Potholes and bins can wait: Northern Ireland’s local elections are a constitutional showdown

Analysis: As Brexit looms large, the prospect of a referendum on Irish unity has the DUP dusting off their old battle cries

Ben Kelly
Thursday 18 April 2019 21:02 BST
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Northern Ireland local elections: Leaders of Sinn Fein and DUP use border poll debate fire up electorate ahead of vote

You know election season is under way in Northern Ireland when politicians are out beating the drum on the constitutional question.

Ahead of local elections on 2 May, parties have been unveiling their manifestos, but their rhetoric is not about bin collections and potholes. Instead, the parties are discussing (you guessed it) whether Northern Ireland should stay in the UK, or whether Ireland should be reunited.

Launching their campaign in the unlikely surroundings of unionist Ballymena on Monday, Sinn Féin’s leader Mary Lou McDonald said this election was “an opportunity for voters to say the time is up for Brexit and the time is up for DUP Tory cuts”.

But follow the party’s output on social media in recent days, and it’s clear the republican party is focused on the bigger picture. New logos, hashtags and campaign videos all send the same message: “A referendum on #IrishUnity is coming. Let’s win it.”

Irish unity is of course Sinn Féin’s raison d’etre, and will always feature in their electioneering. But in the political climate around Brexit, their desired border poll has never seemed a more likely prospect.

As Ireland continues to enjoy the firm support of Europe, the UK government is on its knees and its international standing is in tatters. A growing number of people in Northern Ireland are wondering if their interests might be better served in a united Ireland.

And, as the partition of Ireland has proven itself to be the single biggest obstacle to Brexit, its removal might not seem like a bad idea to many in Britain who want a clean break from the EU – something which is thwarted by a border of their own design.

All of this has left the DUP spooked. They tried to have their cake and eat it, despite being warned that pursuing Brexit would threaten the union. Now, with the union predictably threatened, the DUP are turning down the volume on Brexit and blaring some good old fashioned tribalism.

Launching their manifesto in east Belfast on Thursday, leader Arlene Foster called on unionists to vote for her party to show the strength of the union.

“Some claim it does not matter which party you vote for,” she said, “but you can be absolutely certain that it would be heralded as a massive success for republicans and a massive defeat for unionism if unionism was to be split and republicans were to have a massive win, and use the election results to strengthen their demand for a border poll.”

It’s a long way from 2013, when Foster was so sure of the union’s security, she suggested the DUP might back a border poll, to win it and put the issue to bed. She’s not so certain any more.

“We are living in profound political times,” she told the party faithful at the election launch, “and there can be no doubting in these times that every vote matters.”

But for the party that has been busy waving the Union Jack at Westminster, there are uncomfortable truths to face at home, where the union – with its political instability and economic uncertainty – is proving a harder sell than usual.

Of Ms Foster, unionist commentator Sophie Long tweeted, “Why is a border poll the worst thing she can imagine? What is the union delivering for working class people, single parents, for Irish speakers, for women and for gay people?”

Ultimately, the local elections won’t make much of a difference to the constitutional question – a border poll can only be called on the intuition of that most astute secretary of state Karen Bradley. But the results could serve as something of a litmus test.

More telling will be the results of the European Parliament elections on 23 May, in which Northern Ireland’s parties compete for three seats. The candidate list is still taking shape, but this is likely to become a proxy vote on Brexit, in a region that voted strongly for Remain, and where the prospect of a hard border is fiercely opposed.

So keep those drums out – they’ll be beating them again very soon.

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