Belfast’s failed Eurovision bid still striking a sour note at city hall
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At the recent full meeting of Belfast City Council, SDLP Councillor Brian Heading spoke out against the bid as details emerged of who voted for and against City Hall making a bid for the contest.
Belfast missed out last month after failing to make the shortlist of seven cities. The competition is set to be held in the UK in 2023 after safety fears ruled out this year’s winner Ukraine.
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Hide AdDUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson said last month there were “lessons to be learned” from Belfast’s failure to make the shortlist, adding the city was at a “significant disadvantage” because the application bid was not submitted sooner. Belfast Council said it was submitted within the deadline.
The Alliance motion at City Hall to make the bid, forwarded by Councillor Mickey Murray, at last month’s City Growth and Regeneration Committee passed by 10 votes to seven.
All Sinn Féin committee members voted against the motion, with one SDLP member and one People Before Profit member joining them to vote against. All DUP and Alliance members voted for the Eurovision bid, with one SDLP member and one Green Party member joining them in support.
At the full council meeting, SDLP Councillor Heading told the chamber: “At the City Growth and Regeneration Committee I said I disagreed with the council ring fencing between £2 million and £5 million to prepare the way for bringing the event to Belfast. Especially given we had 15 deaths, within three months, of vulnerable people on our streets.
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Hide Ad“I said if the council had money to spare, we should be using it to tackle issues relating to why those deaths had taken place, and to prevent further events taking place.
“But as we saw a mere 48 hours after the announcement was made on Radio 2, Belfast didn’t rate on it. It was always going to go to some marginal seat for some Tory, looking at the rise of Labour in the polls, saying ‘I’m going to be redundant soon – if I can get a bit of good news and get associated with bringing Eurovision’.”
He added: “I have to say at the committee I told you so. And I repeat it tonight – we were never going to get it.”
Green Councillor Anthony Flynn said: “It is important to hear the concerns Councillor Heading is raising, and a lot of it I do agree with.
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Hide Ad“One of the issues I do want to challenge is around the potential costing of hosting that event. That cost is based on the local authority’s size and power, and as we know, Belfast City Council does not have the same powers as other councils in England.”
He said when it was announced in June that the UK would be a contender to host the contest, “the Assembly should have been straight off the bat”.
He said: “Where was the First Minister? Where was the Deputy First Minister. I believe there was only one government minister who actually talked about it in public.
“And then we had a party leader come out and say on the day it was announced Belfast was unsuccessful ‘Oh there you go, it was in late’. It wasn’t in late, it was before the deadline.”
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Hide AdAlliance Councillor Mickey Murray said: “We could have hosted Eurovision, it could have been done. I don’t buy this whole argument, that there are homeless people on the street, and such and such is happening in the city centre.
“I had ten years experience working in the homeless sector, and the issues in the sector ten years ago are the issues that are still facing them now. The way the government has dealt with the homeless issue hasn’t changed in ten years either, and that is why we are facing the issues.”