Seanad debates

Tuesday, 14 June 2022

An tOrd Gnó - Order of Business

 

12:00 pm

Photo of Niall Ó DonnghaileNiall Ó Donnghaile (Sinn Fein) | Oireachtas source

I shall begin my remarks with a quote by a very famous and well-known Dubliner. In 1921, Edward Carson said:

What a fool I was. I was only a puppet, and so was Ulster, and so was Ireland, in the political game that was to get the Conservative Party into power.

Replace 1921 with 2022 and replace the words "to get the Conservative Party into power" with "to keep the Conservative Party and, probably in particular, Boris Johnson in power" and we can see the very dangerous and retrograde antics play out in London. I refer to knowingly breaching international law. That has been done, with eyes wide open, by the British Prime Minister and his Government, which jeopardises the peace process, the Good Friday Agreement and its institutions and, indeed, the economies of this island both North and South.

As I am sure colleagues will know and agree with me, the reality is that the protocol, which was agreed to and negotiated by the British Government and the EU Commission, works for the benefit of people, businesses and the economies here on this island. It is by no means the perfect solution nor is it the solution that we wanted here given that no one in Ireland - North or South - consented to Brexit.

I wish to express my very real concern and, indeed, that of my party, about the direction of travel by the British Government and not just this breach of international law with its protocol Bill but coupled with moves around issues like legacy and other matters of deep concern. We need to be alert to what is happening in Britain and Westminster. We need to ensure that here in this House we remain, as we have consistently done, united in our support for the protocol and for its proper effective implementation, and above all else our resolute unity and support for the Good Friday Agreement and its institution.

I do not believe anyone is under any illusions about the machinations that are playing out in the Tory Party, and how willingly they put Ireland and our peace and progress under threat to suit their own agenda. They also operate to give political cover to a section of political unionism which, ironically, do not support the Good Friday Agreement, never did support it and opposed same yet sees people day-to-day continuing to suffer without institutions in the North as we face ever more into a cost-of-living crisis. I appreciate that this is playing out before us. Therefore, it would be right and proper, and certainly before the summer recess, that the Minister for Foreign Affairs updates us on this issue and outlines the measures and moves the Irish Government will pursue to oppose this direction and to garner and mobilise international solidarity and diplomatic support in opposition to it.

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