Boris Johnson is warned of ‘dangerous political
vacuum’ in Northern Ireland
Letter from four former secretaries of state says
Brexit’s damage to peace process must be addressed
The letter said recent disturbances reflected failure
in Belfast and Whitehall to sustain positive political momentum
Rory
Carroll Ireland correspondent
@rorycarroll72
Mon 26 Apr
2021 00.01 BST
Northern
Ireland is in a dangerous political vacuum and could “fall over” unless the UK
government acts swiftly, according to a cross-party group of former cabinet
ministers with experience in the region.
Boris
Johnson needs to show more urgency and focus to ameliorate Brexit’s damage to
the peace process, the group tells the prime minister in an open letter
published on Monday.
“The lesson
of the past 50 years or more in Northern Ireland is that if there is no forward
movement things do not stand still: they fall over. It is the responsibility of
the UK government to ensure that does not happen because there is nothing more
dangerous than a political vacuum.”
The letter
tacitly accuses Johnson and the Northern Ireland secretary, Brandon Lewis, of
endangering the 1998 Good Friday agreement through neglect and dishonesty.
The letter
is signed by four former Labour Northern Ireland secretaries: Peter Hain, Shaun
Woodward, Peter Mandelson and Paul Brown.
It was also
signed by Chris Patten, a former Conservative party chairman who led a
commission on policing in Northern Ireland, Sir Hugh Orde, a former chief
constable of the Police Service of Northern Ireland, Lord Robin Eames, a former
Church of Ireland primate, Des Browne, a minister in the Tony Blair and Gordon
Brown governments, and Patrick Cormack, a former Tory MP. Seven of the nine
signatories sit in the House of Lords.
The letter
said recent disturbances in mostly loyalist areas reflected failure in Belfast
and Whitehall to sustain positive political momentum, a requirement for peace
and stability in the region.
“Tony Blair
and Gordon Brown recognised that, as did John Major before them. They each took
personal charge of the peace process, convening regular summits and being in
constant touch with all the parties.”
The letter
said only serious, continuous engagement could defuse anger over the Irish Sea
trade border: “There is a strong sense within loyalists and unionists that no
one is listening to them, and that nobody in authority in Whitehall has been
honest with them about the consequences of Brexit.
“The most immediate
step is therefore for the government, at the highest level, to be seen to take
an interest.”
Unless
politics is made to work and seen to work unrest will continue, it said. That
meant creating space for local politics to regain the initiative and restoring
“badly damaged” trust with the Irish government.
In a poll
of Northern Ireland voters last week, only 5% of respondents said they trusted
the UK government to handle Northern Ireland’s interests in post-Brexit
arrangements.
Analysts
said the prime minister’s claim to be “sandpapering” the Northern Ireland
protocol into shape was abrasive rhetoric, not leadership.
DISUNITED
KINGDOM
Can Northern Ireland survive Brexit?
Those who dream of a united Ireland see hope in the
economic unity between north and south provided by the Brexit deal.
https://www.politico.eu/article/northern-ireland-brexit-border-protocol-unionists-nationalists-poll/




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