Bloomberg
Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party cranked up the prospects of a prolonged political crisis following the resignation of the region’s First Minister, warning it won’t return to the power-sharing Executive unless issues related to Brexit are resolved.
“The DUP will not be involved in forming a government in Northern Ireland until those issues have been satisfactorily addressed,†the party’s leader Jeffrey Donaldson said, referring to tensions over the Northern Irish Protocol, the part of the Brexit agreement which deals with trade to the region from the rest of the UK.
Northern Ireland’s government was effectively paralyzed after the abrupt resignation of First Minister Paul Givan late Thursday forced the subsequent end of Sinn Fein’s Michelle O’Neill’s position as Deputy First Minister. The Executive can no longer meet or make decisions, basically freezing the legislative agenda.
“Some of the ministries will function but there will be no capacity to set budgets or to make any decisions beyond what was already agreed.†said Peter Shirlow, Director and Chair of the Institute of Irish Studies at the University of Liverpool.
Under the Good Friday agreement, the first minister and deputy first minister —one unionist and one nationalist — have equal powers and one cannot be in place without the other.
The DUP’s condition seems unlikely to be met soon. While the EU and UK have struck a more positive tone since Liz Truss was promoted to Foreign Secretary, there’s been no substantive progress and the latest developments are set to cause more chaos. Truss and EU Vice President Maros Sefcovic are due to meet again on Feb. 11 to discuss their broader post-Brexit dispute.
Northern Ireland was effectively kept in the EU’s single market to avoid creating a hard border on the island of Ireland when the UK left the EU. Over time, the protocol has become a political sore.