BELFAST: Keir Starmer makes his first visit as UK prime minister to Northern Ireland on Monday, with hopes high on both sides of the political divide that relations will improve after years of Brexit turmoil.
Both pro-Irish unity and pro-UK parties expect the Labour leader to bring greater stability and closer engagement to Northern Ireland, as well as patch up relations with Dublin.
“There’s cautious optimism about the new government across the board, but for different reasons,” James Pow, a politics lecturer at Queen’s University Belfast, told AFP.
At last Thursday’s election, the largest Irish nationalist party, Sinn Fein, held on to its seven seats to become the largest Northern Ireland party in the UK parliament in London.
It overtook its main rival the pro-UK Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which lost three of its eight seats, two of them to rival unionist parties.
Analysts see the result as allowing Sinn Fein, which does not take up its seats in the House of Commons because it opposes British sovereignty in Northern Ireland, to claim continued momentum towards an eventual referendum, or “border poll”, on Irish unity.
The party, the former political wing of the paramilitary IRA during the Troubles – the three-decade sectarian conflict over British rule in Northern Ireland – is also the largest at council level and in the devolved Northern Ireland assembly.
On Friday, Sinn Fein’s leader Mary Lou McDonald urged the new Labour government to embrace “impartiality” and accept the right for constitutional change.
But Pow said “the fundamentals haven’t changed”, pointing to roughly equal combined vote share at the election between nationalist and unionist parties.
Starmer and his newly appointed Northern Ireland secretary, Hilary Benn, “won’t feel forced to put a border poll on the agenda, at most some pressure to outline procedural criteria for a poll to take place”.
Ireland’s prime minister Simon Harris has warmly welcomed Starmer’s win and already accepted an invitation to visit Downing Street on July 17.
Both he and Starmer are determined to “reset and strengthen” bilateral relations, Harris said.