The prime minister’s bluster is meeting head-on with the complex reality of Northern Irish politics

Apologies make cynical history, but Boris Johnson has a big one to make, and fast. He must apologise to Northern Ireland’s unionists that he did not mean it last year when he pledged “no border” down the Irish Sea. As the Good Friday agreement negotiator, Jonathan Powell, wrote on Sunday, this was a lie. Johnson had just told the Irish government that the Good Friday deal held and there would be no border on the island of Ireland. Given Britain’s intention to leave the EU’s customs union, the two statements were incompatible, and Johnson knew it. Every truck on the Belfast ferry knows it, too.

The current Belfast riots have invoked the usual platitudes. The Irish taoiseach, Micheál Martin, has called for calm. Joe Biden has offered concern. Everyone is outraged that children are being encouraged to attack the police. Even Prince Philip’s death has been cited as a call for restraint. Deprivation, local political grievances, poor relationships with the police – these are all factors behind the disturbances. But every act of violence also carries the same word: exasperation. Will someone answer the question? Johnson lied, and what is Britain going to do about it?

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Is it cheaper to have a bath or a shower? Your energy questions answered

From boiling pasta to vampire devices, experts explain how you can reduce…

London commuters welcome return to work but some say move is No 10 diversion

Workers’ views on opening up vary from ‘it’s time to learn to…

Is anyone convinced by Saudi sportswashing? Only the crooks who sell fake football strips | Adrian Chiles

Saudi Arabia is pouring a fortune into soccer, including £180m a year…

Japan reports five cases of coronavirus variant found in UK

Cases emerge as Russia becomes latest country to tighten controls on travel…