With Sinn Féin’s victory, tectonic plates have shifted in Northern Ireland | Susan McKay
The Irish taoiseach, Micheal Martin, put it politely. It would be undemocratic" for the Democratic Unionist party to refuse to form an executive in Belfast after the elections, he said. But the DUP will refuse to enter an executive, now that Sinn Fein has massively outpolled it, and a majority of Northern Ireland's people has voted to have as first minister a republican whose party wants a united Ireland. Sinn Fein gained an astonishing 29% of first preference votes in Thursday's assembly elections. The DUP got 21.3%, a drop of 6.7% on its last performance.
That refusal, ostensibly a protest over the Northern Ireland protocol, will be even further good news for an already jubilant Sinn Fein, because it proves definitively to its voters that Northern Ireland, set up 101 years ago to be an exclusively unionist state, is incapable of becoming a pluralist one and must therefore be brought to an end. No wonder Sinn Fein's president, Mary Lou McDonald, has already said that preparations for a border poll should begin immediately and that it could be held within five years.
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