Viewpoint from Northern Ireland: Conservatives Beware

Filibuster Team
Filibuster
Published in
4 min readJun 29, 2017

Most of you in Britain probably hadn’t heard of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) before the 9th of June. Yet with 10 MPs, they’ve been the largest party in Northern Ireland for the past decade and are set to play a crucial role in propping up a Conservative minority government.

UK Politics

By Daniel Xu

DUP founder Rev. Ian Paisley interrupts Pope John Paul II’s address to the EU Parliament, unfurling a poster reading “Pope John Paul II Antichrist”. (Photo: AP)

Since then, you’ve no doubt learned that they are fervently anti-abortion and anti-LGBT rights. You may even have seen the video of Reverend Ian Paisley — the party’s founder — heckle Pope John Paul II and denounce him as the “anti-Christ”. The party’s founder and many of their senior leadership are fundamentalist Calvinists.

The aim of this article is not to expose the DUP’s fanatical conservatism or how a Conservative-DUP deal could jeopardise the Northern Ireland peace process; there’s plenty of articles that do just that. Rather I want to give my opinion — having lived in Northern Ireland and observed the DUP way of politics — of why the Conservatives should beware of their new political bedfellows.

The first thing to understand is that the DUP are popular, not because of their conservative views, but despite them. They have a large and dedicated following who will support them no matter what their economic or social policies may be, so long as they present themselves as protectors of Protestantism and the Union.

For example, late last year it emerged that current DUP leader and former First Minister Arlene Foster had overseen a mismanaged renewable heat incentive scheme that will cost the public purse £400 million. Under this scheme one farmer was set to receive £1 million over 20 years for heating an empty shed. The scheme was allowed to continue for years despite concerns being raised by multiple whistle-blowers.

Foster resisted all calls to resign or step aside temporarily, amidst allegations of corruption and cover-up — even from one of her own ministers. Such a political scandal would have felled the leader of any other British political party, but didn’t cause so much as a dent in the DUP’s popularity at the polls. In fact, the party received more votes than ever at the snap assembly election called after the botched heating scheme was exposed.

Given their unwavering base and the extraordinary power they now wield in Westminster, the DUP are stronger and bolder than ever before. On the other hand, the Conservatives are weak and exposed to attack from within and without following a disastrous general election result.

Conservatives may take consolation in the fact that the two parties are “natural allies”, as described by one Conservative MP. Both parties are right of centre, pro-Brexit, and Unionist. Moreover, the DUP are intensely antipathetic to Jeremy Corbyn due to his perceived sympathies with the IRA. However this does not mean that the DUP will bend over backwards and do the Conservative’s bidding. In fact, a senior DUP source warned that they should not be “taken for granted”.

Closer examination also reveals that the two parties are less politically aligned than many might think. Socially, the DUP are far more conservative. It was recently revealed that Arlene Foster had asked the Scottish government to curtail access of Northern Irish citizens to Scottish same-sex marriages. By contrast, the Tory leader in Scotland is openly lesbian. Economically, the DUP are less conservative — they opposed rises to tuition fees, the bedroom tax, and cuts to the winter fuel allowance. On Brexit, the DUP are keen for a softer Brexit to protect trade and travel with the Republic of Ireland.

The Conservatives should also not mistake the DUP’s unionism as a desire to act in the best interests of the UK as a whole. For the DUP, unionism means to fight for the Union flag to fly on Belfast City Hall every day of the year (instead of just on designated days as is the practice in most British councils). DUP unionism means to ignore the importance of the Irish language by opposing an Irish Language Act (even though both Scotland and Wales have a Gaelic and Welsh Language Act).

The DUP may also be described as Ulster Nationalists — they desire what’s best for Northern Ireland within the UK, and it is certain that they will press for increased funding. Given that Northern Ireland already receives 24% more public spending per person than England, this could be difficult for the Conservatives to swallow.

As a final caveat, those of us in Northern Ireland have lived without a devolved government since the Northern Ireland Executive collapsed in January, triggered in part by Arlene Foster’s refusal to resign after the heating scheme scandal. Talks between the DUP and Sinn Fein (their power-sharing partners in the Northern Ireland Executive) to restore a functioning government have resulted in nothing but mudslinging and missed deadlines.

Perhaps it’s not too difficult to understand that after more than 10 days of talks, and despite early Conservative optimism that a deal would be concluded before the Queen’s Speech, one has yet to materialise. (In contrast, it took only 5 days for the Liberal-Conservative coalition to be agreed.)

Two ‘bloody difficult women’: strong and stable Arlene Foster (left) and weak and wobbly Theresa May (right). (Photo: Charles McQuillan/Getty)

The Conservatives are starting to realise that Arlene Foster, too, is a “bloody difficult woman”, much more so than Theresa May.

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