Politics

Michelle O'Neill: Brokenshire's unhelpful deadline means we are quickly running out of road for a deal

Sinn Fein's Michelle O'Neill addresses the media at Stormont today. Picture Mal McCann 
Sinn Fein's Michelle O'Neill addresses the media at Stormont today. Picture Mal McCann  Sinn Fein's Michelle O'Neill addresses the media at Stormont today. Picture Mal McCann 

Time is running out for any deal between Sinn Féin and the DUP in the Stormont talks, Sinn Féin's Northern Leader has said.

Michelle O'Neill said that while she remains determined to achieve a "successful conclusion" and to see the Executive re-established that "one way or another, this process is coming to an end." 

"Sinn Féin is determined to achieve a successful conclusion and to see the institutions re-established.

"If the British Government and the DUP want a deal, they should end their denial of basic rights which are protected everywhere else on these islands. Language rights, marriage equality and the right to proper coroners inquests."

A new deadline for political talks was set by Secretary of State James Brokenshire earlier today.

Mr Brokenshire said an Executive had to be in place by the week commencing November 6 and if that deadline was not met he would be forced to set a budget.

Speaking  in the Dáil today, Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams TD told the taoiseach that he fears the Dublin government is sleep-walking into a deeper crisis in Anglo-Irish relations as direct rule by the British government appears to be a reality.

"British rule in Ireland has failed. It failed in this part of the island and it failed in the north," said Mr Adams.

"What we need to see is the Good Friday Agreement fully implemented.

"The Taoiseach needs to advise the British prime minister that the government is absolutely opposed to any return to British direct rule and that he expects the British government to fulfil and to hold to their obligations agreements to which the Irish government is a co-guarantor."

Addressing the Northern Ireland Affairs Select Committee this morning, Mr Brokenshire said if no deal was evident by the week beginning October 30 he would need to begin the legislation process at Westminster to enable a budget to be set.

This means there would need to be a deal in place, or a clear indication there was a deal in the offing by Monday October 30.

"A breakthrough has not been reached. Whilst if I had given evidence to this committee last week, I might have indicated some momentum, some more positive progress, that momentum stalled at the end of last week," the secretary of state said.

He added: "The prospects do not look positive at this time."

Mrs O'Neill said that James Brokenshire's announcement on the budget was not helpful in that "it clearly signifies the end of this phase of negotiation."

She also denied an Irish Times report she had agreed a deal with the DUP but was overruled by senior party figures.

Mr Brokenshire reiterated that the Irish Language act remained a sticking point in negoiations. 

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar last night warned that the DUP and Sinn Féin were "not close to a deal", as former US President Bill Clinton had discussions with both party leaders in a visit to the north.

While he said he would let the parties "account for themselves as to what went wrong", he warned that "big things" including Brexit and challenges in the health service were not being dealt with because the former government partners were "arguing about the intricacies of an Irish Language Act".

SDLP leader Colum Eastwood said the two main parties had "brought us to the brink of direct rule" and it would be "a source of great anger" to nationalists that power and progress "is now being handed back to a Tory/DUP government in London".

“While crises engulf our health services and our schools, they have talked for month after month and have only delivered failure. 

“In particular for the nationalist community, after years of trying to bring power back to Irish soil in order that local people could make local decisions, it should be a source of great anger that all of that power and progress is now being handed back to a Tory/DUP government in London.

“Talk of a slow ‘glide path’ towards more British government involvement in the north should fool no-one. A British government delivering a budget in Westminster is direct rule." 

He said if no deal is reached the Dublin government must step in.

“In the absence of an Executive and Assembly, giving full and proper representation to those traditions falls on both the Irish and British governments,” he added.

Ulster Unionist Party leader Robin Swann said the north was "still being held to ransom by ideological demands".

"The public need to know whether there really is prospect of an Executive being formed by the DUP and Sinn Féin or if hopes are falsely being raised.

“If the two big parties cannot get their act together then the Secretary of State has a responsibility to look at other options to allow other parties to get on with the job.”

Alliance Health spokesperson Paula Bradshaw has accused the parties refusing to form an Executive of showing a callous disregard for patient care. 

The South Belfast assembly member said that after "some hopes last week we are now hearing that the two main parties have still not agreed to form an Executive, despite the fact that they have proposals delivering consensus on their supposed key issues such as language and culture right in front of them". 

She said Issues such as missed targets and long waiting lists affect quality of life "yet still we see parties putting their own narrow sectional interests ahead of the livelihood of hundreds of thousands of people". 

“I agree entirely with the SDLP and others when they say there is now no reason not to form an Executive."