Tóibín Says A GFA Without Stormont Is Hollow Affair

Good Friday Agreement Anniversary Without Democratic Institutions Will Be A Hallow Affair Says Tóibín

Good Friday Agreement Anniversary Without Democratic Institutions Will Be A Hallow Affair Says Tóibín

Aontú leader and Meath West TD Peadar Tóibín has urged the British and Irish Government to reconstitute the Executive with or without the DUP.

In reference to the upcoming Good Friday Agreement anniversary An Teachta Tóibín said: “A Good Friday Agreement anniversary celebration without the institutions of the Good Friday Agreement would be a hallow affair.

“There is no functioning  Stormont, no Executive, no North-South Ministerial Council, no democratic accountability and no mechanism to fix the severe cost-of-living crisis or the decimation in the public services”.

Peadar Tóibín TD says the existence of the Good Friday Agreement without a functioning government is a hollow affair.

“The absence of violence is of course extremely welcome. But is this the sum of our ambition, the bar for success in a so called western liberal democracy?

“We have had no functioning democracy for 40% of the last 25 years, this would not be tolerated in any other country. There would be protests on the street anywhere else in the western world.

“1 in 7 people in the North is on a hospital waiting list. Enniskillen A&E is close to closing. Daisy Hill Hospital is losing services. Causeway coast is in danger of losing maternity services. GP services are teetering on the edge of closure. Antrim Area hospital closed doors to patients due to ‘unsafe’ conditions.

“Public Service staff are on strike right across the North. There are over 43,000 people on social housing waiting lists. Tens of thousands of food packages are being distributed through food banks.

“There is a £750m hole in the Education budget. And shockingly there is zero local political activity to fix these life and death issues”.

“While the Good Friday Agreement was a significant step forward, the guarantors of the Agreement, the British and Irish Government have failed miserably in guaranteeing its function.

“There is a serious cost to the people for this failure. Are we going to see pomp and pageantry of anniversary celebration together with a US Presidential cavalcade but still no functioning democracy?

“It will be a very hallow celebration if that is the case.

“We urge the two governments to proceed with the Protocol and to reform the legislation underpinning the institutions of the Good Friday Agreement so that no one party can crash the democratic system ever again.

“In this way, the objective of the Good Friday Agreement  will be realised in time for the 25th anniversary”.