Title: New Structures of Government in the North
1New Structures of Government in the North
- Reading
- Tonge (2002) ch. 6 on the new institutions. Ch.14
on the Good Friday Agreement - Coakley and Gallagher (2005) ch.15
- Dixon (2001) NI the politics of war and peace,
ch.10
2Defining consociationalism
- Institutional measures designed to protect or
ensure fairness to minorities in deeply divided
societies - Dictionary of the Social Sciences
- Oxford University Press www.oxfordreference.com
- Its key contention is that divided territories,
be they regions or states, with historically
antagonistic ethnically, religiously or
linguistically divided peoples, are effectively,
prudently, and sometimes optimally, governed
according to consociational principles - John McGarry and Brendan O'Leary (2006)
Consociational Theory, Northern Ireland's
Conflict, and its Agreement. Part 1 What
Consociationalists Can Learn from Northern
Ireland. Government and Opposition, 41, p.43-.
3Arend Lijpharts theory of consociationalism
- The Netherlands (pillars), Switzerland, Belgium
- Elite co-operation in divided societies
- Grand coalition
- Mutual veto
- Proportionality
- Segmental autonomy
- Overarching sense of loyalty a problem in
Northern Ireland - The case of Lebanon
- McGarry and OLeary the role of external states
4The Good Friday Agreement
- The Belfast Agreement / The British-Irish
Agreement - Two aspects to the agreement Conflict
Resolution and new structures for government - A three-stranded process, a three-stranded
agreement - The peace process a long and tortuous path
- The surrender process Unionist opposition
- An agreement with an all-Ireland mandate
- An agreement that lays down requirements for any
united Irish state that might emerge
5ARTICLE 1
- The two Governments
- recognise the legitimacy of whatever choice is
freely exercised by a majority of the people of
Northern Ireland with regard to its status,
whether they prefer to continue to support the
Union with Great Britain or a sovereign united
Ireland
6- (v) affirm that whatever choice is freely
exercised by a majority of the people of Northern
Ireland, the power of the sovereign government
with jurisdiction there shall be exercised with
rigorous impartiality on behalf of all the people
in the diversity of their identities and
traditions and shall be founded on the principles
of full respect for, and equality of, civil,
political, social and cultural rights, of freedom
from discrimination for all citizens, and of
parity of esteem and of just and equal treatment
for the identity, ethos and aspirations of both
communities
7- (vi) recognise the birthright of all the people
of Northern Ireland to identify themselves and be
accepted as Irish or British, or both, as they
may so choose, and accordingly confirm that their
right to hold both British and Irish citizenship
is accepted by both Governments and would not be
affected by any future change in the status of
Northern Ireland
8Why the Agreement was signed
- A declining Unionist majority
- The failure of the IRAs Long War
- Britains desire to end direct rule, to end the
security problem and to improve relations with
the Republic of Ireland - The decline of traditional nationalism in the
Republic of Ireland
9(No Transcript)
10The Northern Executive 1
- Office of the First Minister and the Deputy First
Minister - Jointly elected into office on the basis of
parallel consent - Executive Committee 10 Ministers selected under
the DHondt system
11The Northern Executive 2
- Ten Departments, among them
- Agriculture and Rural Development
- Environment
- Regional Development
- Finance and Personnel
- Culture, Arts and Leisure
- Education
- Higher and Further Education
12Consociationalism in the Northern Ireland Assembly
- Assembly members (MLAs) designate themselves as
nationalist, unionist or other - Key decisions are made on a cross-community basis
- Parallel consent a majority of MLAs and a
majority of both unionist and nationalist MLAs - Weighted majority 60 of MLAs, including at
least 40 of both unionist and nationalist MLAs - Most decisions made by simple majority vote
13Committees
- Committees scrutinise departments and can
initiate legislation - Chairs and deputy chairs of the committees are
allocated proportionately, using the DHondt
system - Committee membership to be proportional to party
strength in the assembly
14(No Transcript)
15All-Ireland Implementation Bodies
- Inland Waterways
- Food Safety
- Trade and Business Development
- Special EU Programmes
- Language (Irish and Ulster Scots)
- Aquaculture and Marine Matters
16Areas of North South Co-operation
- Transport
- Agriculture
- Education
- Health
- Environment
- Tourism
17North South Ministerial Council 1
- Meets in plenary format twice a year, bringing
together all members of both governments - Individual ministers meet one-to-one on a regular
basis and can propose any matter for
consideration - Ministers from the Irish Government and the
Northern Ireland Executive must participate - Based in Armagh
18North South Ministerial Council 2
- The Council
- to use best endeavours to reach agreement on the
adoption of common policies, in areas where there
is a mutual cross-border and all-island benefit
making determined efforts to overcome any
disagreements
19Direct Rule from London, 1972 - 1999
Secretary of State for N.I 4 junior ministers
from GB N.I. Government Departments (Education,
Health, Finance, etc.)
The Northern Ireland Office
20The NI Executive, 1999
Secretary of State for N.I First Minister and
Deputy First Minister The Northern Ireland
Executive N.I. Government Departments (Educatio
n, Health, Finance etc.)
The Northern Ireland Office
21British-Irish Council
- Representatives of the following governments and
administrations - British
- Irish
- Northern Ireland
- Scotland
- Wales
- Isle of man
- Channel isles
- Summit meeting twice a year
- Ministers meet regularly
22Civic Forum
- 60 members and a chairperson
- Balanced by gender, age, community, area
- Representatives from various sectors including
business, voluntary and community, trade union,
church, arts, sports, victims
23A Historic Compromise ?
- Republicans and Nationalists accept
- ? British sovereignty, and the principle of
consent - ? Devolved Government
- ? Decommissioning
- ? Unionism as a legitimate stance
24Unionists and Loyalists accept
- Cross-border bodies
- Power-sharing, with Republicans in government
- Prisoner releases
- Reform of the police
25A fair and final settlement?
- An unworkable system?
- Sectarian structures?
- A corruption of democracy?
- An interim system?
- The only show in town?
26- Part of Article 2 of the amended Irish
constitution - It is the entitlement and birthright of every
person born in the island of Ireland, which
includes its islands and seas, to be part of the
Irish nation . .
27Peter Hain, Secretary of State for Northern
Ireland and Wales, November 2005.
- In future decades, it is going to be increasingly
difficult to look at the economy of north and
south except as a sort of island of Ireland
economy. We are deepening north-south cooperation
in a number of areas. The Northern Ireland
economy, though it is doing better than ever in
its history, is not sustainable in the long-term.
I dont want the Northern Ireland economy to be a
dependent economy as it is now, with a sort of
UK, big brother umbrella over it. It needs to
be much more self-sufficient, so thats what
were trying to do.
28Changing relations between Britain and Ireland
- January 2000 quote from Peter Mandelson, then
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland - As far as we can see, the Good Friday Agreement
is the end settlement. It enshrines the principle
of consent - that is the cornerstone of the new
dispensation. At the same time I would like to
see relations between North and South deepen. So
many of our economic interests coincide, and in
certain economic respects the Border is becoming
less visible