Newton Emerson: Could Sinn Féin’s southern woes be good news for Stormont?

If Sinn Féin sees Stormont as a way to demonstrate its fitness for office in the Republic, the demonstration period just got longer.

That could work out to everyone’s advantage.

When devolution was restored in February, Sinn Féin could reasonably assume it would be leading a coalition in Dublin within a year, an ideal time-frame to send a positive message of leadership from north to south without having to stand over any difficult decisions.

The demonstration period would not have to last longer than the new executive’s honeymoon period. Stormont might not even have a programme for government by October, when Irish voters could be heading to the polls.

But Sinn Féin’s prospects for power have taken a knock after its European and council results in the Republic.

It should do better by default in the next Irish general election, as the only major opposition party. In one respect its chances of being in coalition have increased, as it is less threatening to Fianna Fáil as a junior partner. However, its chances of leading a sovereign government in the coming months have significantly receded.

That puts the goal back to the subsequent Irish general election, probably towards the end of 2029. A Stormont election is scheduled for May 2027. So Sinn Féin has to lead the executive through the rest of this term, campaign to be re-elected, then lead it through half of the next term, before presenting its northern record as a reason for southern voters to put it in charge.

Few elections are due across the island of Ireland for the remainder of this decade, making Stormont the only arena where Sinn Féin can sustain a message of success and momentum.

There are strong signs the party has genuinely embraced responsible leadership of the executive. It appears to have chosen the Department for the Economy with the intention of delivering serious reform. Passing a challenging budget and defending it against UUP populism suggests a willingness to stand over difficult decisions.

newton emerson: could sinn féin’s southern woes be good news for stormont?

Sinn Fein MLAs Conor Murphy and Caoimhe Archibald took the economy and finance portfolios in the new executive

On the other hand, the budget is only for one year and Sinn Féin did not know it would be writing it until the last moment in February, as the DUP had been expected to take the Department of Finance instead. Republicans have a reputation for long-term planning that can obscure frantic improvisation.

Sinn Féin must now show policy delivery at Stormont to impress voters on the timescale required. It needs several landmark successes; keeping the lights on will not be enough.

The party does not have direct responsibility for the two areas where success would make the greatest impression. Northern voters will judge Stormont on health, which is under the UUP and would pass to the DUP if the UUP goes into opposition. Southern voters may judge Stormont on housing, which mainly falls under the DUP-controlled Department for Communities.

newton emerson: could sinn féin’s southern woes be good news for stormont?

Sinn Féin does not have direct responsibility for health, where UUP leader Doug Beattie (centre) has replaced general election candidate Robin Swann with Mike Nesbitt

Sinn Féin ministers have related remits and the party co-directs the executive’s agenda. In theory, having to share credit with unionists should make progress easier to achieve, as everyone would be motivated to cooperate. Sinn Féin could capitalise on vague perceptions in the Republic of its leadership getting results. It can also choose a more relevant set of departments when the executive is reformed in 2027, half-way to the critical Irish general election.

Housing and health are just two prominent issues where Stormont could achieve dramatic improvements if it was prepared to be briefly unpopular and confront entrenched interests.

One of the great mysteries of power-sharing is why parties almost guaranteed a place in office and who do not compete with each other for votes are still terrified of doing anything that might be criticised.

One of the great mysteries of power-sharing is why parties almost guaranteed a place in office and who do not compete with each other for votes are still terrified of doing anything that might be criticised

The republican dilemma over ‘making Northern Ireland work’ is that it could strengthen the union. This is now matched by a unionist dilemma of strengthening the union by making a Sinn Féin-led executive work.

It is possible these contradictions could cancel out and usher in the long-promised best of both worlds, where everyone believes a successful Northern Ireland serves their constitutional aspirations, although those beliefs may be cynically and strategically held.

But that assumes Sinn Féin will continue to see Stormont as a way to demonstrate its fitness for office.

It could note how the southern electorate seems unmoved by its northern progress and conclude that responsible government at Stormont is a risk with little reward.

OTHER NEWS

7 minutes ago

Freddy explains Latrell's Origin impact

7 minutes ago

NBA Fans Are Saying The Same Thing About Wizards' Alex Sarr Pick

7 minutes ago

‘Learn as much as you can about opportunities out there for your child’

10 minutes ago

Afghanistan's dream T20 World Cup run ends as South Africa storm into final

15 minutes ago

Ofcom warned it must change outdated reporting rules to counter election day fake news

15 minutes ago

Mandopop stars Ella Chen, WeiBird stage joint concert in Singapore on Sept 14

15 minutes ago

What to watch out for in the first Trump-Biden debate

15 minutes ago

Back pain, grappling tides, defaced beaches: Frontliners on ECP oil spill clean-up

15 minutes ago

China to hold key political meeting July 15-18: State media

15 minutes ago

ASX 200 fell 0.3 per cent at the close as the market recovers from the shock CPI

15 minutes ago

Protea’s DREAM run continues!

15 minutes ago

John McEnroe’s Wimbledon predictions featuring Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff, Naomi Osaka

15 minutes ago

Is BCE Stock a Buy Just for its 8.8% Dividend Yield?

15 minutes ago

Ten most iconic moments of Euro 2024 tournament so far

15 minutes ago

Ann Ashworth fired as Comrades Marathon race director

15 minutes ago

GNU | Civil Society calls for national dialogue

15 minutes ago

High-protein snacks that keep you feeling fuller for longer

15 minutes ago

Everton to green light sale of defender in clever move to frustrate Man Utd

15 minutes ago

Southgate sack: European media tear England boss to shreds as Roy Keane mocks ‘delicate’ Arsenal star

15 minutes ago

Rand Water maintenance | Joburg residents left out to dry

15 minutes ago

Bulls snatch up talented Stormers poacher

15 minutes ago

Europe wants to send data centers into space — study says it's possible

15 minutes ago

6 managers who showed their class after flopping in the Premier League

15 minutes ago

AAP will talk to INDIA bloc parties to raise Kejriwal's arrest issue in Parliament: Sanjay Singh

19 minutes ago

2 dead, 1 missing and dozens injured in northern Russia after a passenger train derailment

22 minutes ago

Man Utd transfer news: Paulo Dybala interest remains as bosses face Mason Greenwood dilemma

22 minutes ago

Denmark go through in second – thanks to a yellow card shown to Slovenia coach

22 minutes ago

H&M plunges 13.5% on doubts over full-year margin target, June sales outlook

22 minutes ago

Euro 2024 group stages best XI as Germany dominate and even one England star makes it

22 minutes ago

Why are Catholics still being attacked for wearing GAA jerseys? - The Irish News view

22 minutes ago

Qantas and Jetstar make big announcement about new Pacific island flights to capitalise on recent collapse of rival airline Air Vanuatu

25 minutes ago

Man Utd Transfer News: Brighton blow Red Devils out of the water with Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall move to replace Pascal Gross

25 minutes ago

Jamie Carragher suffers Twitter hack during England game as tweets cause confusion

25 minutes ago

TV legend quits iconic Neighbours role as Toadie after 30 years

26 minutes ago

Marko warns Red Bull: 'Even Verstappen can't drive like this for a whole season'

26 minutes ago

Dogs sweat in the summer, too, but can a haircut cool them off?

26 minutes ago

UAE to announce petrol prices for July: will rates drop further?

30 minutes ago

‘Planet Killer’ asteroid will be one of the closest asteroids to plunge past planet Earth this year

30 minutes ago

How “A Quiet Place: Day One” director incorporated his love of “Lord of the Rings”

30 minutes ago

Luke Littler to miss World Cup of Darts as Phil Taylor weighs in on snub