Rishi Sunak can’t compromise his protocol deal.
He must face down the DUP
Simon
Jenkins
The prime minister has to stand firm against Northern
Ireland’s backwoodsmen and their cheerleaders in his own party
Tue 21 Feb
2023 06.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/feb/21/rishi-sunak-northern-ireland-protocol-dup
Rishi Sunak
knows what he must do in Northern Ireland. He cannot cringe any longer before
that region’s backwoodsmen and their cheerleaders in his own party. Unlike his
predecessors, he has nothing to lose, with probably just two years in office.
He clearly has a deal on a revised Irish trade protocol with the EU on the
table, and he has the parliamentary votes to push it through. His reputation
has no time for error.
The
partition of Ireland was born a century ago to appease northern Protestant
sentiment. That sentiment has ever since abused self-rule – under licence from
London – with blatantly sectarian government. This was sustainable as long as
trade and citizenship were left fluid across Ireland, with both sides of the
border still partners in the European single market.
Brexit
crashed that sustainability. Boris Johnson’s (largely personal) fixation that
Brexit meant leaving the single market required a trade protocol to keep Irish
economic unity intact. Though temporary and a mess, this rescued the Brexit
deal. Now Johnson is plotting to undermine Sunak’s clearing of that mess. Red
and green lanes will separate internal and “external” Irish commerce, aided by
digital technology. Regulatory disputes will be handled by a two-tier process
under the European court of justice. This is perfectly sensible, given the
nature of Ireland’s geography. All trade is a compromise of sovereignty.
The
Protestant DUP was born of objection. It was formed to oppose the cooperative
unionism of the 1980s and the Good Friday peace agreement. Its members were
political primitives who divided their cities with walls and called for
creationism to be taught in schools. Dusted with the covenant of unionism, they
have held the Tory right – and Johnson – in thrall, a toxin on the party’s
Westminster backbenches. They represent just a quarter of the region’s
population.
Northern
Ireland is desperate for a settlement, especially its young people, and for the
return of self-government, which the DUP denies in opposing the protocol. The
region voted against Brexit and barely half its voters are still firmly
committed to the union with Britain. A poll a year ago showed a majority
expects Irish reunification within a decade. Perhaps most significant is that
declared Catholics now outnumber Protestants. Things are clearly changing.
Yet one
concession for resolving the DUP impasse this week is said to be a
strengthening of the minority veto in the Stormont assembly. This entrenchment
of sectarian “power-sharing” is precisely what has frozen the region’s
government for most of a quarter of a century. It should be unthinkable that
one party should be free to veto not just facets of Britain’s overseas trade
policy but, in effect, any improvement in the UK’s absurdly ill-judged dealings
with the EU over Brexit. If the DUP continues to oppose power-sharing, that
sharing should be revised, not the protocol.
The dire
history of British rule over Ireland merits the “reparation” of some London
sympathy for eventual reunion. One day this will come. Protocol revision offers
the glue of restored economic unity. Letting the DUP block such a joining would
be outrageous. Sunak must know this – and know what he should now do.
Simon
Jenkins is a Guardian columnist
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