Tony Blair and Bertie Ahern sign the Belfast Agreement. Image, BBC, fair use.
Northern Ireland basked in international media attention in the 1990s,
with its ‘peace process’ bracketed with those in Israel/Palestine and South
Africa as carrying global political significance. An ‘historic’ agreement on
Good Friday 1998 brought a forest of media satellite vans once more to encircle
the Stormont estate. Yet as the 1993 Oslo accords bequeathed to still-dominated
Palestinians broken-backed, divided enclaves and the end of apartheid in South Africa in 1994 saw its
vast ethnic inequality yawn still wider, Northern Ireland faded back into a familiar
history of sectarian polarisation, and the spotlight turned elsewhere.
Until 2017, that is. The most-recent collapse of the power-sharing
institutions stemming from the Belfast agreement in January had hardly caused a
ripple in London. But when things went horribly wrong for the Conservative party
in the June Westminster election, leaving the prime minister, Theresa May, in
enfeebled dependence on Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party to remain
in power, Queen’s University Belfast’s PR staff found themselves begging their
political scientists for help with calls from around the world, along the lines
of ‘Who is the DUP?’
May had called the snap election to strengthen—she thought—her mandate
to pursue ‘Brexit’, after the narrow vote in favour of the UK leaving the
European Union in the referendum a year earlier, which had dislodged her
predecessor as Tory leader, David Cameron, from power and office. The result
was however to return the focus to what Winston Churchill, in government when
Britain partitioned Ireland in 1920-22, resentfully called ‘the dreary steeples
of Fermanagh and Tyrone’, counties abutting what then became the UK’s new
border.
Ireland had barely entered the heads of the Brexit enthusiasts. Cameron
was evidently blithely unaware of how an EU referendum would simply add another
charge to the sectarian divide. There was a majority for Remain in Northern
Ireland but only because what might be called an alliance of Catholics and/or
cosmopolitans prevailed over the conservative communalists within the
Protestant community: those who self-defined as ‘unionist’ were even more
likely, according to one poll, to vote Leave than voters on the other side of
the Irish Sea. While Sinn Féin failed to mobilise for Remain—its 1970s
Euroscepticism hangover mirroring that of Labour’s current leader and its
long-time ally, Jeremy Corbyn—and the (slightly) more conciliatory Ulster Unionist Party was divided on
Brexit, the DUP was ideologically gung-ho, willingly acting as a conduit for dark money flowing into the Brexit campaign.
Fast forward to today: Remain is now leading by ten points in the latest
poll in Britain, there is still no devolved government at Stormont and the
Brexiters find themselves unwillingly dragged into an Irish bog which they can
neither fathom nor escape. True, the discomfiture is not only theirs: Corbyn, turned
mute on Brexit and attempting to trample the growing demand within his party
for a commission to review its policy, finds himself in an indefensible
position—on the one hand supporting not just an invisible border but an end to
partition in Ireland, while on the other endorsing not just a soft but a total Brexit,
outwith the customs union and the single market, which would make the hardest
of Irish borders inevitable.
But, partly because of Corbyn’s consequent inability to mobilise the
Remain voters Labour would need to displace the Tories from power anytime soon,
it is the Brexit ideologues who are now finding Ireland a troubling source of
cognitive dissonance. Anyone who really wants to know what is going on with
Brexit should read the Irish Times,
which clearly reports the view in Brussels that it is impossible to turn into legal text the EU’s
outline agreement in December with May—almost scuppered at the time by the DUP.
This is because the deal not only implies maintenance of a soft border
in Ireland but also a consequent regulatory ‘alignment’ between the two parts
of the island. Since, to keep the DUP onside at Westminster, the agreement also
blocks the obvious solution of a new, de
facto, EU/non-EU border down the Irish Sea, while retaining a soft
(UK-Irish) border in Ireland, the alternative reduces to the whole of the UK
remaining in the single market and the customs union—the softest of Brexits,
which would solve all the associated economic problems but would ‘give back
control’ to the remaining EU 27 over the rules a post-Brexit UK would follow.
That this should cause much political thrashing around among the
Brexiters is hardly surprising. And they have picked up on a call in an article in the conservative Daily
Telegraph by Ruth Dudley Edwards, a senior Irish commentator who has long focused on the north, for an ‘updating’
of the Belfast agreement—given
its ‘unintended consequence of enshrining sectarianism in the political
process’—into
making the accord their whipping boy.
It was, after all, the agreement, with its institutionalisation of
north-south co-operation in Ireland and associated dismantling of the
repressive apparatus of military border control, which rendered the Irish border
invisible in the first place. The DUP was always opposed to the
agreement—mainly because of the at-root theological reluctance of its
evangelical-Protestant core support to share power with Catholics. It ensured
that when devolution was renewed in 2007, after an hiatus from 2002, it was on
amended terms which the former head of the Community Relations Council in
Northern Ireland, Duncan Morrow, called ‘sharing power out’.
So who is the DUP? Cas Mudde’s
authoritative Populist Radical Right
Parties in Europe defines this political family as comprising parties that
are ‘nativist’ (nationalistic and xenophobic), authoritarian and, of course,
populist. So he includes the DUP in the radical-right family, noting that it is
fundamentalist to boot. Sinn Féin he places just outside: it is, yes,
nationalistic, authoritarian and populist too, but ‘only’ xenophobic towards
the British and Protestants.
Now, with Owen Paterson, a former Conservative Northern Ireland
secretary, Kate Hoey, a Labour Leave MP originally from Northern Ireland, and
Daniel Hannan, a Tory MEP, all casting doubt on the Belfast agreement, their
opponents, including Owen Smith, Labour’s recently appointed shadow on Northern
Ireland, Keir Starmer, its shadow on Brexit, and John Harris, a Guardian commentator on the left, have all
felt obliged to rise to the agreement’s defence, in what has become a noisy but
likely ephemeral Twitter storm.
On its own terms, however, this doesn’t make a lot of sense. It feels
like individuals on the liberal left whose knowledge of matters Irish may also
be limited are weighing in regardless. As its 20th anniversary looms
within weeks, after all, the agreement is not functioning, with neither the
Northern Ireland assembly and executive nor the North-South Ministerial Council
in being.
Indeed, what remains is the Police Service of Northern Ireland. Ironically,
this is because policing was so difficult an issue in the talks leading to the agreement—going
as it did, as with the decommissioning of paramilitary weapons, to the heart of
the contest over the state—that it was passed to an impartial independent
commission to solve. Informed by the region’s human-rights lobby born of the
‘troubles’, the consequent Patten report led to the old, overwhelmingly
Protestant and ‘securitised’ Royal Ulster Constabulary being transformed into a
police service founded on human-rights principles and committed to
neighbourhood policing. Far from adequate, it is however the one
institution—despite the still hugely controversial nature of Northern Ireland’s
decades of lead—still standing.
The reasons why the rest of the Good Friday Agreement institutions are
not functioning have by now been well established. In political-science terms,
it is a matter of agents and structures.
As for the agents, a South African expert on dealing with violent
legacies, who now lives in Northern Ireland, points out in the Irish Times
how the region has failed to see the transition to inspiring leadership marked
by his native country’s elevation of Cyril Ramaphosa as president after the
disastrously corrupt rule of Jacob Zuma. Bizarrely, it was the one-time anti-apartheid radical, Peter Hain, who as
Labour Northern Ireland secretary introduced the DUP to power at Stormont in
2007, by accepting amendments to the post-agreement legislation ensuring it
could veto propositions advanced by Sinn Féin which it did not like.
This referred back to an attempt in 2002 by the then Sinn Féin education
minister, the late Martin McGuinness, to end Northern Ireland’s uniquely
antiquated (in Europe) system of academic selection at 11. Latterly, the DUP
has similarly blocked SF’s demand for an act to promote the Irish language,
predominantly spoken by Catholics (though in no case as mother tongue)—hence
the latest, prolonged impasse.
As for structures, the agreement ensured Northern Ireland’s sectarian
politics would be set in aspic by requiring newly elected assembly members to
designate themselves as ‘unionist’ or ‘nationalist’. The correlation between
religion of family origin and euphemistic political cover is about as exact as
any in social science: only one Catholic and one Protestant among the hundreds
of members elected since 1999, to my knowledge, has not designated themselves
in a way entirely predictable from their accident of birth. Those declining so
to do—members of the non-sectarian Alliance and Green parties—are consequently
marginalised: a ‘petition of concern’ raised by 30 members can ensure any
motion requires ‘cross-community support’, which has been taken to mean concurrent
majorities of soi-disant ‘unionists’
and ‘nationalists’.
This clearly retards the emergence of not only the left-right political
axis on which a normal European society is based but also of a liberal pole to
counterbalance the embedded authoritarianism of Northern Ireland’s political
culture—particularly in terms of feminism and a generally more open and tolerant society. The DUP has abused the petition of
concern repeatedly to ensure that the region remains unique in the UK and
Ireland in denying marriage equality to gay and lesbian individuals.
There were many claims at the time of its promulgation, principally by
the then US president, Bill Clinton, that the Good Friday agreement would be a
template for divided societies across the world. Yet actually it has just made
Northern Ireland remain similarly abnormal to Bosnia-Hercegovina and Lebanon,
with backward-looking constitutional arrangements entrenching ethnicity and so
governmental dysfunctionality.
In political-science terms, the agreement harked back to the ‘pluralist’
theory of democracy from 1960s America, as applied to divided societies by
‘consociationalist’ thinking in the 70s: political blocs were thus taken as
given aggregates, and ethnic elites were allocated the role of private
deal-makers. Today, by contrast, there is a broad recognition in the academic literature
that democratic societies are necessarily individualist, that constitutional
arrangements need to be impartial and that political solutions should be
arrived at through public deliberation.
In that context, rising to the defence of the Belfast agreement will,
unfortunately, take Northern Ireland and its citizens no closer to the
normality that few would have thought would take so long to emerge two decades
on from 1998. The Brexit mess, however, does illuminate why the British state’s
role has proved so inept over those decades—never mind the prior ‘troubled’
years in which its forces were so deeply implicated.
Whether it is regarding Belfast or Brussels, the
dominant view from London has been that of the English gentleman amateur, who it
is assumed will somehow muddle through, without having to detain himself too
much with the detail, deploying some ‘creative ambiguity’ en route. The Brexit
engagement with EU officials has, however, brought some up short.
In the Guardian,
a Downing Street source is quoted as
saying: ‘The UK is run by generalists … Our political class,
including officials and journalists, is coming up against a process which isn’t
just about bright men who are plausible and get the broad outlines. The EU is
built on a really rigid legal order. Our difficulty is when our generalism comes
into contact.’ An official in the Brexit department added: ‘We just can’t cope with it. We don’t have the wisdom
in the system. The political class can’t cope with the complexity of it.’
Britain’s liberal left has
betrayed the same ‘Do we still have Northern Ireland?’ disposition over the
years, no more aware of the close-textured arguments about ‘constitutional
engineering’ resolution of the region’s complex task of conciliation requires.
Meanwhile, with honourable exceptions, it has also absented itself from
European-wide progressive networks, such as those established by the
social-democratic Friedrich Ebert Stiftung and the Foundation for European
Progressive Studies.
And the best thing it can do
now to stem Northern Ireland’s chronic sectarian polarisation—never mind
haemorrhaging jobs in engineering and construction, as business confidence weakens—is not to rise in reflex to
defend the inoperative Belfast agreement. It’s to stop Brexit.