IS a DUP-Labour deal possible? History says maybe

Northern Ireland MPs have propped up governments before, and now a former first minister has hinted at a Labour deal

 

The game of fantasy government continues this morning following heavy suggestions by a former first minister of Northern Ireland that the DUP might be prepared to cut a deal with Labour.

Speaking to BBC Northern Ireland’s ‘The View’ which went out last night, the former UUP first minister and now Conservative Peer, Lord Trimble, has argued that the DUP may opt to go with a party that commits to provide the funding for as many government projects as possible.

Whilst admitting that the DUP and Conservatives share many of the same basic beliefs, Lord Trimble argued that the basic calls for greater spending on Northern Ireland could see the DUP attracted to ‘a party of public spending’. That could, he argued, mean the DUP ‘moving towards Labour’.

Trimble’s assertions will intensify the interest now being shown in who the Northern Ireland parties will choose to side with in the event of a hung parliament. Earlier this week the Sun splashed with a headline that Labour was wooing Sinn Fein to take its seats and encouraging it to provide Ed Miliband with voting support in the Commons.

Whilst Sinn Fein has repeatedly denied that it intends to reverse its policy of not taking its seats, it nevertheless demonstrates the febrile atmosphere in Westminster.

DUP leader Peter Robinson meanwhile, argued last week  that there was no question that his party could do a deal with Labour during Ed Miliband’s visit to Northern Ireland.

It comes on top of the reception hosted by David Cameron last May in Downing Street for DUP MPs. Publicly, the shadow Northern Ireland secretary Ivan Lewis has made clear that there are no secret deals in place between Labour and any party in Northern Ireland, whilst the DUP’s leader in Westminster Nigel Dodds has clearly indicated his MPs would not be joining any formal coalition.

That said however, for either Labour or the Conservatives to rely on the votes of party’s from Northern Ireland would not be new. In the 1970s, Labour Prime Minister Jim Callaghan supported and drove forward measures to increase the number of MPs returned from Northern Ireland in return for support from the Ulster Unionists.

John Major’s government was also propped up thanks to the support of unionist MPs from Northern Ireland.

Whatever the results, the growing sense that Northern Ireland’s parties could play a pivotal role in deciding who gets the keys to Downing Street makes the decision to exclude the DUP from any potential election debates look increasingly absurd.

Ed Jacobs is a contributing editor to Left Foot Forward. Follow him on Twitter

11 Responses to “IS a DUP-Labour deal possible? History says maybe”

  1. Patrick O'neill

    i would imagine the average UK voter would have a major issue with a sectarian party anywhere near power and i would say there are indeed millions within the UK that see themselves as part Irish

  2. David Lindsay

    Most people in Britain see anything to do with the Irish as incomprehensibly sectarian, and no one party of them as any more so than any other.

    There long ago ceased to be any Irish vote as such in Britain, it only ever had one place to go in electoral terms, the DUP is economically quite left-wing, and it has no time whatever for the Tories.

    I am a practising Catholic, by the way.

  3. Patrick O'neill

    you really have no issue with labour pandering to an openly sectarian party?

  4. David Lindsay

    Labour in much of Scotland, the North West and the West Midlands is itself a sectarian party. Specifically, an Irish Catholic one.

    Being a practising Catholic is the single highest indicator of being a Labour voter in Scotland, higher than being a trade union member, or working in the public sector, or identifying as working-class, or anything.

    Glasgow City Council even uses the colour green to make the point.

  5. ForeignRedTory

    As in Shin Fein? After that, why even complain about the DUP?

Comments are closed.