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Sasko Lazarov/Rollingnews.ie

Analysis Stormont is too fragile to be confident after one day's success

It was the DUP’s week in the lights, but Saturday was a different day.

JUST AFTER THREE o’clock on Saturday afternoon, the three men from the Northern Ireland Office stepped into Stormont’s Great Hall.

NI Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris was there with Minister of State Steve Baker and Lord Caine; having a moment on the stage at this beginning of yet another new beginning in the politics of the North.

Time will judge how wise the UK Government was to engage in a one-party negotiation with the DUP, and to produce a selling commentary about Britishness, the UK internal market and the Union, as they tried to push Jeffrey Donaldson and his party over the line and back into the Stormont Executive.

It was the DUP’s week in the lights, but Saturday was a different day.

“If there’s a wow factor, that was yesterday,” a veteran Belfast republican commented; “a day like no other.”

He was talking, of course, about what it all meant for Sinn Féin; a day “replete with symbolism” as Michelle O’Neill stepped forward as First Minister.

She walked in careful steps and chose considered words.

Her walk down that grand staircase, into the Great Hall and towards the Assembly Chamber perhaps the image that will more than any other be remembered from this day in the Stormont theatre.

Many of us who have watched the politics of this place over many years, will remember her not-so-sure steps and her nervous words when she first took over the republican leadership role in the North in the period of Martin McGuinness’s illness and just before his death in 2017.

Who would not have been nervous taking on that role and following in those footsteps. That was then.

We now see a much more confident Michelle O’Neill. Watched it yesterday. Heard it in her words. We see how comfortable she is in the company of people. How good she is in conversation.

The 8 February deadline was a signal.

When that target was set by the UK Government, we had a sense that the DUP was moving towards agreement.

And, in recent days, we have watched as Donaldson, his deputy Gavin Robinson, Gregory Campbell and others have fought off the critics of their deal with a simple challenge; publish your achievements. It has worked.

Inside the Assembly Chamber, we heard more of that from others in the party yesterday.

Donaldson will have been happy about how he was heard by loyalist leaders during a private briefing in Belfast on Tuesday. He was joined in that meeting by Gavin Robinson; encouraged also by the reaction to a number of his media interviews, and by what he has described as a “decisive” vote in his party Executive.

Is his deal perfect? No.

Did he get everything he wanted? No.

No negotiation delivers that type of outcome, but he spoke yesterday of bringing about change that many said was not possible.

There is no sense of Ulster at the crossroads.

The Stormont roof didn’t cave in on Saturday.

One of Donaldson’s key backers, a one-time and short-time leader of the party, Edwin Poots, is the new Speaker in the Northern Ireland Assembly.

His support for Donaldson is viewed as critical.

We know what Sinn Fein and the DUP won’t be able to agree on.

Our Past is never far behind us, and when we talk about it, we walk on eggshells.

There is no agreed narrative. There never will be.

But can this new Executive, in shared effort, help to begin to fix what is broken in health and education and policing; get the pay disputes settled, end the strikes, show us a politics that works?

Can Michelle O’Neill and Emma Little Pengelly (the deputy First Minister) surprise us as Paisley and McGuinness did in 2007?

I spent Saturday at Stormont sharing thoughts and analysis with the BBC News Channel, chatting with them throughout the day alongside the academic Dr Clare Rice.

And, as it was getting dark at teatime, this was my last thought. I remembered the cold on that political hill in January 2020, and the New Decade New Approach Agreement jointly presented by then Secretary of State Julian Smith and then Tánaiste Simon Coveney.

And I remembered a couple of days later (a Saturday) when we watched the same theatre at Stormont with all of the same media attention, and then Boris Johnson arriving, on a Monday I think, for his slice of the celebratory cake, before the Executive fell again in 2022.

I guess Rishi Sunak will want to take a bow; have a photograph of the latest political rescue mission in Belfast.

And my point is this, Stormont has fallen too many times for us to believe in it on the basis of just one day.

It is about what happens next; about politics working and about the review and change that might put it on more solid ground.

A deal, another deal, that makes the theatre of yesterday, is not good enough.

Stormont, if it is to be Stormont and our place of politics, needs something more.

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    Mute Paddy Ryan
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    Feb 4th 2024, 4:03 PM

    The unionist grip on power slowly coming to an end. Historic

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    Mute Justin Gillespie
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    Feb 4th 2024, 4:09 PM

    @Paddy Ryan: There has been no unionist grip on power since the GFA was signed.
    The top unionist and nationalist party govern together. The first minister can’t buy a box of paper clips without agreement from the deputy and vice versa.

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    Mute Brendan O'Brien
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    Feb 4th 2024, 4:23 PM

    @Justin Gillespie: Even before that there had been no ‘unionist grip on power’ since direct rule came in in 1972.

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    Mute brian o'leary
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    Feb 4th 2024, 5:24 PM

    @Ratko Mladic: you do realise that sharing power is a step down from actually being in power?

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    Mute Mr Inbetween
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    Feb 4th 2024, 5:51 PM

    @Ratko Mladic: shyte is awesome, lol

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    Mute Paddy Ryan
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    Feb 4th 2024, 6:03 PM

    @Ratko Mladic: you OK hun

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    Mute brian o'leary
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    Feb 4th 2024, 6:20 PM

    @Ratko Mladic: lol….. you do realise that if that were true then you wouldn’t check back later to see if I responded……. hopefully angerly……lol

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    Mute Alan
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    Feb 4th 2024, 6:05 PM

    Car crash interview with rte earlier. Macdonald opened with usual United ireland (talk about poor timing except that I’m sure west Belfast wanted to hear this). Then a series of evasions, no questions answered, growing hostility and dismissive attitude to interviewer. Can only hope she does more interviews. Will expose threadbare nature of sf policies and their complete inability to give straight answers.

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    Mute Justin Gillespie
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    Feb 4th 2024, 6:21 PM

    @Alan: McDonald walking a tighteope trying to keep everyone onside. Tanking in the polls on the south and about to find out how difficult it is to be top dog in NI.
    Interesting times ahead.

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    Mute Alan
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    Feb 4th 2024, 6:23 PM

    @Justin Gillespie: yes. There’s only so many times you can keep saying we want more funding and better services for everyone. Who doesn’t.

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    Mute Marcus Maher - Triskellion Films
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    Feb 4th 2024, 7:09 PM

    Even as a Liverpudlian I loathe the Unionists. They are like the constant bad neighbours who simply complain to you about everything, whinging, giving out, ringing your doorbell because Aoife’s ball went into their flowerbed, Declan has a cough and they’re banging the walls, spreading rumours about Sinead’s promotion, putting parking cones in front of your parking space, just constant misery, spite and bitterness. They’ll never be a United Ireland until they’re deported off the Island, I wouldn’t appease Sammy Wilson, Arlene Foster, Donaldson, Campbell, I’d send them to Eastbourne or Isle of Shipey one way…seriously.

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    Mute Mike smith
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    Feb 5th 2024, 12:42 PM

    @Marcus Maher – Triskellion Films: They might leave voluntarily if there is a UI. I hear they all fancy moving to Liverpool.

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    Mute Thom Hunter
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    Feb 7th 2024, 6:40 PM

    @Marcus Maher – Triskellion Films: tf you live in England. There is enough bigotry in Northern Ireland. We neither need nor want people like you. I imagine anyways.

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    Mute Alan
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    Feb 4th 2024, 8:31 PM

    Hard to when sf’s first move following on agreement with dup is to bang on about United ireland. Not the best way to start really. It’s the same polarised ding dong. Dup no to United ireland, sf no to United Kingdom.

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    Mute John Doe
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    Feb 6th 2024, 8:59 AM

    @Alan: it’s an entirely legitimate aspiration and you don’t seem worried about the DUP talk of securing the union with Britain.

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    Mute Alan Kennedy
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    Feb 4th 2024, 11:34 PM

    Congratulations to Mary Lou on finally masterminding overall control of a 32 county People’s Irish Republican Ireland!

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    Mute Alan Kennedy
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    Feb 5th 2024, 12:03 AM

    @John H Green: The occupied 6 are in the bag!

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    Mute Blue Moon
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    Feb 5th 2024, 3:05 AM

    @Alan Kennedy: A bag of nothing… The 26 counties can’t afford to keep the republic afloat, never mind the other six…. Let the Brits keep pumping good money into bad…

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    Mute Jack Moss
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    Feb 5th 2024, 7:00 AM

    @Alan Kennedy: I think you need to read the GFA . All sides including SF agreed that NI is part of the UK till the people of NI vote to leave .

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    Mute Mike smith
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    Feb 5th 2024, 12:44 PM

    @Jack Moss: Union Jack! It is all over bar the shouting and the fit lady singing. Welcome to the future, not your imaginary empire.

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    Mute Thom Hunter
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    Feb 7th 2024, 6:43 PM

    @Alan Kennedy: except, some us will most likely be forced to leave. I think some are calling it ‘deported’. I don’t know where I will be sent to though. My kids even less as they are born through a mixed relationship. Let’s hope fascism doesn’t win.

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    Mute Caoimhín Ó Seanáin
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    Feb 4th 2024, 7:22 PM

    Ca we change this conversation to a mature exchange of views, please,?

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    Mute Blue Moon
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    Feb 5th 2024, 2:57 AM

    So Mary Lou isn’t happy the way the government are handing the migrant situation….. What would she do with them ?? Bring back Tar and Feathers ? Or just kneecap them ??? SF have objected to every housing development in their personal localities…. SF have only One agenda… United Ireland… We can’t afford the 26 nevermind the 32…

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    Mute Mary.E.
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    Feb 5th 2024, 1:40 AM

    No comments allowed on Mary Loo,and many others.

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    Mute Blue Moon
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    Feb 5th 2024, 3:09 AM

    @Mary.E.: Post here…. Comment sections are shut down on nearly every story…

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    Mute Margaret Gallagher
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    Feb 5th 2024, 8:44 AM

    After one sided negotiations with whiners having to be assured of the love of their mother Britttanica ..insecure attachment issues there , we get a deputy first minister who wasn’t ever elected ? What more nonsense has to be swallowed without question about Norn Ireland ? Confused .com

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