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The Sinn Féin team in Westminster today. Kirsty O'Connor/PA Images

Mary Lou McDonald wasn't impressed after meeting Theresa May in London

The new Sinn Féin leader says the British Prime Minister has ‘no plan’.

AFTER MEETING TODAY with British Prime Minister Theresa May in London, Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald has said that the British government “doesn’t have a plan” to deal with the ongoing deadlock at Stormont.

McDonald said her party are “disappointed” that the British government favours a “reflection period”, adding that she feels such a wait could be “extremely dangerous” for hopes of a breakthrough.

A spokesperson for 10 Downing Street said that May impressed on both the DUP and Sinn Féin in separate meetings today that the parties should “reflect” on the situation.

Last Wednesday, DUP leader Arlene Foster collapsed talks on the restoration of power-sharing in Stormont and blamed an inability to find common ground on the issue of the Irish language.

Sinn Féin has said that the basis for a deal was agreed between the parties but that the DUP would not follow through on it.

Speaking to reporters in Westminster this evening, McDonald said she feels the Irish and British governments need to convene talks to ensure progress is not lost.

“I have to tell you that we can only surmise from the meeting with the British Prime Minister that the government here doesn’t have a plan. Doesn’t have a viable plan for carving a pathway to the restoration of the institutions.”

We’re disappointed that the government seems wedded to what it calls a reflection period. We regard the opening up of a political vacuum as extremely dangerous.

“We have reiterated our call for the convening of the intergovernmental conference as per the Good Friday Agreement,” she added.

Asked why stalling further talks would be dangerous, McDonald said she felt it would harden positions:

I fear drift, I fear entrenchment, I fear that those elements who were clearly never really up for a deal actually dig their heels in further and are further emboldened by delay. There comes a moment in political life to call things and we’re at a point to make a decision.

“Just because the DUP has crashed the bus, it doesn’t mean that everybody has to sit at home now, cross their fingers and hope against hope that things will improve,” she added.

The DUP has said that it does not favour direct rule from London but is calling for the UK government to start making decisions on an “interim” basis.

The DUP’s leadership was also meeting the British Prime Minister today.

“In the absence of the devolution that we all want, we can’t continue to have Northern Ireland left in limbo as it’s been for the last 13 months, we need decisions taken on waiting lists, on health, on mental health, on housing and on education,” the DUP’s Nigel Dodds MP said today.

In the absence of the devolution that we all want, we can’t continue to have Northern Ireland left in limbo as it’s been for the last 13 months, we need decisions taken on waiting lists, on health on mental health on housing and on education.
Following today’s meetings, Downing Street acknowledged that it has “a responsibility to ensure the continued delivery of public services in Northern Ireland.”

Stormont powersharing talks The DUP's Nigel Dodds MP and Arlene Foster MLA in London. Yui Mok / PA Images Yui Mok / PA Images / PA Images

In her outline of how discussions went with the British Prime Minister, Mary Lou McDonald said citizens in Northern Ireland must have the same rights as those in the rest of Britain and Ireland.

“Both governments need to work to ensure that citizens in the north enjoy the same rights as citizens all across these islands of marriage equality, for language rights to ensure the legacy funding is not withheld as some kind of bargaining chip in this process,” she said.

Sinn Féin’s leader in Northern Ireland Michelle O’Neill MLA claimed that all parties to the talks, including the DUP, know that the basis for a deal was agreed.

“The British Prime Minister, who the DUP are here talking to today, came and visited last Monday and said there was the basis of a deal. The Irish government said there was the basis of a deal and indeed the DUP were briefing that there was the basis of a deal. We’re crystal clear that we had a way forward,” O’Neill told reporters.

In a briefing to the media on the content of today’s meetings, a spokesperson for 10 Downing Street said May told both parties that devolution remains the best option.

“In both meetings, she said it was important for everyone to reflect on the circumstances which have led to this and their positions, so a way forward could be found to restore an Executive,” the spokesperson said.

She made clear how the UK government remains steadfast in its commitment to the Belfast Agreement and its successors and reiterated that devolved government is in the best interests of the people in Northern Ireland.

“On next steps, she set out how the Northern Ireland Secretary would continue to work intensively with the parties on the basis for an agreement. ”

Read: ’A standstill is completely unacceptable’: Sinn Féin to meet Varadkar and May over Stormont deadlock >

Explainer: Why UK Brexiteers have been told to ‘sod off’ away from the Good Friday Agreement >

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    Mute Franklin Roosevelt
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:05 PM

    What are the Catalans actually at now? They just seem to be ars*ing around

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    Mute Mick Jordan
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:45 PM

    @Franklin Roosevelt: He knows that the split between the separatists and unionists is too fine to call an election he could very well lose.

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    Mute Paul Devlin
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    Oct 26th 2017, 8:21 PM

    @Mick Jordan: well, the problem is that Abby election would be a de facto independence referendum. The separatist movement would probably win and Madrid would suspend autonomy again. They were waiting for promised guarantees from Madrid to respect any election result. Madrid refused

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    Mute Dave O Keeffe
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    Oct 26th 2017, 8:59 PM

    @Paul Devlin: I’m not sure the seperatists would win. He has pretty much clocked everything up since the day after the referendum. Has come off very indecisive and almost afraid to act.

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    Mute Paul Devlin
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    Oct 26th 2017, 9:21 PM

    @Dave O Keeffe: or unwilling to ratchet up the tension to the point of violence. That’s Madrid’s way. Every violent or coercive blow the Spanish government lands leads another section of the Catalan people to the separatist camp

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    Mute Dave O Keeffe
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    Oct 27th 2017, 2:49 PM

    @Paul Devlin: I agree, but if he wanted a result he should have gone for it two weeks ago when people were already being brutalised by Madrid.

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    Mute Deano Cracow
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:18 PM

    He is out of his depth. Think of the Grand Old Duke of York.

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    Mute Dean Anderson
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:30 PM

    he’s just making an eejit of himself at this stage.. I think the momentum is just gone now &the govt in Madrid must be just loving watching this now

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    Mute MK76
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:57 PM

    FLIP-FLOP. No wonder SF claim such an affinity to this party.

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    Mute cormac o neill
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:00 PM

    He knows they will be outcasted by Europe.. dopey stunt he played

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    Mute Franklin Roosevelt
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:08 PM

    @cormac o neill: they’d have a few friends at first, maybe some Scandinavian and Eastern European countries. The UK if Corbyn gets elected even.

    Then the nation of Catalonia will become just the new normal and conservatives in Ireland, Britain and beyond will then pretend “Oh yeah, we were always cool with that idea”

    27
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    Mute Dog Eat Fog
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:37 PM

    Farcical. End of.

    29
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    Mute Joseph Dempsey
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:35 PM

    This chap is all over the place, get on with it

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    Mute Conor Sheehan
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    Oct 26th 2017, 6:28 PM

    Just declare independence already.

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    Mute La Massa
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    Oct 26th 2017, 5:44 PM

    lol. The head of the catalan fascist government seems to be Lost…

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    Mute Malachi
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    Oct 26th 2017, 6:13 PM

    @La Massa: Fascist?

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    Mute La Massa
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    Oct 26th 2017, 6:47 PM

    @Malachi: yeah, a facist disgrace. A shame for Freedom and democracy… A bad joke.

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    Mute Sandra Clifford
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    Oct 26th 2017, 7:40 PM

    Looks like he bottled it

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    Mute Rachel Didleu
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    Oct 26th 2017, 8:20 PM

    Eeny Meeny Money Mo. Catch a blackbird by the toe. If it squeals let it go eeny meaney miney mo….no election

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    Mute alphanautica
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    Oct 26th 2017, 8:26 PM

    I think he knows if he called a second election then the majority of the population would vote and the result wouldn’t be for independence.

    Last time round most Catalan’s didn’t recognise the vote as legitimate and only the pro-
    independence folk were motivated to vote.

    Bit like the Easter Rising. Supported by very few, thought at the time to be crackpots and dreamers. Yet corrected history’s warm hand has made them out to be heroes.

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    Mute Reg
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    Oct 26th 2017, 7:32 PM

    This guy doesn’t seem to know the difference between his arse and his elbow.

    15
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