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Ok stuff's been happening in the world of UK politics and I need to share it with you before I scream.
So first, some important context. Way back in the 1920s when Ireland left the UK, the province of Ulster, by this point predominantly Protestant, remained, splitting from the rest of the nation. However, as is always the case with partition, it wasn't a clean break: people got stuck on sides of the border they weren't necessarily happy with, and over time, historical political and cultural divides were exacerbated by a new concrete separation that culminated in the Troubles, a period of violence in NI between the 1970s and the 1990s as radical nationalists (the IRA) clashed with the UK military over control of the region. This was largely ended in 1998 by the Good Friday Agreement, tearing down the hard border across Ireland and facilitating free movement of goods and people. In order to preserve the peace, a power sharing mechanism was implemented in Stormont (NI's assembly) whereby the government had to consist of two equal and codependent parties. The first minister was from the party who won the elections, the deputy minister was from the opposition, etc. This system worked well enough at suppressing Unionist/Nationalist tensions for about 20 years and was considered one of the greatest diplomatic achievements of British and Irish history.
Flash forward to 2016, and the UK votes to leave the EU. Overall. Within the nations, it's a different story, and while Scotland's desire to remain gets most of the press, Northern Ireland also voted disproportionately to remain. And as the Conservatives would discover, they kind of had to.
Because you see, a big part of the reason why the Good Friday Agreement worked is because both parties were EU members, so they were already part of the Single Market, meaning free movement of goods and services wasn't an issue since it was already European policy. Now Britain wants to leave the Single Market, we have an issue.
If you were looking at memes around 2017, you'll be familiar with the term 'Hard Brexit'. What that means is the UK is fully cut out of all the various levels of EU membership: the free trade, the external tariffs and, most importantly, the regulatory framework of the Single Market that allows goods to be easily traded across borders. As you may also know, the EU takes regulation very seriously, so ensuring imports are up to code is a lengthy and time-intensive process. If Britain wants a Hard Brexit, and they're cut out of the Single Market, there has to be a point where goods being traded in and out of countries still in the framework are checked. Say, for instance, in Ireland.
One problem: this entails a hard border. Not for people, perhaps, but for products, and people need products to make a living. On top of that as well, Northern Ireland would be cut out of the free trade area and potentially face massive import duties, massively increasing costs and threatening demand. Even on a symbolic level, its a firm dividing line across Ireland. And the Good Friday Agreement is very clear about the No Borders thing because Look What Happened The Last Time There Was A Border. If the Conservatives try and surround the UK with a hard customs border, Northern Ireland will fall.
But the alternative is either not having a Hard Brexit, the entire point of their manifesto, which would be political suicide, or leaving Northern Ireland behind basically in the EU, creating a border not across Ireland but across the UK. And if that happens, Northern Ireland will fall because of the radical unionists.
(Alternatively the solution was 'No Brexit in the first place' but too late for that now ig.)
David Cameron resigns before having to sort this out. Theresa May spends her entire premiership trying to sort this out while part of a coalition with the DUP (the leading Unionist party, at this point the largest party in Stormont and basically NI's Tories) and she can't, forcing her resignation. Then Boris Johnson comes along and finds a 'temporary' solution to get the paperwork signed: put the border between Great Britain and Norther Ireland, keeping Good Friday intact, until they can find a better way. Until then, Northern Ireland abides by EU trade regulation and future amendments: the Northern Ireland Protocol. And they wait. And they wait. And they don't.
As this shitshow is going down, Northern Ireland is getting increasingly tired of Westminster's routine (and the DUP's dumpster fire coalition attempt) and pivots towards new kid on the block, the party of compromise, Alliance. The Nationalists, led by Sinn Fein, lose votes through this too, but to a far lesser degree. DUP loses 10% of the vote share in the 2017 election, putting them and Sinn Fein neck and neck.
And in 2022, for the first time, Sinn Fein wins Stormont. The nationalists are in power in Northern Ireland. Or rather, they're half in power.
Because as we established, Northern Ireland has a power sharing system. And the DUP have boycotted Stormont. They aren't happy with the potential of being pulled away from the UK, so they decide if they can't have NI, no-one can. By refusing to participate in the coalition government, the Sinn Fein half is prohibited from governing alone, forcing the government into shutdown.
That shutdown has lasted for a year.
This happened around the time Boris Johnson started sinking over Partygate, followed by whatever the fuck happened with Truss, so NI got overshadowed in the news cycle but over the course of 2022, order has been breaking down in Northern Ireland as radical unionists begin to stir trouble. Indeed, it looks like Northern Ireland is heading straight back to the Troubles, and no-one seems to want to do anything to fix it. In fact, the Conservatives seem to want to declare war with the EU through a proposed override of the Protocol, dismantling decades of diplomatic hard work and plunging the continent into anarchy.
In October, Rishi Sunak is 'elected' Prime Minister, and he sets out to solve the Northern Irish issue. For all her many faults, Truss was pretty cordial with Europe, and Sunak continued that trend well into his premiership. Combined with the looming threat of Russia over European stability, the EU is in a compromising mood, and agrees to help work out a new system that tears down the border between the UK and Ireland. The plan is: separate goods going to Northern Ireland and goods going to the EU. Why it took them 7 years to sort that out I don't know but huzzah, a solution. But on top of this, they also implement the Stormont Brake: whereas before, EU law applies automatically in Northern Ireland, Stormont can veto proposed amendments from applying in Northern Ireland if they're too radical. This is a hugely generous concession by the EU since this is a major compromise on a lot of their core principles, since Northern Ireland is now part of the Single Market but theoretically exempt from following it, and by extension a huge win for Rishi Sunak. While the DUP have lost all credibility, this will hopefully be enough to get them back into Stormont. This new arrangement is called the Windsor Framework, and buries the final major hatchet in the Brexit divorce proceedings.
OK, LENGTHY context complete, lets discuss what's happened. Because turns out, there's opposition to this new framework.
Who from?
WHY ITS BORIS JOHNSON AND THE CHUCKLEFUCKS.
Basically, leading members of the Johnsonian and Trussian governments (including both PMs) explicitly said they wouldn't support the deal. They don't have an alternative. A plan. Anything. They just won't support it.
Joining them is, you guessed it, THE FUCKING DUP. No matter what happens, they're refusing to go back to Stormont. Just to spite their rivals.
Some more important context, the Conservatives are on the verge of self destructing since vast swathes of the party believe Johnson is a martyr and Sunak is not the True King, so getting the Conservatives to vote together is a massive challenge. If this vote passes, it'll give the Tories a lifeline to the next election, possibly their one positive achievement since 2016 outside of 'not actively backing Putin'. If it fails, the Conservatives are history. Making matters worse in the best way, Keir Starmer pledges Labour's plurality in support of Windsor, saying, to paraphrase, 'if you fucks can't get it together we'll do it for you.' Iconic. By doing so, Labour guarantee the vote passes unless the entire Conservative party rips itself in twain, but potentially force the PM to rely on the OPPOSITION over his OWN PARTY to pass groundbreaking legislation, which is almost worse for Sunak than the bill failing.
The vote took place today and the Conservatives, despite a massive rebellion, barely managed to vote in favour on their own majority alone. Barely. We're talking single digits. Two dozen Tory MPs rebelled, and 3 dozen more abstained. With no alternative. They would rather have chaos in Northern Ireland than be forced to work with the EU when the EU is bending over backwards to make this happen.
Today is a positive for the UK's future, but it reaffirms that the Conservatives need to go now more than ever.
FSB NI Welcomes House Of Lordsâ NI Scrutiny Committee Windsor Framework Report
Following publication of the House of Lordsâ NI Scrutiny Committeeâs report on âStrengthening Northern Irelandâs Voice in the Context of the Windsor Frameworkâ, Alan Lowry, FSBâs NI Chair welcomed the reportâs call on the UK Government to acknowledge that the Windsor Framework isnât working for businesses as envisaged and to work to address these problems well in advance of any SPSâŠ
DUP executive endorses deal to restore devolution at Stormont
Sir Jeffrey Donaldson says the proposals are not perfect but will be good for Northern Ireland.
The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), the main unionist party in Northern Ireland, has endorsed a deal to return to power-sharing government, its leader has said.
A health and cost of living crisis is causing real problems that must be addressed. Democracy cannot be hamstrung any longer, says Guardian
[...] A recent Liverpool University survey showed that even 56% of unionists support Sunakâs deal. Just 17% oppose it. Most people in Northern Ireland are clearly fed up with the political morass in which they have become trapped. Yet Johnson and 21 other Tory backbenchers find themselves agreeing with Donaldson. These Tories would vote for the Earth being flat if it might undermine their party leader. The DUP is able to use veto rights over the provinceâs executive decisions under the Good Friday agreementâs power-sharing constitution. It can also vote Stormont and its government into recess, as it has done for the past year following Sinn FĂ©inâs 2022 election success. Then, the DUPâs one-third of votes at the 2019 general election shrank to 21%, while Sinn FĂ©in rose to 29%. This reflects the fact that declared Protestants are now in a minority in Northern Ireland, coupled with the expectation, notably of younger voters, that Irish reunion is now only a matter of time. [...]
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Because of the DUP obstruction of Stormont, the UK government called for the election to be held at the beginning of March, but this was postponed to give the DUP time to see what the Windsor Framework had to offer. However, they postponed it until January 2024 which means the people of Northern Ireland will have to go another 9 months without a functioning government. Since it's clear the DUP will not return to Stormont despite the framework the election should be brought forward. The election in Northern Ireland should be held now and the DUP handed its arse on a platter.
The brake would allow a minority of MLAs at Stormont to formally flag concerns about the imposition of new EU laws in Northern Ireland.
SDLP leader Colum Eastwood said his party has not decided whether it will vote in favour of or abstain from the Commons vote on the Stormont brake. MPs will vote on the mechanism in Westminster tomorrow, while the DUP has already voiced its intention to vote against the Windsor Framework proposal. The brake would allow a minority of MLAs at Stormont to formally flag concerns about the imposition of new EU laws in Northern Ireland â a move that could see the UK Government veto their introduction in the region. If the break is triggered, it would automatically suspend the application of the EU rule in Northern Ireland until the existing EU/UK joint committee on Withdrawal Agreement consider the issue. At this point, the EU would have the right to take retaliatory or remedial measures specifically related to the substance of the disputed rule. âI think itâs utterly ridiculous for anybody to think that 30 MLAs in Northern Ireland would be able to veto European regulations. Thatâs madness,â Eastwood said on BBCâs Good Morning Ulster. âI think the Stormont brake is a bad idea anyway, I think it muddies the water in terms of our investment proposition.â -He added that the SDLP has not decided their position for Wednesdayâs vote: âWeâll either vote for it or abstain, weâll make that decision today.â
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The Stormont Brake is anti-democratic and was made solely for unionists. True, any thirty MLAs could trigger it, but it's most likely to be unionists. To be truly democratic, any objection by thirty MLAs should be first put to the vote of the whole Assembly. The Stormont Brake only delays the inevitable, even unionists know that.
Gregory Campbell said the Windsor Framework was better than the contentious Northern Ireland Protocol, but it was still ânot what we need to
A senior DUP MP has said he would advise party colleagues to oppose the new Brexit deal on Northern Ireland trade if further movement is not secured. Gregory Campbell said the Windsor Framework was better than the contentious Northern Ireland Protocol, but it was still ânot what we need to seeâ. The DUP, which collapsed powersharing in Northern Ireland in protest at the protocol, has yet to come to a collective decision on whether to back the framework and return to devolution. Mr Campbell and other senior party figures, including Sammy Wilson, Ian Paisley and Lord Dodds, have all expressed concern at the UK/EU agreement. Earlier this week, DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson established a consultation panel to inform its deliberations on the new deal. It will report back by the end of March.
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It would have been really weird if there had been no objections. The Windsor Framework has not been dismissed outright, and the opinions here are from the DUP bigwigs who would be expected to object on principle. Since the talks are ongoing, it means there are DUP members who are willing to accept the Windsor Framework, even the unpalatable bits.
Perhaps the bigwigs are speaking only to reassure their base that nothing will change, while secretly planning to accept the deal. Having deprived Northern Ireland of a functioning government for 10 months they might want to have one well before the next election in nine months.