Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Catholics lead Northern Ireland census

For first time since region’s founding, Protestant­s no longer largest faith group

- MEGAN SPECIA AND ED O’LOUGHLIN

LONDON — For the first time, Catholics outnumber Protestant­s in Northern Ireland, census figures released Thursday show — confirmati­on of a long-anticipate­d but still striking shift with implicatio­ns for the region’s future.

The result could intensify debate, at an already politicall­y fraught moment, about the region seceding from the United Kingdom and reunifying Ireland, but experts have also cautioned against equating religion with political affiliatio­n.

“With Catholics coming out now in the plurality, that really is quite significan­t because of the grounds on which Northern Ireland was created to begin with,” said Katy Hayward, a professor of politics at Queen’s University, Belfast. “But I would immediatel­y point to the dangers of reading political opinions on top of that.”

According to the census numbers, some 45.7% of Northern Ireland’s population are or were raised Catholic, while 43.5% are or were raised Protestant. Since the formation of Northern Ireland — which remained part of the United Kingdom when the island was partitione­d in 1921, while the larger part of the island became an independen­t Irish state — Protestant­s have outnumbere­d Catholics.

Those who identified as currently religious were fewer, with Catholics making up 42.3% of the population, Protestant­s making up 37.3%, other religions 1.3%, and 17.4% indicating ‘no religion,’ pointing to an increasing­ly secular population.

“It changes the balance, more than a hundred years after Northern Ireland was engineered deliberate­ly to have a Protestant majority,” said Theresa Reidy, a professor of political scientist at University College Cork. “It probably moves the conversati­on on Irish unity a little bit closer, but there is still a good deal that would need to change.”

The Good Friday Agreement, a key 1998 peace accord between the British and Irish government­s and political parties in Northern Ireland, does have provisions for a referendum to potentiall­y reunify the island, though it does not detail how that would work.

But the shifting demographi­cs do existentia­lly undermine the rationale behind Northern Ireland’s creation a century ago, when religion was considered a reliable indicator of support for either continued British rule or a united, independen­t Ireland.

After World War I, the weakened British Empire faced an armed campaign for independen­ce in Ireland. A strong majority in Ireland — mostly Roman Catholics who identified ethnically with the island’s original Gaelic inhabitant­s — supported independen­ce. But in parts of the northeaste­rn province of Ulster there was a regional majority of Protestant unionists, who remained fiercely loyal to Britain.

The British government agreed to withdraw from the nationalis­t south, which became an independen­t state, and the island was partitione­d. Six of the island’s 32 counties were carved out to form Northern Ireland, where Protestant­s outnumbere­d Catholics by about 2-to-1, and remained a part of Britain.

But nearly since Northern Ireland’s founding, its Protestant majority has been slowly eroding. At first, this was often attributed to the Catholic Church’s opposition to family planning, and the resulting large Catholic families. But there were also economic factors at play, such as the decline in industrial jobs, which were held predominan­tly by Protestant­s.

Diarmaid Ferriter, a professor of history at University College Dublin who has written about the partition era, said that the new census figures were “quite a milestone” for the territory. The loss of the Protestant majority in Northern Ireland was a significan­t developmen­t, he said, although much has changed in the past hundred years.

“You can’t apply a 20th-century analysis to a 21st-century census,” he said. “Religious identity is not as central to political identity as it was a hundred years ago. It’s not about a crude sectarian head count anymore.”

The previous census, in 2011, showed that while self-identified Protestant­s still outnumbere­d Catholics by 48.4% to 45.1%, they were for the first time no longer an absolute majority of Northern Ireland’s population. The newly released 2021 results take that a step further.

A further blow to the concept of a Protestant state came earlier this year in regional elections, when the hard-line, pro-Britain Democratic Unionist Party lost its place as the largest faction in Northern Ireland’s assembly. Instead, the leading party was

Sinn Fein, a mainly Catholic and pro-unity group, and formerly the political wing of the Provisiona­l Irish Republican Army, which until the 1990s had waged an armed campaign to end British rule.

The unionist party currently refuses to join a power-sharing government in the Northern Ireland Assembly, because of its opposition to new Brexit trade protocols, leaving Northern Ireland unable to form a new government.

But if and when it does, the new first minister, or prime minister, is likely to be Michelle O’Neill of Sinn Fein, who would become the first Roman Catholic, and supporter of Irish reunificat­ion, to head the Northern Ireland government.

O’Neill, in a statement Thursday, said the census results were “another clear indication that historic change is happening across this island and of the diversity of society which enriches us all.”

Phillip Brett, a Democratic Unionist member of Northern Ireland’s legislativ­e assembly, said that “to draw political conclusion­s based on the number of Protestant­s and Catholics is simplistic and lazy.”

“Rather than focus on a divisive border poll, we should ensure that Northern Ireland builds first-class public services and a genuine shared future,” he said.

Crucially, the census, which was conducted in March 2021, was the first to be held since Brexit, and also revealed that a significan­t number of additional Irish passports were issued — Northern Irish citizens have a right to both British and Irish passports.

And those identifyin­g as both British and Northern Irish, both Irish and Northern Irish, or all three, had also increased since the 2011 census.

According to the census numbers, some 45.7% of Northern Ireland’s population are or were raised Catholic, while 43.5% are or were raised Protestant.

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