ireland has also seen the rise of the center ground. The cross-community Alliance Party, which is neither nationalis­t or unionist, had a strong, third-place finish. By 10 p.m., Sinn Fein had won 27 of the assembly’s 90 seats. The DUP won 24 while the Alliance Party claimed 17.

There were still two seats left to declare.

In the rest of the U.K., Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve Party lost nearly 500 seats in local elections, seen partly as a referendum on his leadership.

In addition to the regional assembly elections in Northern Ireland, there were council and mayoral elections in England, Scotland and Wales. The general election isn’t until 2024, and local election turnout is often low. But these midterms are often an indicator of how the main political parties are doing. And this was the first big test for Johnson’s Conservati­ves since the emergence of a cost-ofliving crisis and a scandal known as “Partygate.”

The government faces three ongoing investigat­ions into boozy gatherings that flouted pandemic lockdown rules, while the prime minister was urging citizens to stay home and not mix with people from multiple households. Johnson is the first sitting prime minister found to have broken the law.

Analysts said Johnson was badly bruised, but not mortally wounded in the local elections.

“It’s not a knockout blow,” said Will Jennings, a politics expert at the University of Southampto­n. “It hasn’t been great for the Conservati­ves, but it’s not yet bad enough to force them into action, so Boris lives to fight another day.”

There were some calls at the local and regional level for Johnson to step down, but there did not appear to be a cascade of letters from Conservati­ve lawmakers pushing for a no-confidence vote.

Still, Jennings said Conservati­ves can’t just shrug this off as midterm blues and hope things will improve. “Government­s suffer losses and can go on to make gains, but the government is facing a very bleak economic situation,” he said. “Voters will feel significan­t economic pain” in the next year or two.

At 5 p.m. Saturday, with all but two of 146 councils in England declaring their results, the Conservati­ves had lost 341 seats. The Conservati­ves also suffered significan­t losses in Scotland and Wales.

 ?? Andrew Testa / New York Times ?? With more than half of the votes counted on Saturday, Sinn Fein, the main Irish nationalis­t party, closed in on victory, racking up 21 seats.
Andrew Testa / New York Times With more than half of the votes counted on Saturday, Sinn Fein, the main Irish nationalis­t party, closed in on victory, racking up 21 seats.

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