We arrive in Belfast, which we had all visited earlier in
the semester, so we were familiar with the set up and everything. Found our bus
to go on a tour of the city. A group of us girls had already gone on a tour
when we were here before so a lot of it was repetition but it was still a good
time and we saw a few new things. I guess I should say that unfortunately my
camera was dead so I didn’t take any new photos but I might put a few from some
of the other students on here.
After a nice lunch break in the city center, we load the bus
again and head off to Stormont. This is Northern Ireland’s parliament building.
Had to go through airport-type security, and you have one in every group...Andy
set off the alarm. Thankfully it was just a bunch of change, a phone and his
house key in his pocket that did it.
So we headed on up and to meet Mervyn, our Programme Director inside.
After donning our visitor passes we meet up with a representative from the
Education Department who gives us a presentation over the history of Stormont
and how their government is set up now.
We then had the privilege to meet representatives from each political
party and listen to them talk about their party, their own personal stances,
etc. It was nice to get to see the spectrum of stances and beliefs that are
represented in their government. It was sort of interesting because it is
difficult for me to translate ok so is the Northern Irish government the
equivalent to a state government or more on the national government side? Because they are part of the UK, but
yet they are so different and their history is just completely different, and
yet they are part of the European Union too.
Regardless here is some of the information we learned about:
The Northern Ireland Assembly is set up under the
Belfast/Good Friday/1998 Agreement (They can never decide on terminology
because of the differing opinions.) How their government works, not only is it
a power sharing government but they also use what is called a referendum to
gain citizen acceptance in order to pass a bill into law so that the people of
Northern Ireland have a say in the law if it is going to change or alter their
constitution. So they decided to
take a referendum with the Good Friday Agreement and the North had a 71%
consensus and the South (Republic of Ireland, ROI) had a majority consensus of
94.4% in amending the Irish Constitution.
The thing to know about this agreement is it involved 3 main players:
Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland, and England. (America also played a
huge role in this but only a persuasive/supportive role.) So how this all worked out is through
what is called Strands in the Agreement. Strand 1 deals with the democratic institutions
in NI, mainly setting up a power sharing government between the two disputing
sides, Republican/Nationalist and Loyalist/Unionist. Strand 2 deals with the
North-South cooperation in setting up councils to deal with matters that affect
the whole island. Strand 3 deals
with the Northern Irish government and British government.
Britain still holds control over Northern Ireland, they are
considered a part of the United Kingdom (Britain, Wales, Scotland, and NI), but
Northern Ireland Government is a devolved government meaning that Britain is
gradually giving more power to NI as they see fit.
There is the Assembly and Executive Committee. The Assembly
has 108 elected members while the Executive committee has 11 department
ministers and the first and deputy first ministers. (Note: First minister and
Deputy First Minister have equal powers, this is simply because First minister
Peter Robinson’s political party, DUP was the majority winner with, Deputy
First minister Martin McGuinness’ (he’s my neighbor!) party Sinn Fein coming in
second. This is part of the power sharing deal.
Since 1998 there have been some hiccups in the road to being
a devolved government and they had to meet again and work out their differences
in the St. Andrews Agreement. This mainly reviewed everything in the Good
Friday Agreement and fixed minor details but was very important in giving the
impression of keeping the peace.
Ok so that was a ‘brief outline’ of what the NI Assembly
does, sorry it was so long but it is very interesting to try to determine what
it really does and how it works and everything. Difficult not to constantly
compare to the US system because who says we have it right or wrong but just
trying to analyze it. It is
by no means complete or completely successful how they have it now. They are
going to have to start the reviewing process again soon because things are
getting tense on the community levels again. Also something else interesting, the UK (including NI)
system of government uses a different system for elections as far as how often
they must hold elections. At minimum they have to have a General Election every
5 years but the Prime Minister (Westminster) can call a GE at anytime. When they have vacancies in the MP
(Member of Parliament) seats, they hold by-elections. So say someone resigns
from the post of MP, that constituency holds a by-election to vote in someone
new. Their government has a lot of little differences from ours since they
operate on a parliamentary system and just because we all can’t be the same I
guess. I know the one thing I do
like about their legislative process though is the referendum requirement for
changing/altering the Constitution. Just makes sense to have direct support
from the voters themselves.
Well in close, it was a very interesting day in Belfast and
we all enjoyed being able to understand more of their jargon and acronyms for
the parties and everything. It was just nice taking this field trip after we
have learned about it for so long. Oh I could keep going…I just remembered a
story our Education Dept. Rep was telling us when we were sitting in the
chamber of the Executive about how they had to cover the entire building with
tar and manure I think, during WWII so that it wouldn’t get bombed! And funny
thing is it worked! Belfast did get bombed a couple of times but Stormont was
in once piece and was actually used by the English Navy/Air force as a
headquarters I believe. Anyway it took about 5 years for a crew of men to clean
the building after WWII. And interesting, the building is 365 feet wide, for
the days in a year! I wonder if it is 365 and a ¼, ha…
Anyway I know this post is a little heavier as far as
content but this is a culmination of everything I have been learning about this
great country. And it really is a great country, I mean they have the best
intentions but they are just two different views is all. Maybe having they same
paths at first but both see a different end goal so it’s very difficult to not
be frustrated that they have such difficulties in working together. Well I will have a fun post after this!
I’ve been working on it for a couple weeks now, gradually writing down the
differences I see/experience in NI culture vs. the American way. Hopefully that
one will stir up some comments :) Have a great day!
Stormont-NI Parliament Building |
Looking back at Belfast from Stormont |
Inside Stormont |
Ceiling inside Stormont |
I never made inside Stormont, but I remember the LONG walk up the hill as seen in your picture looking back towards Belfast.
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