Sinn Fein set for first win in Northern Ireland election

With 47 of 90 seats counted so far, results showed that Sinn Fein has 18 seats, while the Democratic Unionist Party, which has been the largest in the Northern Ireland Assembly for two decades, have 12.


PTI | Belfast | Updated: 07-05-2022 15:16 IST | Created: 07-05-2022 15:14 IST
Sinn Fein set for first win in Northern Ireland election
Sinn Fein Image Credit: Wikipedia
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Irish nationalist party Sinn Fein was widely expected to become the largest group in the Northern Ireland Assembly for the first time, with vote-counting resuming Saturday.

A Sinn Fein win in the election would be a milestone for a party long linked to the Irish Republican Army, a paramilitary group that used bombs, bullets, and other forms of violence to try to take Northern Ireland out of U.K. rule during decades of unrest. It would also bring Sinn Fein's ultimate goal of a united Ireland a step closer.

But the party has kept such issues low down on its agenda during a campaign that has been dominated by more immediate concerns, namely the skyrocketing cost of living. If Sinn Finn emerges victorious, it will be entitled to the post of the first minister in Belfast for the first time since Northern Ireland was founded as a Protestant-majority state in 1921. With 47 of 90 seats counted so far, results showed that Sinn Fein has 18 seats, while the Democratic Unionist Party, which has been the largest in the Northern Ireland Assembly for two decades, has 12. The centrist Alliance Party, which doesn't identify as either nationalist or unionist, has seen support surge and has eight seats so far.

Under Northern Ireland's power-sharing system, created by the 1998 peace agreement that ended decades of Catholic-Protestant conflict, the jobs of the first minister and deputy first minister are split between the biggest unionist party and the largest nationalist one.

Both posts must be filled for a government to function, but the Democratic Unionist Party has suggested it might not serve under a Sinn Fein first minister.

The DUP has also said it will refuse to join a new government unless there are major changes to post-Brexit border arrangements, known as the Northern Ireland Protocol, that are opposed by many unionists.

Sinn Fein's vice-president Michelle O'Neill said the party wanted to work “in partnership with others.” “That is the only way we will achieve much, much more for people here, whether in terms of the cost-of-living crisis or trying to fix our health service,'' she said.

The full results of the election, which uses a system of proportional representation, were expected later in the weekend. The new legislators will meet next week to try to form an executive. If none can be formed within six months, the administration will collapse, triggering a new election and more uncertainty.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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