Sunak to visit Northern Ireland amid political crisis

Sinn Féin’s Michelle O’Neill said she wants a political outcome from her meeting with Rishi Sunak, not ‘tea and sympathy’

British prime minister Rishi Sunak is to visit Northern Ireland on Thursday to meet politicians, Stormont leaders have said.

The development came after the parties met Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris as the Government continues to press for a return to powersharing.

Sinn Féin vice-president Michelle O’Neill said any meeting with the prime minister had to have a political outcome, and that she did not want “tea and sympathy”.

Devolution has been in flux since February when the DUP withdrew its First Minister from the ministerial executive in protest at Brexit’s Northern Ireland Protocol.

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Another issue that featured in the cross party discussions in Belfast on Thursday was the continued uncertainty over when £600 Treasury-funded energy support payments will be rolled out to householders in Northern Ireland.

Speaking after the meeting, DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson said: “We covered a wide range of issues, including the ongoing negotiations between the UK Government and the European Union.

“There’s very little to report on that.

“We want to see progress made, we want to see a ramping up of these talks, to try and get to a solution.”

Mr Donaldson said: “I hope we will hear from the Prime Minister a renewal of his commitment to resolving the issues around the protocol, taking the decisive action that is needed to restore and all those places in the UK internal market.”

Ms O’Neill said the Government had no plan on how to restore Stormont.

She said: “I think he [Heaton-Harris] is bereft of a plan. Even at this stage, we’re still left in political limbo. There was no concrete proposals as to how they’re going to reach an agreed way forward on the protocol.”

Speaking about Mr Sunak’s visit, Ms O’Neill said: “I want a political meeting with the British Prime Minister. I want to know what he’s doing to get the £600 into people’s pockets. I want to know what he’s doing to secure a deal on the protocol and negotiate a way forward.

“So I have no desire to have tea and sympathy with the Prime Minister, what I want to see is a political outcome to such an engagement.”

Alliance Party deputy leader Stephen Farry said progress on talks about the protocol between the UK government and the EU had been “painfully slow”.

He said: “Much to our frustration the protocol has become the main obstacle to the restoration of an executive. The government needs to get its ducks in a row in that respect.”

SDLP Stormont leader Matthew O’Toole said: “Unfortunately, today’s meeting did not have any concrete actions or proposals around getting an executive formed.”

Ulster Unionist leader Doug Beattie said: “Nothing has changed, nothing has gone any further forward. We asked for an update on the protocol, we didn’t get it.”

The DUP, the region’s largest unionist party, has blocked the formation of a new administration following May’s Assembly election and prevented the Assembly meeting to conduct legislative business as part of its protest over the protocol.

The DUP claims the protocol has undermined Northern Ireland’s place within the United Kingdom by creating economic barriers on trade entering the region from Great Britain.

The party has insisted it will not allow a return to powersharing until radical changes to the protocol are delivered.

Last week, Mr Heaton-Harris cut the pay of MLAs by 27.5 per cent to reflect the fact they are not doing their jobs as legislators.

If a new executive is not formed by January 19th, the Government assumes a legal responsibility to call a snap Assembly election by April 13th.

The meeting in Belfast come on a day when foreign secretary James Cleverly was due to hold face-to-face talks with European Commission vice-president Maroš Šefčovič in Brussels to discuss the protocol deadlock.

The meeting at the NIO also comes against the backdrop of nurses across Northern Ireland striking over pay and conditions.

A similar strike by the Royal College of Nursing in the region in late 2019 was seen as a factor in securing a return to powersharing after the political impasse at Stormont. - PA