Northern Ireland nationalists fear focus on reconciliation stalling push for unity referendum | Northern Ireland

IN Northern Ireland was the only goal that everyone used to agree on: compromise. In the UK, whether it is united with Ireland, all sides have accepted the need for healing wounds and the differences between Catholics and Protestants.
Even those who took the other side called to compromise. How can they not? It was a better thing from himself.
Not anymore. The increasing number of nationalists says that R-Kelime has been kidnapped and bent to block their campaigns for the merger referendum.
“The purpose of the agreement is very valuable, but it is manipulated and bastard,” he said. Irish Border SurveyA group lobbying for the referendum. “A fearless unionist has become a veto.”
Rooney and others are afraid that a difficult, badly defined rapprochement between the two largest blocks of Northern Ireland has turned into a prerequisite that gives an excuse to unionists and Irish and Irish governments as an excuse to escape the referendum.
For Rooney, such a prerequisite will strengthen the status quo in an entity designed for trade unionist a century ago and weaken paradoxically compromise. “Hardline creates a perverted incentive for loyalty to resist and threaten violence.”
Under this scenario, tensions associated with the traditional summer walking season, or Irish Rap Triple Kneecap’s openly ORGANIZATIONS ABOUT THE British administration, or any number of debates, can be used as evidence that Northern Ireland is not ready to vote on the constitutional future.
Combining compounds Nationalist Anxiety: Catholic birth organs in Northern Ireland are decreasing, Brexit shock decreased, and Sinn Féin fell in Ireland’s elections last November and paved the way for a renewed Fianna Fáil/Fine Gael coalition government.
Tánaiste Simon Harris said that he did not expect this decade and this was not a priority. Taoiseach, Micheal Mártin, not a merger, the government of the government Shared island initiativeReconciliation and encouraging cross -border cooperation and infrastructure.
In other words, Dublin, in other words, does not put pressure on Keir Starmer’s government for referendum, which is understood that most people in Northern Ireland will vote to leave England within the scope of the good Friday agreement.
For Sinn Féin and the Moderate Nationalist Socialist Socialist Socialist and Labor Party (SDLP), the United Voting Share has progressed to approximately 40% since 1998, which has been an ongoing stagnation despite the number of Catholics who overturned Protestants, but to reduce support support for trade union parties, to leave the last elections.
For nationalists who think that the conditions of a referendum would be met soon, focusing on compromise launched alarm bells. MP and former SDLP leader Colum Eastwood criticized what he calls “creeping normalization üzere to make it a prerequisite.
“Reconciliation is a moral necessity for our whole society – the Southern Establishment cannot use it to tell citizens in the North to tell a good economy, jobs and public services,” he tweeted.
E -Posta detailed Eastwood, a new united Irish creation can advance the compromise, he said. “Will there be a tension? Yes. Can we confront the understanding and actually contribute to compromise?
Leo Varadkar, former Taoiseach, called on the existing Irish government for a referendum, saying that the Irish government would not be established in 1922 and would not have a good Friday agreement if a complete compromise was a prerequisite. Last week, he told a Phobail Festival in Belfast, and said that the game “50 plus” in favor of the merger would be enough. It would be better to have “majority majority” but “maximum consent ..
Sinn Féin’s Northern Ireland Minister Michelle O’Neill said last week that a Republican commemoration ceremony was “laser -oriented to the union, and urged the Irish government to put the issue in front of a citizen parliament.
A report The Future of IrelandAn non -profit organization advocating the merger, the good Friday agreement before the referendum does not insist on reconciliation, he says. “Our opinion is that any goal of such a goal will only follow the transition to a new constitutional regulation in our common man. Re -merger is a reconciliation project,” he says.
However, others – trade unionists and some nationalists – say that it would be reckless to vote for the existential change to relieve the sectarian tensions of Northern Ireland.
Liam Referendum demands will only contribute to common polarization and will be completely productive against the common polarization, Li
He referred to the walls of peace that warned the Catholic and Protestant regions and the “unstable balance ın of the region. “We need a much higher compromise to lay the foundations of a united Ireland. It would be madness that most people in Northern Ireland were satisfied with the Irish unity or at least not at least satisfied with the Irish Union, and the unification of the Republic would be madness.”
In 1994, David Adams, who helped him receive a commission through the Sadık Paramilitter Armistice, said that separated housing and education were Catholics and Protestants and the buried tribal “Korel .. “No violence, but we are divided. Without a sign of compromise, I do not think that the Republic will touch this place with a mava pole.”
Peter Shirlow, Director of Liverpool University Irish Research InstituteHe said that the reconciliation was actually advanced-Stormont, integrated workplaces, mixed marriages-However, Catholic birth rates and static nationalist support weakened the referendum. “There will be no border survey,” he said.
Trevor Ringland, a former international rugby player and unionist politician working at the Northern Ireland Police Board, said that some referendum defenders have weakened the reconciliation by legitimizing the violence of IRA during the problems. “They sell messages to young people we have to kill our neighbors to reach the constitutional change.”
Ringland said that songs such as Kneecap-Brits Out a by Knecap-Brits were a slogan of the IRA. “The children thought they were angry, but it was from the angry police, which meant that you could get a bullet inside.”
Ringland said Northern Ireland needed more compromises before voting for the constitutional change. “Let’s focus on establishing relationships and can decide where to get future generations.”
Union defenders believe that the constitutional change will be achieved by winning elections in Northern Ireland and mobilizing the Irish government – a task for the current generation.
Rooney said: “The Dublin organization has been warm about the Union for a while – some of them are basically wanting an easy life and they don’t want to think north at all. It is our job to win them.”