Northern Ireland

DUP hierarchy seeking swift process to replace Edwin Poots as leader

<span style="mso-fareast-language:EN-GB">Edwin&nbsp;Poots&nbsp;leaves DUP headquarters in </span>east <span style="mso-fareast-language:EN-GB">Belfast last night&nbsp;</span><span style="mso-fareast-language:EN-GB">after he said he will stand down as the party leader following an internal party revolt against him</span>. Picture by <span style="mso-fareast-language:EN-GB">Brian Lawless/PA Wire</span>
Edwin Poots leaves DUP headquarters in east Belfast last night after he said he will stand down as the Edwin Poots leaves DUP headquarters in east Belfast last night after he said he will stand down as the party leader following an internal party revolt against him. Picture by Brian Lawless/PA Wire

The hierarchy of the DUP is hoping to move quickly to replace resigning leader Edwin Poots in an effort to stem the chaos engulfing the party.

The DUP is looking for a new leader only three weeks after Mr Poots was formally installed in the top job of the largest party in Northern Ireland.

The Lagan Valley MLA tendered his resignation last night after simmering concerns over his faltering leadership escalated into a full blown internal revolt.

The dramatic development was prompted by his decision to press ahead with reconstituting Stormont’s powersharing Executive alongside Sinn Féin, despite a significant majority of his MPs and MLAs being vociferously opposed to the move.

At a heated three-hour crisis meeting of party officers at DUP headquarters in Belfast last night, Mr Poots was presented with little alternative other than to end his brief but tumultuous tenure as leader.

The DUP’s Westminster leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson, who narrowly lost out to Mr Poots in last month’s leadership contest, is the overwhelming favourite to succeed him.

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Ian Knox cartoon 18/6/21&nbsp;
Ian Knox cartoon 18/6/21  Ian Knox cartoon 18/6/21 

The ousting of former leader Arlene Foster in April – in a coup instigated by supporters of Mr Poots – laid bare deep internal divisions within the once rigidly disciplined party.

Those wounds were further exposed during last month’s bruising leadership campaign – the first in the party’s history – and they continue to fester.

Mindful of the need to return some degree of stability to the listing party, the DUP hierarchy is keen to address the leadership issue swiftly.

“We need to move quickly,” one senor figure told the PA news agency.

While Lagan Valley MP Sir Jeffrey has yet to formally declare an interest, and it remains to be seen whether any of his colleagues will consider a run, many within the DUP are hoping to avoid another potentially divisive contest, instead preferring the next leader to be appointed unopposed.

Anger at a British government pledge to grant Sinn Féin a key concession on Irish language laws was behind the internal opposition to Mr Poots’s decision to nominate a first minister to lead the administration alongside the republican party.

The departure of Mr Poots has now plunged powersharing back into uncertainty, only 24 hours after Paul Givan and Sinn Féin Deputy First Minister Michelle O’Neill assumed office together.

Serious question marks now hang over the future of Mr Givan, who has long been closely aligned with his constituency colleague Mr Poots.

The 39-year-old remains as first minister for the time being but it would appear unlikely that a new DUP leader would ultimately pass up the chance of making his own appointment to the position.

Today Ms O'Neill said she remained committed to working with Mr Givan for as long as he remained in the role.

She urged her partners in government to "get their act together" to ensure effective governance at Stormont.

Speaking to the media in Coalisland, Co Tyrone, the deputy first minister said: "I think the issues for the DUP are for the DUP, but where I'm concerned is where it impacts on the day-to-day governance.

"That's where I would have concerns. So I hope that they get to the point where they're able to resolve their internal issues and we get back to basics and dealing with good powersharing and delivering public services."

The latest political crisis at Stormont forced the cancellation of today's planned meeting of ministers from the Executive and Dublin government in Armagh.

Mr Poots will remain in position until a new leader is appointed.

In his resignation statement, he said: “This has been a difficult period for the party and the country and I have conveyed to the chairman (Lord Morrow) my determination to do everything I can to ensure both unionism and Northern Ireland is able to move forward to a stronger place.”

A Sinn Féin/DUP stand-off over the Irish language issue came to a head this week as a result of the administrative process required to reconstitute the Executive following the resignation of Mrs Foster as first minister.

The joint nature of the office Mrs Foster shared with Deputy First Minister Ms O’Neill meant her departure automatically triggered the removal of Ms O’Neill from her position – as one cannot hold post without the other.

Failure to fill either of the roles within a seven-day time window would have collapsed the Executive, handing the British government the legal responsibility to call a snap assembly election.

Sinn Féin had made clear it would not nominate a deputy first minister until it received assurances that language laws committed to in the 2020 New Decade New Approach deal that restored powersharing would be implemented this assembly mandate.

With Mr Poots declining to give that assurance, Sinn Féin urged the British government to intervene and pass the laws at Westminster instead.

The legislation would enshrine protections for Irish speakers in Northern Ireland society, ensuring oversight of how public bodies provide services in the language.

While the laws contain similar provisions for the Ulster Scots culture, the legislation has always been viewed as a top ticket item on the wish list of republicanism.

DUP politicians had strongly warned against British government intervention on such a sensitive devolved issue.

However, Secretary of State Brandon Lewis announced yesterday that the British government would move to pass the laws in October, if the Executive had failed to bring them before the assembly in the interim.

Mr Poots’s decision to accept the terms of that arrangement, and proceed with nominating Mr Givan as first minister, enraged his party colleagues, who characterised it as caving to “ransom” politics by Sinn Féin.

An overwhelming majority of DUP MPs and MLAs voted against the move in a fractious party meeting that took place in Stormont in the hour before the nominations were confirmed at a special assembly sitting.

Today Ms O'Neill was asked if she feared the UK Government might renege on its commitment to pass the legislation at Westminster following Mr Poots' resignation.

"I would very much hold the British Government to account on the fact they have made a political commitment this week that they will legislate in the autumn and I certainly will work towards that being the case," she said.