Today Northern Ireland's 108 assembly members took their seats in Stormont for the first time since October 2002. The MLA's were elected over two and a half years ago, and for 40 of them this will be the first time they have taken their seats.
The session began with a minutes silence for Michael McIlveen, the 15 year old boy, murdered in Ballymena.
The MLA's then listened to a letter from Peter Hain, read by the new Speaker Eileen Bell. Ms Bell, an MLA for the Alliance Party, also made clear her intention to refrain from making any political statements in her new role.
Assembly members signed the register, stating whether they were Unionist, Nationalist or other.
No other business was conducted, and most members are expected to attend a rather wet garden party, hosted by Peter Hain at Hillsborough Castle. The dull skies added to the mood of foreboding, no-one quite knows if this assembly will be ready for devolution by the November deadline. Some believe this assembly will be no more than a 'talking shop' and will lend itself to political grandstanding, rather than constructive debate.
Ian Paisley says he will refused to accept Gerry Adam's nomination as First Minister, and Sinn Fein, are reluctant to be involved in any discussions which are not directly aimed at restoring devolved power. The Assembly is due to debate the NI economy tomorrow and it is not known if Mr Adam's and his party will contribute to this debate.
Since all previous negotiations to find political compromise have been conducted in private through intermediataries, it seems somewhat unlikely that the local parties will take the initiative to find a way forward. The onus is on Sinn Fein and the DUP to lead this process over the next few months. The question is can such polarised political entities ever be reconciled and if they can't, what is the alternative?
'The Gown' is the independent student newspaper at Queen's University. The paper, founded in 1955, is run voluntarily by students and funded entirely by advertising without University or Students' Union assistance. From terrorism to teletubbies, prostitution parties to political protests, 'The Gown' has reported it all, providing a colourful account of life within the University and within Northern Ireland.
The timescale between now and November is much to short. We have only 6 weeks now before the summer recess, when the assembly returns in the autumn a few weeks before the deadline the government will think it can use time pressure to push us into some sort of hotch-potch deal. The sky isn't going to fall in on 25th November.
ReplyDelete"The sky isn't going to fall in on 25th November"
ReplyDeletebut it'll probably stop raining money... on our overworked MLAs
That hurts a party with 9 MPs less than anyone else.
ReplyDelete...it hurts ALL parties, and for good reason too.
ReplyDeleteAndrew either you've got a secret admirer or the site's been spammed, if it's the latter then turning word verification on stops it :)
ReplyDeleteDavid
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately it wasn't an admirer but indeed a Spammer.
Therefore we have turned on the 'Word Verification' setting as you advise.
Many thanks,
Andrew