Belfast Agreement Revisited-Ten Years On.

  1. PRC-UTE
    PRC-UTE
    Belfast Agreement Revisited-Ten Years On.


    The IRSP position is very clear. In 1998 the I. R. S. P. opposed that
    Agreement mainly on the basis that it institutionalised sectarianism in
    the political institutions of the North.

    “After thirty years of conflict, civil rights agitation and death
    destruction and mayhem the end result is that we have now got a more
    sophisticated head counting exercise. There is now no incentive for people
    to move away from entrenched sectarian positions”(Political Secretary’s
    Report to Ard-Feis 1998)

    We also pointed out that the issue of sovereignty was so ringed around
    with pre-conditions and confusions that unionists and nationalists could
    interpret the issue of sovereignty in the agreement to suit their own
    political stance. We pointed out clearly that

    "Northern Ireland in its entirety remains part of the United Kingdom"
    (Article one of Annnex A of the agreement)

    We queried whether the so- called equality agenda would in fact be
    implemented.
    10 years there is still no Bill of Rights, no Irish Language Act and the
    DUP resisting anything that smacks of a nationalist agenda.
    We also pointed out that
    “The cross border bodies are not moves towards unity. They are simply
    pragmatic responses towards the need for capitalist economic efficiency
    within the context of the European Union. Does any one here think that
    improved co-operation on issues such as
    ’animal and plant health.. teachers qualifications and exchanges, waste
    management social security fraud control, aqua culture accident and
    emergency services’ (GFA)
    was what the last thirty years was all about.?” (ibid)

    We also did not believe that the RUC would be abolished or essentially
    reformed. The RUC became the PSNI and many young catholics are now joining
    the PSNI with the strong encouragement of provisional Sinn Fein.

    At that time we tried to tell the strong republican base that existed in
    1998, that in essence the GFA was a defeat for republicanism and that
    rather than try to work the new institutions by jointly running the north
    with unionists, (in effect administering British rule,) republicans should
    form a legitimate opposition within the new assembly and oppose from both
    a republican and socialist positions the right wing policies being
    implemented under British direction whilst upholding the republican base
    positions.

    Unfortunately few were prepared to listen to us. They were prepared to put
    their trust in the ‘republican leadership’. In the intervening 10 years
    many who once scorned our arguments have since come to realise that they
    were fooled by that same republican leadership and that our initial
    position was correct. There have been at least two splits from Provisional
    Sinn Fein since then and a fracturing of republicanism.

    From a Republican perspective the republican position has suffered a
    serious defeat.
    ➢ MI5 now have a strong physical presence in North Down,

    ➢ British regiments are still stationed in the North of Ireland at
    the level they were in 1968,

    ➢ British troops can march through the streets of Belfast

    ➢ a regime still operates from Stormont administrating British rule

    ➢ and the British Treasury dictates the economic policies that
    regime implements

    Supporters of the Good Friday point out the gains they claim made since
    the GFA. They point out that it covers a wide range of areas from

    “constitutional issues, political matters, institutional arrangements,
    human rights, equality, policing, justice, language and culture issues.”
    (Gerry Adams Irish Times April 2nd 2008)

    and that progress has been made on these fronts.
    Yes. There have been changes. Now we have a vibrant catholic/ nationalist
    middle class now on an equal basis with protestant/unionist middle
    classes. In Adam’s own words there is now a “level playing field” (ibid)
    The mantra of “equality” is rarely away from the lips of Provisional Sinn
    Fein leaders. But what kind of equality? Is it equality for the middle
    classes? Is it the equality of poverty? Is it economic equality?

    In the early days of the Civil Rights movement those of us on the left
    pointed out that one of the consequences of calling for equal rights on
    issues such as housing and jobs, under the current economic system would
    be to create less job and housing opportunities for protestants thus
    further feeding sectarianism within those thus disadvantaged.

    Equality under capitalism meant taking from one group and giving to the
    other. That simply facilitated the old Imperialist tactic of divide and
    rule.

    The Unionist Aristocracy and bourgeoisise in collaboration with sections
    of the British ruling class argued forcefully against Home Rule at the
    turn of the 20th century on the grounds of religion, the economy, the
    interests of the British Empire, strategic military grounds and racism.

    They created an all class alliance that linked the protestant proletariat
    to their industrial masters. Despite the fact that the unionist
    bourgeoisie was extracting as much surplus value from the protestant
    proletariat as they could possibly exploit, the protestant masses
    identified with their exploiters and with the reactionary British Empire
    fearing a loss of, in many cases, imaginary privileges they had, compared
    to the catholic masses.


    When the first Northern Government was set up in 1921 the first Cabinet
    looked
    “ -like an executive committee of Northern industry and commerce”
    (page 68” Northern Ireland ; the Orange State” Michael Farrell Pluto Press
    1990)

    Protestant workers who either opposed partition or preached socialism were
    described as “rotten prods” and driven out of their workplaces.
    Thus was created an enormous block to Irish independence, a block it must
    be said, greatly underestimated and misunderstood by republicanism

    As the 20th century progressed many Protestant workers formerly
    ‘privileged’ by easy access to jobs in heavy industry, found their sector
    in decline. Resentment, hatred, bitterness based on years of
    indoctrination about the privileges of being British made many easy prey
    to bigotry and sectarianism. It took courage to stand up to sectarian
    hatred and there were many trade unionists workers and socialists who did
    so.

    James Connolly, Ireland’s outstanding Marxist writer in the early part of
    the 20th century had argued strongly against partition on the grounds that
    it would create a reactionary bulwark against socialism. And so it has
    proved.

    The Good Friday Agreement, far from being but a stage on the road to a
    united Ireland that its supporters argue, has in fact re-enforced the
    sectarian nature of the 6-county state by pushing its inhabitants into
    being either “unionist” “nationalist” or “other” for the purposes of
    forming an administration.

    Adams has argued that
    “The British policy in Ireland has changed dramatically… British policy
    was about repressing republicanism; British policy in the last decade, or
    so, has been about trying to find some accommodation with republicanism.”
    (1)

    The price to be paid for the inclusion of republicans in talks was the
    exclusion of republicanism. This means dialogue with Republican leaders
    and organisations but on the basis of an agenda that excludes the
    political objectives of Republicanism.

    Central to the political objectives of Republicanism was

    ➢ that there would be no internal settlement,

    ➢ that the Irish people have a right to self-determination

    ➢ and it's not dependent on the agreement of a majority in the north.

    The whole peace process may have included Republicans, but from the 1993
    Downing Street Declaration to the final 1998 Belfast Agreement, was always
    based on the British state’s political alternative to Republicanism since
    1972:

    ➢ an internal solution (a power sharing assembly in the North which
    includes Nationalists)

    ➢ with the externality of an Irish dimension (cross border bodies)
    grafted on it.

    The longstanding Republican demands were never serious runners for all
    party talks, and none of them appeared in the final Belfast Agreement.

    Instead we now have political parties based on communal interests. It is
    in the political interests of the mainstream political parties to maximise
    their votes within the protestant or catholic sections of the population.
    So it is in the direct interests of PSF, SDLP, DUP, and UUP to maximise
    the turn out from their “side of the house”. Now as the administration is
    a coalition there is absolutely no chance of radical measures, never mind
    socialist measures, being introduced. After all the budget is allocated
    from Westminster and must be allocated in accordance with the wishes of
    the Westminster Government which means implementing neo -liberal economic
    policies.

    So when Gerry Adams of Provisional Sinn Fein argues that,

    “The fierce opposition from within unionism and the British system to the
    Belfast Agreement has stemmed from the recognition that the agreement is a
    powerful instrument for change.” (Gerry Adams Irish Times April 2nd 2008)

    he is being less than honest. The Agreement is an instrument of British
    policy. It has stabilised the Northern state. And did not the most
    formidable opponent of change and of opposition to nationalism and
    Catholicism, Ian Paisley point out that Adams had revised every republican
    position he ever had and that PSF were now administrating British rule?

    ‘I did smash them [the Provos] because I took away their main plank. Their
    main plank was that they would not recognise the British government [in
    Ireland].
    “ ‘Now they are in part of the British government. They can’t be true
    Republicans when they now accept the right of Britain to govern this
    country and take part in that government.’
    (Interviewed on BBC radio One “Andrew Marr Show” on March 9 2008)

    When Paisley agreed to share limited power with Provisional Sinn Fein he
    knew that the Union was safe.

    The 1998 Belfast agreement amounts to the following:
    1) The British state has repeated its 1973 Sunningdale declaration of
    intent to remain in the North until a majority in it asks it to do
    otherwise;

    2) The British state has made it clear that the unionist veto shall remain
    in place and has strengthened the partitionist ethos underlying that veto
    by having it enshrined it in the revised Southern constitution;

    3) The British state has ruled out any transition to a united Ireland by
    refusing to state that by a certain date - no matter how far in the
    distant future - it will no longer have a presence in Ireland.

    4) The fact remains that the unionists will determine when the north will
    join a united Ireland.


    This represents the best deal unionists could possibly have won. In the
    words of Anthony Blair, the British Prime Minister:


    'This offers unionists every key demand they have made since partition
    eighty years ago...
    The principle of consent, no change to the constitutional status of
    Northern Ireland without the consent of the majority of the people, is
    enshrined.
    The Irish constitution has been changed.
    .A devolved assembly and government for Northern Ireland is now there for
    the taking.
    When I first came to Northern Ireland as a Prime Minister, these demands
    were pressed in me as what unionists really needed.
    I have delivered them all.'
    ( Blair’s Dawn Call kept the heat on Trimble, Sunday Times, 4 July 1999)


    The IRSP has advanced the argument that in the current climate there is no
    basis for republicans engaging in armed struggle. There is little or no
    popular support, organisations may well be infiltrated with people hostile
    to the national struggle and the prospects of any successful conclusion to
    an armed campaign practically nil.

    Republicans need to take a different direction and we have argued
    consistently that that direction is the class struggle. Needless to say
    the mere mention of class struggle has the politically sectarian jumping
    up and down frantically shouting ‘economists, “reformists” “anti
    republicans” and whatever suitable insult they can think up without having
    to make up a suitable sensible argument. Worst of all, in their eyes, are
    those who put forward clear arguments based on a socialist understanding
    of modern Irish society. They are accused of being trendy middle class
    intellectuals living in theoretical ivory towers.

    Such anti-intellectualism has no place in any revolutionary movement.

    It is almost impossible to think of one revolutionary leader from the 20th
    century who was not also simultaneously a writer and thinker; Lenin,
    Trotsky, Gramsci, James Connolly, Padraigh Pearse, Liam Mellows, Mao tse
    Tung, Ho Chi Minh, Fidel Castro, Che Guevara.

    Also in the IRSP itself many of our own leaders including Seamus Costello,
    Ronnie Bunting, Johnny White, Miriam Daly, Ta Power and Gino Gallagher
    were critical thinkers, writers and doers, basing themselves on the class
    struggle.

    The IRSP has argued from its inception that without national liberation
    there can be no socialism and without socialism there can be no national
    liberation. So in deepening and developing the class struggle we are in
    actual fact deepening and developing the struggle for national liberation.

    Republicans need to remember some wonderful phrases of Wolfe Tone, a
    founder of Irish Republicanism,


    “To subvert the tyranny of our execrable government, to break the
    connection with England, the never failing source of all our political
    evils, and to assert the independence of my country--these were my
    objects.
    To unite the whole people of Ireland, to abolish the memory of all past
    dissentions, and to substitute the common name of Irishman, in the place
    of the denominations of Protestant, Catholic, and Dissenter--these were my
    means."
    "To unite Protestant, Catholic and Dissenter under the common name of
    Irishmen in order break the connection with England, the never failing
    source of all our political evils, that was my aim".
    "If the men of property will not support us, they must fall. Our strength
    shall come from that great and respectable class, the men of no property".

    We republican socialists need to remember that it is not “our community”
    we owe allegiance to but to our class.

    The Northern economy is heavily dependant on the public sector, services
    and retailing. Large numbers of people are economically inactive in the
    North with nearly 40% of the working age population. The education system
    is socially divisive class based and not fit for purpose. Every year over
    1000 pupils leave school without basic qualifications and over 12000
    without GCSE passes in Maths and English.

    Gas bills are going up. Electricity bills are going up. Water charges are
    being introduced. Public sector jobs are being axed and replaced by the
    private sector. Working class families can now not afford mortgages and
    the state refuses to increase substantially the supply of social housing
    to meet current needs. There is a slump in the building trade and energy
    prices are rising dramatically.

    In the South of Ireland the economy is now in recession and unemployment
    is expected to rise to 5.5%or 6% this year. House prices are falling
    rapidly and as in the North some working class families now find
    themselves with negative equity. Many now face the prospect of either
    selling their homes or having them dispossessed and moving into rented
    accommodation to be at the mercy of landlords. The recent budget was a
    vicious attack on the living standards of the working class but let the
    wealthy off almost scot free.

    Capitalism worldwide has suffered its greatest shock since the great
    depression in the1930’s. That Depression aided the rise to power of
    fascism with the subsequent world war. What happens in the world economy
    directly affects workers in both parts of Ireland. Neither of the two
    administrations can protect the working class from the effects of a
    recession even if they were so inclined. Administrations that include the
    right wing PD party in the South and the right wing DUP in the North will
    have as their first priority defence of capitalism and their cronies in
    the business world. For all Sinn Fein’s professed “radicalism” they are
    the party that introduced Public Private Initiatives that essentially is
    privatising the educational system.

    For capitalism, that has been one of the outstanding successes of the
    Belfast /Good Friday Agreement. Sinn Fein is now working the capitalist
    system with a gusto and enthusiasm that would turn the stomachs of those
    who once believed in their left wing posturing.

    We say to those republicans shed away your illusions and work towards
    republican aspirations by joining with growing sections of the working
    class in taking up explicit anti-capitalist stances. There is now an
    opportunity to rally working class forces in a fight back against the cuts
    now being imposed. Are republicans prepared to join in that fight? And be
    under no illusion when fighting for the working class in these day to day
    struggles we are also pushing forward the anti-imperialist struggle.

    Gerry Ruddy