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Devolution in Northern Ireland

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Nationalist ( the Catholic community which favoured ... Reverand Ian Paisley ... and stubborn the DUP Leader Ian Paisley is set to become the First Minister ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Devolution in Northern Ireland


1
Devolution in Northern Ireland
  • The troubled path to power sharing

2
The Six Counties of Ulster which make up Northern
Ireland.
3
Key terms
  • Nationalist ( the Catholic community which
    favoured union with the Republic of Ireland to
    the south)
  • Loyalist ( the Protestant community which wished
    to remain loyal to the United Kingdom)
  • Unionist (same as above wished to maintain the
    union with the rest of the UK)
  • Para-military terrorist groups such as the
    Nationalist IRA and Loyalist UDA, UFF and UDF.

4
1972 Bloody Sunday
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1984- The Brighton Bomb
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A troubled history
  • Since 1969 the province of Northern Ireland
    suffered a sustained terrorist campaign which
    lasted almost 30 years.
  • The Catholic nationalist community fought against
    discrimination in jobs and housing from the
    Protestant loyalist community.
  • The IRA killed hundreds of British soldiers and
    policemen and dozens of civilians with bombs and
    shootings.
  • The UDA and UDF killed Catholics in revenge for
    IRA attacks.
  • Whilst terrorism remained a feature of Northern
    Irish politics there was no chance of devolution.
    The government in London maintained direct rule
    through the Secretary of State for Northern
    Ireland.

16
The peace process
  • The IRA called a ceasefire in 1993
  • John Majors government attempted to bring all
    sides together in peace talks to secure a lasting
    political settlement.
  • Tony Blair continued this process, achieving a
    breakthrough in 1998 with the Good Friday
    Agreement

17
The four main parties
18
Sinn Feins new respectability
19
Sinn Fein is now the largest Nationalist Party in
the NI Assembly. It still officially promotes a
United Ireland. It was for years the political
wing of the IRA.
20
The Good Friday Agreement
  • All sides agreed in 1998 to the following peace
    deal
  • A Northern elected assembly of 108 members
  • A Northern Ireland power-sharing executive
    (government) consisting of a First Minister,
    Deputy Minister and ten other ministers

21
Stormont Castle, Home of the NI Assembly
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Implementation
  • The Good Friday Agreement was put to a referendum
    in May 1998 to the people of N.Ireland 71
    voted yes.
  • The people of the Irish Republic voted yes in a
    separate referendum. The Irish Government also
    formally gave up any territorial claim on
    N.Ireland.

24
Devolution stalled
  • Since 1998 the Good Friday Agreement has still
    not been fully implemented.
  • The issue of de-commissioning of all terrorist
    weapons has taken years to be accepted by all
    sides. The Unionist parties would not share power
    with Sinn Fein until all weapons had been
    surrendered. The issue was not finally resolved
    until 2006. The IRA said it had disbanded and
    given up all weapons.
  • The acceptance of Sinn Fein and the IRA of the
    new Police Service of Northern Ireland was
    another sticking-point not resolved until March
    2007.
  • Several attempts to start the power-sharing
    government broke down and the UK government had
    to re-impose direct rule from London. The
    Assembly was suspended in 2002.

25
Policing the sticking point.
The change of name has not convinced many
Catholics that the NSPI will be impartial and
fair. Until all sides support the police there
can be no power-sharing.
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Reverand Ian Paisley
Forthright and stubborn the DUP Leader Ian
Paisley is set to become the First Minister in
the Power-Sharing Government after his party won
the largest number of seats in the March 2007
elections. Sinn Fein came second.
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