Opinion

Brian Feeney: Arlene Foster's absurd EU comments demonstrate a narrow world view

Brian Feeney

Brian Feeney

Historian and political commentator Brian Feeney has been a columnist with The Irish News for three decades. He is a former SDLP councillor in Belfast and co-author of the award-winning book Lost Lives

DUP leader Arlene Foster
DUP leader Arlene Foster DUP leader Arlene Foster

What’s that song, ‘Small Town Girl Livin’ in a lonely world’? Taking a train to anywhere to get out of the big city.

It exemplifies Arlene Foster’s attitude to the EU and high politics. She reduces everything to the worm’s eye view of an unreconstructed 1950s Fermanagh unionist. Watch themuns in Sinn Féin.

Her interview on Monday with the BBC – note BBC London, not BBCNI which it looks like she’s still in a huff with – showed she hasn’t a clue about how Michel Barnier is required to operate, what his aims and objectives are and what’s going on in the big world of politics. What was most pitiable is that she thought unionists had some role in Barnier’s negotiating calculations.

She complained he is not an ‘honest broker’: absurd. Barnier once again reminded journalists in Dundalk that he represents the EU27 and they present him with written guidelines he must follow. As he said, ‘I am not an arbitrator.’ His job is to get the best deal for the EU27 and of course that includes the Republic and definitely does not include Arlene.

Furthermore, negotiations are between the UK and the EU27 not between Barnier and unionists who are represented or more accurately misrepresented by this UK government. Laura Kuenssberg correctly put it to Foster that she should be telling the British government of her concerns, not Barnier.

Sadly Foster doesn’t accept that she has no role. In her tiny circumscribed world everything is reduced to the fear of Sinn Féin. She complained that Barnier listens to the Irish government and Sinn Féin but not unionists. Well of course Barnier listens to the Irish government. They are one of the EU27 on whose behalf he is negotiating and whose instructions he is complying with. They are remaining in the EU. Why should he, would he, listen to someone who doesn’t represent a sovereign government and besides, advocates leaving the EU? Of course he will also listen to Sinn Féin, a party with twenty-three TDs and four MEPs in an EU27 government and who support the EU. Why would he not listen to them? How silly to think otherwise.

Oh yes, of course. On Planet Foster Sinn Féin are the bad guys, not to be trusted, guilty of ‘disgraceful behaviour’ and should never be accorded equal status with unionists even though unionists in this case are supporting the opposition in the negotiations Barnier is leading. What kind of a daft mindset is that? Oh yes, of course, a Fermanagh unionist ‘livin’ in a lonely world’. Unfortunately for Arlene she’s a spectator and will remain so.

What never figures in her remarks is the preposterous position of her own party which does not represent the views of the majority of people in the north but worse, props up a dreadful shambolic government which has no mandate for its actions.

Remember, a year after the Brexit referendum the British electorate had a look at Theresa May and her divided party, didn’t like what they saw and removed her majority. However with the help of the DUP she ploughs doggedly on. Foster’s party is supporting a government the British people rejected.

As opponents of May’s chaotic rigmaroles point out, no one in Britain voted in the EU referendum to be poorer yet the DUP encouraged people here, unsuccessfully it should be said, to vote in their own worst interests.

You don’t hear much talk now from the DUP about ‘opportunities’ flowing from Brexit for it has dawned on them there are none. Every report from the British government, Stormont officials and independent economists agrees that the north will take the biggest hit from Brexit no matter what the exit deal is.

Yet despite the Conservatives’ austerity programme making people worse off, the cuts in education, health and welfare and the guaranteed economic downturn the DUP has never produced a plan of its own, never suggested how to mitigate the impact of Brexit on the north. Why? They can’t because it would put them at odds with the government they are keeping in power in defiance of the wishes of the British people.

In a Fermanagh unionist world view is this the only way to secure the union?

Ian Knox cartoon  2/5/18: With their MPs boycotting  the commons debate, their Euro MP too busy to meet Barnier in Derry the DUP flail with anger that Varadkar informed the NIO and not them about his visit north 
Ian Knox cartoon 2/5/18: With their MPs boycotting the commons debate, their Euro MP too busy to meet Barnier in Derry the DUP flail with anger that Varadkar informed the NIO and not them about his visit north  Ian Knox cartoon 2/5/18: With their MPs boycotting the commons debate, their Euro MP too busy to meet Barnier in Derry the DUP flail with anger that Varadkar informed the NIO and not them about his visit north