Kenny's all-Ireland Brexit forum proposal a '˜shambles'

Irish premier Enda Kenny is coming under parliamentary pressure to set up an all-island forum to deal with Brexit despite a 'humiliating' rejection from Northern Ireland's First Minister.
Enda Kenny was told he 'botched' the plan for the Brexit forumEnda Kenny was told he 'botched' the plan for the Brexit forum
Enda Kenny was told he 'botched' the plan for the Brexit forum

Mr Kenny said his invitation for an “island conversation” remains open to political parties and other organisations north and south but warned it would be divisive without cross-party agreement.

Arlene Foster, Stormont First Minister whose Democratic Unionists campaigned for a Leave vote, publicly dismissed the suggestion after a meeting of the North South Ministerial Council on Monday.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

In the Irish parliament, the Dail, Mr Kenny was accused of having botched the idea by floating it over the weekend without consulting Ms Foster.

Labour leader Brendan Howlin said the Taoiseach’s approach had “damaged” the authority of his office and “more importantly the interests of Ireland”.

“At yesterday’s press conference it became clear that the Taoiseach had failed to prepare the ground with the Northern Ireland First Minister and the result was that the proposal was rejected by her publicly in a very humiliating way,” he said.

Micheal Martin, leader of the chief Opposition party Fianna Fail, said he found it incredible that the proposed forum was trumpeted by government ministers over the airwaves without consultations with Stormont.

The approach resembled a “shambles”, he told the Dail.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“Very clearly now the will of the people of Northern Ireland is going to be subverted by the English nationalistic approach in terms of its future within the EU,” he said.

“Brexiters have very little time for Northern Ireland, to be frank, and Northern Ireland will not be central to their engagement with Europe.

“We do need an all-island response here. But we need to work in advance before people start floating ideas just for the sake of spin over substance.”

Some 56 per cent of voters in Northern Ireland backed remaining within the EU.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The DUP was the only major party on the island to campaign for a Brexit.

In Dublin, Mr Kenny’s minority Fine Gael-led government needs the support of Mr Martin’s Fianna Fail – its age-old rival – to survive in power.

Mr Martin said a majority of people in Northern Ireland voted to stay in the EU and that “additional capacity” is needed in government departments on both sides of the border to work towards that.

Mr Kenny said it was no time for political point-scoring and called on everybody to work together.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“It was a good idea and still remains a good idea,” he said of the proposed all-island forum.

“And I keep open an invitation to everybody if they want to follow through on it.”

Mr Kenny said the forum would not be a statutory authority and could not work if other parties did not buy into it.