The Boston Globe

In N. Ireland, Kennedy walks political tightrope

The US Envoy cautious of trade rules, dysfuction

- By Mark Landler

BELFAST, Northern Ireland — Joe Kennedy III had the kind of arrival in Northern Ireland that any American diplomat would envy: disembarki­ng Air Force One steps behind President Biden, his shock of red hair tousled by the breeze as Biden introduced him to a waiting Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain.

The rest of his assignment is not likely to be as glamorous.

Kennedy, a 42-year-old former Democratic congressma­n from Massachuse­tts and a scion of the nation’s most famous Irish American political clan, is taking up the post of special envoy to Northern Ireland for economic affairs at a time when its politics are paralyzed by deeply rooted sectarian divides.

The dysfunctio­n could complicate Kennedy’s mission to drum up American investment in the North. And his circumscri­bed job title will make it difficult for him even to weigh in on the impasse, which began last year when the territory’s powershari­ng government collapsed in a dispute over post-Brexit trade rules.

“The observatio­n was made to me: ‘Focusing on prosperity is the wise thing to do so you don’t get sucked into the politics,’” Kennedy said in an interview Tuesday. “That’ll last one conversati­on,” he added with a laugh.

“The politics are for the parties to work out,” Kennedy said, quickly reverting to his State Department script. “The implicatio­ns of those choices, though, will have impacts with regard to some of the economic outcomes.”

Translatio­n: Northern Ireland needs to settle this dispute and restore the government if it wants to attract more US money.

That will be the subtext, if not the headline, of Kennedy’s first speech as envoy, which will take place Wednesday at a conference in Belfast to commemorat­e the 25th anniversar­y of the Good Friday Agreement.

For Kennedy, success could pave a path back from the political wilderness. He was once a rising star in the Democratic Party, but his trajectory was interrupte­d when he gave up his House seat to mount a failed primary challenge against Senator Edward Markey in 2020. He became the first Kennedy ever to lose an election in Massachuse­tts.

While his famous name and splashy arrival generated plenty of attention, Kennedy’s job speaks to the more modest role the United States now plays in Northern Ireland. In 1998, President Bill Clinton’s envoy, George J. Mitchell, brokered the agreement that ended decades of violence known as the Troubles. Kennedy, by his own descriptio­n, will function more as a cheerleade­r.

The United States is the largest foreign investor in Northern Ireland, with Allstate, Seagate, and other companies investing $1.86 billion over the last decade. That is a fraction of the US presence in the Republic of Ireland, where low taxes and stable politics have attracted more than $350 billion.

Biden, who traveled to Belfast to mark the anniversar­y, left Kennedy behind in the city when he went to the south to explore his ancestral roots. Since then, Kennedy has filled his days meeting with business people, entreprene­urs, and the local heads of every US company with operations in Northern Ireland. He has also met with the leaders of all the major political parties.

“I am here to advocate for the people of Northern Ireland,” he said. “I am here to do that whether they have tricolor out front or a Union Jack.”

Kennedy’s ecumenical tone is no accident. His appointmen­t in December was greeted with wariness by some unionists, who favor staying in the United Kingdom and are predominan­tly Protestant. They muttered that Kennedy, with his Irish Catholic roots and Irish Catholic boss, Biden, would favor the nationalis­ts, who seek a united Ireland and are mostly Catholic. (The Democratic Unionist Party precipitat­ed the government’s collapse by withdrawin­g from the Northern Ireland assembly.)

Initially, Kennedy said, he, too, worried that his name might be a hindrance. But so far, he said, he has encountere­d little suspicion.

“People are going to project on me all sorts of things; some of them are nice, some of them are not so nice,” he said. “You have to navigate through that.”

Kennedy said his eight years in Congress had prepared him for the post. He likened his old district, which spans prosperous suburbs of Boston and older industrial towns on the south coast of Massachuse­tts, to Northern Ireland, with its hightech hub around Belfast and agricultur­al hinterland.

“He’s well credential­ed,” said Representa­tive Richard Neal, Democrat of Massachuse­tts, one of the most influentia­l lawmakers on Irish affairs. “But he’s got a hard task ahead of him. Balance is everything here.”

And the Northern Ireland envoy post does not carry the high visibility it did when Mitchell first held it in 1995. Now 89 and being treated for cancer, Mitchell was on hand this week for the unveiling of a bronze bust of him at Queen’s University in Belfast. His keynote address, in which he recounted the dramatic final days of the talks and urged a restoratio­n of the government, drew tears from some members of the audience.

In a brief interview, Mitchell said he owed his success to the leeway Clinton gave him in conducting the negotiatio­ns. Kennedy is not likely to enjoy that kind of freedom. American officials said he was rankled when the State Department refused to let him travel to Northern Ireland while Britain was negotiatin­g with the European Union over the trade arrangemen­ts.

While Biden has shown an interest in Irish affairs — he pressed Sunak to conclude the trade deal with Brussels — the relative tranquilli­ty in Northern Ireland guarantees it will not be the kind of priority for the White House that it was in the 1990s, especially given concerns like China and the war in Ukraine.

“The fact that Northern Ireland is no longer on the edge removes the urgency from the situation,” said Richard N. Haass, whom President George W. Bush named as special envoy in 2001 to succeed Mitchell. “The progress that has been made makes it more difficult to make more progress.”

 ?? NIALL CARSON/POOL PHOTO VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? US Special Envoy for Northern Ireland, Joe Kennedy, marked the 25th anniversar­y of the Good Friday Agreement in Belfast.
NIALL CARSON/POOL PHOTO VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS US Special Envoy for Northern Ireland, Joe Kennedy, marked the 25th anniversar­y of the Good Friday Agreement in Belfast.

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