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Sinn Féin and the DUP could soon have a very different relationship. Liam McBurney/PA Wire/PA Images

'Surprised, not shocked': What do the North's politicians make of the Sinn Féin surge?

Unionists and nationalists all agree that Sinn Féin is a powerful electoral force.

SINN FÉIN IN power in the North might be far from a novelty, but that doesn’t mean that the prospect of the party leading the Irish government hasn’t attracted attention there. 

For over two decades, Northern Irish politicians have watched the rise of Sinn Féin from pariah party to the main voice of nationalism. 

It was in 2001 that the Sinn Féin vote exceeded the SDLP’s for the first time in a Westminster general election – the first shift in the centre of power of nationalist politics in decades.

Now, Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael know exactly how that feels. The parties have been pushed into second and third place by Sinn Féin’s share of the vote. 

The two parties – so used to dominating constituencies across the country – might well have been taken aback by the swell in support for Mary Lou McDonald’s party. 

But for some Northern Irish politicians, used to campaigning and canvassing alongside Sinn Féin activists, the party’s ability to attract voters has always been apparent.

Few people know the feeling better than the SDLP in the constituency of Newry and Armagh. Once a heartland for the party, the local MP from 1986 to 2005 was long-serving deputy leader (later Deputy First Minister) Seamus Mallon. 

Today, that same seat is held by Sinn Féin, while the party also holds three out of five Assembly seats in the area. 

To local MLA Justin McNulty, witnessing Sinn Féin’s success is hardly new. 

“They captured the mood,” he says. “I think it was a surprise to everyone.”

The leader of his own party, Colum Eastwood, gave his backing to Micheál Martin in the election

But McNulty, like many others, sees the vote for Sinn Féin as a rejection of century-long dominance of Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael. 

McNulty credits Sinn Féin’s electoral machine for helping to deliver that success – a machine that encompasses a vast array of willing campaigners and a well-resourced campaign strategy. 

“They are very well oiled and put huge numbers on the ground and manage the messaging very powerfully.”

It’s the messaging, in particular, that local politicians stress when they talk about Sinn Féin. 

The party, McNulty says, has placed itself in a position where it “owns” the Irish language in the North. Sinn Féin, during the three years of the Stormont collapse, rallied around and backed the campaign for a standalone Irish Language Act

“No one else can touch it,” he says.

“They used the Irish language very effectively recently,” he adds. “And reaped the rewards.”

general-election-2019 Tom Elliott during the UK general election campaign. Brian Lawless / PA Wire/PA Images Brian Lawless / PA Wire/PA Images / PA Wire/PA Images

Another person familiar with electoral battles against Sinn Féin is Tom Elliott, the former MP and Ulster Unionist Party leader.

Most recently, he lost to Michelle Gildernew in the UK general election in Fermanagh & South Tyrone – a constituency notorious for races that often come down to a handful of votes. 

Sinn Féin, he says, “obviously pick subjects they think will resonate with the people, whether they’re deliverable or not”.  

“They have tapped into those social issues on this occasion, around housing and healthcare.”

It’s a strategy, Elliott says, he has often seen from the party.

“They do pick issues, they’ll always do that. It doesn’t matter who they’re campaigning against.”

It’s an analysis shared across the unionist community. On Monday, First Minister Arlene Foster called the election a “huge change”

“I think if you look at that exit poll it’s very clear that people were upset about domestic issues, they were obviously very upset about the housing crisis that there is in the Republic of Ireland, the health issues that were prominent and to the fore,” she said. 

Still, that doesn’t mean Northern Ireland’s politicians foresaw Sinn Féin’s surge. 

“To a certain degree, I was surprised, even picking those social issues,” Elliott says. 

“Their history and their links to the Provisional IRA, maybe some of the younger generation just didn’t see it in that way. Maybe they don’t remember – they didn’t live through those terrible and dreadful times.” 

‘Surprised, not shocked’

One of the earliest unionist responses was from DUP MLA Christopher Stalford.

Writing on Twitter on Sunday night, even before the extent of the Sinn Féin success was clear, he wrote: “Whomever forms the government in the Republic of Ireland, our job will be to work together in areas of mutual interest”.

“Let us hope they resolve the deadlock soon and a stable government is in place.”

Still, some unionists have concerns that go beyond the need for a stable government as more Brexit talks loom.

Billy Hutchinson, the leader of the loyalist Progressive Unionist Party, thinks the result “says more about the two large parties than it does about Sinn Féin”. 

“It surprised me, but it didn’t shock me,” he says.

Hutchinson thinks Sinn Féin played the “social’ card”, focusing on issues like health and housing.

The vote, he argues, was not a mandate for a united Ireland but instead a reflection of people’s unhappiness at issues like health and housing. 

belfast-pride-festival Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald and Progressive Unionist Party leader Billy Hutchinson at a talk in Belfast. Liam McBurney / PA Archive/PA Images Liam McBurney / PA Archive/PA Images / PA Archive/PA Images

And while he doesn’t think he’ll see a “united Ireland in my lifetime”, he is concerned about what a Sinn Féin government would mean for Northern Ireland. 

“[Since] way back in the 1990s, the Irish government has played a straight bat,” says Hutchinson. “They wanted to guarantee nationalists in Northern Ireland that they would work to make sure things are done equally.”

“Sinn Féin can’t do that,” he argues.

One common comparison that’s been raised in the last week is the position the DUP found itself in following the 2017 UK election, when Theresa May found herself relying on the party’s MPs to secure a majority. 

Back then, there were concerns that DUP leverage on the UK government would distort policy on Northern Ireland, giving the party significant – some argued improper – sway. 

Now, Sinn Féin finds itself in an even more enviable position in Ireland – with the prospect of Mary Lou McDonald as taoiseach no longer a practical impossibility. 

“In terms of the Good Friday Agreement, they weren’t in government. How can they be in government and represent parties in the North?” says Hutchinson. 

It’s a legitimate question – and one no one has answered so far. Nothing in the Good Friday Agreement rules out Sinn Féin being in government in the South, but it certainly adds an element of uncertainty to cross-border relations that all sides will have to navigate in the months to come. 

“If they took up foreign affairs, they wouldn’t be trusted on Northern Ireland,” Hutchinson says.

“They would be representing republicans, not nationalists.”

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    Mute Paul
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:48 PM

    How many of those 5,000 were able to travel to Spain this summer…

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    Mute Charles Alexander
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:54 PM

    @Paul:
    I really despise the likes of you.
    Pitiful and sad!

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    Mute Ryan Carroll
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:55 PM

    @Paul: You can get a basic holiday package cheap for a low side of a few 100, a mortgage requires you to have 5 figures saved up and rent even split between three people would be about 125+ a week when some of them are on 188 or as a family 400

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    Mute Blah blah
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    Sep 1st 2017, 5:17 PM

    @Paul: I agree with you. The number of parents I know who moan about the cost of school, and in the same breath tell you about their foreign sun holiday, while eejit here doesn’t go on foreign holidays to pay for school!
    People give out about the cost of shoes for school…do they go barefoot during the summer?? The cost of uniform? They wear it 5 days a week for 10 months!! My issue is that all books have to be new, I would be happy if the govt even tackled that issue

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    Mute Fox
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    Sep 1st 2017, 5:37 PM

    Yeah guys, stop trying to enjoy life and just work to survive. You’re all so materialistic…

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    Mute Paul
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    Sep 1st 2017, 5:52 PM

    @Ryan Carroll: its not about the cost but the fact some can afford to go on a holiday but not to send kids back to school

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    Mute Ryan Carroll
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    Sep 1st 2017, 6:01 PM

    @Paul: Well going back to school is more expensive, depending.

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    Mute Colin Morris
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    Sep 1st 2017, 6:16 PM

    @Ryan Carroll: except you are simply saying this as you believe poor people deserve every misery they endure.

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    Mute William Grogan
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    Sep 1st 2017, 7:30 PM

    @Paul: ….. or are down in the pub most nights.

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    Mute Kevin Moylan
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    Sep 1st 2017, 7:35 PM

    @Charles Alexander: its probably true and as the saying goes,the truth hurts

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    Mute Theunpopularpopulist
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    Sep 1st 2017, 7:10 PM

    I’ve had a lot of stories regarding SVP and although they do great work, their generosity is well know to be abused. I can’t agree with any charity giving people cash, should be in the form of vouchers only.

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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Sep 1st 2017, 7:38 PM

    @Theunpopularpopulist: vouchers would certainly make it a bit harder for those who abuse the system . People already get help of 125/200 per child towards books. Uniforms can be bought cheap in lidl. I think some people just don’t want to pay a things forwards their kids needs and expect hand outs for everything. If people on social are getting their full benefits , rent allowances , med cards , child benefit and don’t have to pay towards anything then that’s a lot of money a month to themselves .. no wonder they can holidays to Spain every year .

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    Mute Éamonn Flynn
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    Sep 1st 2017, 7:57 PM

    @Theunpopularpopulist: I can understand this but a lot of people feel very embarrassed about having to show they needed help from SVP. Maybe instead SVP should provide the stuff directly.

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    Mute Fran Kembo
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    Sep 2nd 2017, 2:21 AM

    @Suzie Sunshine:
    I totally agree with you Suzie nice
    To see your back from holiday

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    Mute Colin Morris
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:36 PM

    Leo Varadkar and Fine Gael hate the people of Ireland.

    Varadkar’s reaction to the deaths of 2 homeless people yesterday was to reminisce about where he was when Princess Diana died.

    That shows the absolute and utter contempt both he and his party holds for Ireland.

    We are effectively on our own as FG represents banks and vulture funds.

    The government can be disregarded.

    Direct action to address the national housing emergency is not simply justified.

    It is essential.

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    Mute Ryan Carroll
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:53 PM

    Real people vote FG, banks didn’t elect them, and you won’t get anywhere pretending those voters don’t exist, you have to instead change their minds, and just insulting them as people who don’t care and writing them off as tools of banks only drives them deeper into the arms of more regressive politicians.

    Most people, well off or not, are inherently decent, and would want to do things about poverty,. At the moment we have a homeless crises because social housing is no longer being built the way it had been from DeVelera to Bertie, and the reason is they know the people who vote for them don’t live in them so they don’t feel pushed. You have to make them feel pushed by lobbying them – and you don’t convince people by writing them off before you’ve even tried, they needed to be shamed and guilted into it by highlighting the plight of these families not being described as tools of banks.

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    Mute William Grogan
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    Sep 1st 2017, 7:31 PM

    @Colin Morris: Shinner bot alert!!

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    Mute Just Some Guy
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    Sep 1st 2017, 7:46 PM

    @Colin Morris:

    Leo and Fine Gael hate the people of Ireland? oh please and stop talking rubbish

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    Mute Patabake Kennedy
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    Sep 1st 2017, 7:46 PM

    @Ryan Carroll: Don’t forget your tooth brush the next time you go to see your local TD. Don’t forget to bring a few smokes as well.

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    Mute Willy Malone
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:27 PM

    But sure Leo said 70% of the people are middle class . Surely something amiss here !

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    Mute Colin Morris
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    Sep 1st 2017, 5:32 PM

    @Willy Malone: he is not counting poor people though.

    According to Leo you are only human when your income reaches a certain level.

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    Mute Mark Daniel
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    Sep 1st 2017, 8:07 PM

    Between children’s allowance and back to school allowance there’s no excuse not to be prepared. Everyone knows when their child will be starting school so they could put a little away every week if needs be.

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    Mute tom
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    Sep 2nd 2017, 9:40 AM

    @Mark Daniel: that good advice for those that have a little left over each week but what about those that are struggling to get by and have nothing left over to put aside for the free schooling with voluntary contributions

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    Mute Colin Morris
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:18 PM

    Wait for FF/FG (both of which hate the people of Ireland) to claim that half the poor people are scammers and the other half have only themselves to blame. But that either way if you find yourself in financial or housing trouble in Ireland then you deserve to be thrown to the wolves / vultures.

    Direct action is necessary.

    Our government hates this country.

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    Mute scanlanavia
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:34 PM

    @Colin Morris: Agreed entirely. Government and state have despised the people since it’s foundation . ultimate arrogance . and grossly overrepresented per head of population.
    look at the tax take and poor return for tax.
    Excessive VAT rates.. stealth taxes shamblolic health services. filthy water . ecoli etc… who is monitoring water quality now ? Dept of Agriculture no less. it’s no wonder the quality of rivers has disproved.

    property tax will hike in 2009. wait for the outcry then. still too many quangos.

    yada yada

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    Mute Colin Morris
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:38 PM

    @scanlanavia: we are a population without a government.

    FF/FG represent money. Not people.

    Direct action is essential.

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    Mute Ryan Carroll
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:49 PM

    Since FF exposed the govts lies on that score only a few weeks ago (re numbers who were scamming and what they saved) I doubt that. Since it was FF govts that came up with medical cards, college grants, free primary secondary school, the minimum wage, free travel passes etc etc they have a funny way of showing they hate poor people.

    You won’t get anywhere in your knowledge by assuming FG ”hates” the people of Ireland either, people are not cartoon villains, you gotta know your enemy in order to beat them. THey think their approach helps those people too, thats how they look in the mirror in the morning without getting ill. The fact that most of them come from the upper middle class or rich farmers skews their worldview, esp since thats who their voters are too. So instead of their constituents telling them about their poverty they are demanding tax cuts and “those scammers on welfare their whole life” (of which they think there are far more than there really are) be dealt with.

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    Mute scanlanavia
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:26 PM

    so-called booming economy

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    Mute Emmet Dillane
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    Sep 1st 2017, 8:04 PM

    The Catholic church still picking up the slack when government turns its back on the people of Ireland.

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    Mute Colin Morris
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    Sep 1st 2017, 4:53 PM

    tell us.

    This is typical FF/FG deflection.

    Blame the poor.

    Always.

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    Mute Nigel O'Neill
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    Sep 1st 2017, 7:14 PM

    Keep The Recovery Going!!

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    Mute @mdmak33
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    Sep 1st 2017, 9:16 PM

    Fg and labour let all these issues grow,they did not stand up to the EU,they accepted 42% of EU debt.the public must remove them from politics or generations of their family will be born on the streets.

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