Donaldson, Allister and Bryson address anti-protocol rally in Co Armagh

Beattie pulls out expressing concern anti-protocol rallies are raising tensions

DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson has told a rally there is “unwavering support” from the electorate for unionist leaders standing together against the Northern Ireland protocol.

TUV leader Jim Allister and loyalist activist Jamie Bryson also addressed the event on Friday evening at Brownlow House in Lurgan, Co Armagh.

Ulster Unionist leader Doug Beattie had been due to speak, but pulled out expressing concern that the anti-protocol rallies were raising tensions.

A poster of Mr Beattie was placed on a bench at the event, which had a section of rope at his neck.

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Mr Allister said he removed the poster from view because he felt its presentation, whether intentional or inadvertent, was “entirely inappropriate”. He told the PA news agency that if someone placed it to “convey malevolence”, that “they were idiots”.

Addressing the rally, Mr Donaldson said: “We must stand united. We must stand as one in opposition to the protocol.

“Unionism is fully entitled to express its unequivocal opposition to the protocol in a public and peaceful way.

“The protocol has undemocratically altered Northern Ireland’s constitutional position and dealt a hammer blow to prosperity in all corners of our province.

“Not a single unionist representative supports the Irish Sea border.”

The event was the latest rally to be held against the post-Brexit arrangements which see additional checks on goods arriving into the region from Great Britain.

It is strongly opposed by unionists as a border in the Irish Sea.

Mr Donaldson told the rally: “Our opponents see the election on May 5th as an opportunity to weaken Unionism and divide the anti-protocol cause.

“If they succeed, they will use the result to justify the status quo and force the Government to do nothing. We cannot allow that to happen.

“It is critical that our families go the polls and transfer down the unionist ticket.”

He also reiterated his stance that his party participating in the next Stormont Executive depends on the British government taking steps to remove the protocol.

He added: “Let the enduring message sent out from Lurgan tonight not be about who did or didn’t attend but rather about unionists standing together in principled and united opposition to these arrangements.”

Mr Allister said any unionist who “comes to terms with the protocol” is “embracing transition out of the United Kingdom and into an Irish Republic”.

“Such is the fundamental assault made by the protocol on our constitutional position that is irreconcilable with meaningful membership of the UK,” he said.

“The core premise of the protocol is that GB is a foreign country and that Northern Ireland, in trading terms, is an integral part of the EU on what is to be the economically integrated island of Ireland.

“Any unionist who finds nothing to protest about within the protocol and who, indeed, denigrates protests and protestors, sadly, but clearly, does not get the protocol or the its Union-dismantling synergy.

“Unionist voters who are dismayed by such complacency can, and should, express that disappointment by how they deploy their preferences in the election.

“Now is a time for strength, not weakness.”

Mr Beattie’s decision not to appear came after a security alert halted a peace-building event in north Belfast which Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney had been addressing. - PA