Adams decision will see party look south for future direction

Posted By: November 20, 2017



Brian Feeney. Irish News. Belfast. Monday, November 20, 2017


SATURDAY night’s Sinn Féin Ard Fheis was historic for more reasons than Gerry Adams announcing his retirement.

Of course, that announcement got all of the publicity including lengthy heavyweight political obituaries of Adams.

After all,  he has been the dominant figure in Irish republicanism for over 40 years, ever since he emerged as the leader of the newly established Northern Command in 1976.

In 1983, when Adams took the presidency of Sinn Féin, it signaled the dominance of northerners in the Republican Movement.

Instead of being simply a cheerleader for the IRA, Sinn Féin had emerged as a political force. That year Gerry Adams had been elected MP for West Belfast, the constituency’s first ever Republican MP, defeating the former SDLP leader Gerry Fitt. It was a sign of things to come.

The northern dominance that Adams established was reinforced in 1986 when he and his supporters managed to oust Ruairi Ó Brádaigh and southern ideologues by driving through the Ard Fheis decision to take any seats Sinn Féin won in the south.

Let’s look to the future.

Saturday night was historic because the republican movement has pivoted south again, reversing the northern preponderance of the 1980s and 1990s.

Adams’s move south in 2011 indicated the shift in emphasis to the Dáil.

Saturday set it in stone.

The Ard Fheis was all about the Dáil and southern politics.

The next Sinn Féin president will be Mary Lou McDonald. She’s head and shoulders above any other contender but, most importantly, no one from the north will challenge her.

Michelle O’Neill has already ruled herself out.

The party leader has to be in the Dáil because the party desperately wants to be in government in Dublin. Maybe O’Neill will become deputy leader but the weight is in the Dáil.

Sinn Féin knows that they will automatically be in any revamped northern executive with O’Neill as Deputy First Minister.

They decisively stuffed the moribund SDLP in 2017, gaining 71 percent of nationalist votes in June.

The next Assembly election isn’t due until 2022 but, whenever it is, the result in nationalism is a foregone conclusion.

Therefore Sinn Féin is going to throw the kitchen sink at the next election to the Dáil, probably next year.

Passing a resolution to allow the party to enter coalition as a junior partner was part of that Sinn Féin drive to get into government. They need to get about 30 seats, up from their present 23. Adams has privately acknowledged that his media performance in the last election was dreadful.

He may have cost the party three seats.

The sulfurous cloud he carries around him also caps the party’s potential expansion. All polls suggest that as long as he leads the party a slice of voters will never touch Sinn Féin.

So Adams’s departure is part of the same relentless drive towards the government in the south.

Of course, Micheál Martin and Leo Varadkar must say they won’t go into coalition with Sinn Féin. They have to say that but if arithmetic requires they’d go into coalition with Oul Nick [the Devil]

Remember, Fine Gael went in with the Stickies [the Marxist breakaway group from the Republican Movement].