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The new Fine Gael leader said issues over truth and justice for victims in Northern Ireland still had to be worked through between the two governments.
The leaders of the U.K. and Ireland went to Belfast Monday to meet Northern Ireland’s newly revived government and bask in a good-news moment after two years of political crisis. British Prime ...
The members of the British–Irish Council (sometimes called the Council of the Isles) are representatives of the Irish and British Governments, the devolved administrations in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales, together with representatives of the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands. It meets regularly to discuss matters of mutual interest ...
In November 2022, British prime minister Rishi Sunak and Tánaiste Micheál Martin met in Blackpool at the British-Irish Council summit. [28] Sunak said he was confident a breakthrough in negotiations over the Northern Ireland Protocol were possible. [29] The December 2022 deadline passed without any resolution. The deadline was extended to 19 ...
The Liberals and Ireland: the Ulster question in British politics to 1914 (Harvester Press, 1980). Kee, Robert. The Green Flag, (Penguin, 1972) popular history of Irish nationalism; Hammond, J. L. Gladstone and the Irish nation (1938) online edition. Loughlin, J. Gladstone, home rule and the Ulster question, 1882–1893 (1986). online
Kevin Sharkey - BBC News NI in Dublin. December 1, 2024 at 7:01 PM. ... The leaders of the three main Irish political parties were all re-elected on Saturday to serve in the Dáil (lower house of ...
Today, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland each possess a parliament and government, with devolution in Northern Ireland being conditional on participation in certain all-Ireland institutions. The British government remains responsible for non-devolved matters and, in the case of Northern Ireland, co-operates with the government of the ...
The old Irish Party collapsed and a new political force, Sinn Féin which called for force to achieve its goals, united Irish nationalists. Sinn Féin won the 1918 general elections in Ireland and in keeping with their policy of abstention did not send its elected MPs to Westminster, deciding to set up its own separatist parliament in Dublin ...