East Bay Times

Northern Ireland has Sinn Fein leader; it's a landmark moment

- By Megan Specia

As Michelle O'Neill walked down the marble staircase in Northern Ireland's parliament building Saturday, she appeared confident and calm. She smiled briefly as applause erupted from supporters, but her otherwise serious gaze conveyed the gravity of the moment.

The political party she represents, Sinn Fein, was shaped by the decadeslon­g struggle of Irish nationalis­ts in the territory who dreamed of reuniting with the Republic of Ireland and undoing the 1921 partition that has kept Northern Ireland under British rule.

Now, for the first time, a Sinn Fein politician holds Northern Ireland's top political office, a landmark moment for the party and for the broader region as a power-sharing government is restored. The first minister role previously always had been held by a unionist politician committed to remaining part of the United Kingdom.

“As first minister, I am wholeheart­edly committed to continuing the work of reconcilia­tion between all our people,” O'Neill said, noting that her parents and grandparen­ts would never have imagined that such a day would come. “I would never ask anyone to move on, but what I can ask is for us to move forward.”

The idea of a nationalis­t first minister in Northern Ireland, let alone one from Sinn Fein, a party with historic ties to the Irish Republican Army, was indeed once unthinkabl­e.

But the story of Sinn Fein's transforma­tion — from a fringe party that

was once the IRA's political wing to a political force that won the most seats in Northern Ireland's 2022 elections — is also the story of a changing political landscape and the results of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, which ended the decadeslon­g sectarian conflict known as the “troubles.”

“It's certainly symbolical­ly very significan­t,” said Katy Hayward, a professor of political sociology at Queen's University, Belfast. “It tells us just quite how far Northern Ireland has come, and in many ways the success of the Good Friday Agreement and use of democratic and peaceful means of achieving cooperatio­n.”

It is not yet clear what a Sinn Fein first minister

will mean for the hopes of those who want to reunite the island after a century of separation. Although Mary Lou McDonald, president of Sinn Fein, who leads the opposition in the Republic of Ireland's parliament, said this past week that the prospect of a united Ireland was now in “touching distance,” experts believe it remains far off.

For now, the territory's two main political powers — unionists and nationalis­ts — are locked together in the power-sharing arrangemen­t that was laid out in the Good Friday Agreement.

That arrangemen­t had collapsed over the question of how the political powers of Northern Ireland see themselves after Brexit.

Northern Ireland's

leading unionist party, the Democratic Unionist Party, quit the government in 2022, in the wake of Britain's exit from the European Union, which had placed a trading border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom. Wanting to safeguard ties to Britain, the DUP feared that the sea border was the first step to tearing them apart.

Its boycott of the assembly ended this past week after the British government agreed to reduce customs checks, strengthen Northern Ireland's place within the United Kingdom and hand over about $4 billion in financial sweeteners.

Because it had the most unionist seats in the 2022 elections, the DUP had the right to nominate the deputy

first minister Saturday — Emma Little-Pengelly, who will work alongside O'Neill.

“The past, with all of its horrors, can never be forgotten,” Little-Pengelly said as she described being a child during the “troubles” and seeing the devastatio­n of an IRA bomb outside her house when she was 11. But she added, “While we are shaped by the past, we are not defined by it.”

The first and deputy first minister roles are officially equal, with neither able to act alone, to prevent either community from dominating the other.

As the top executives in the devolved government, they make decisions on health care, social services, education and other issues for the region.

 ?? PETER MORRISON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sinn Fein Vice President Michelle O'Neill in the Stormont Parliament Building in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on Saturday.
PETER MORRISON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sinn Fein Vice President Michelle O'Neill in the Stormont Parliament Building in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on Saturday.

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