Stormont restoration talks making progress, Heaton-Harris says

Northern Ireland Secretary believes legislation can be brought forward to assuage DUP’s concerns on post-Brexit trading

Parliament Buildings at Stormont Estate: Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris has insisted progress is being made towards restoring its institutions. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA Wire
Parliament Buildings at Stormont Estate: Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris has insisted progress is being made towards restoring its institutions. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA Wire

Progress is being made which could lead to the restoration of the Stormont powersharing institutions, Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris has insisted.

Mr Heaton-Harris said that while he still required more clarity on demands from the DUP, he believed that legislation could be brought forward to meet the party’s concerns over post-Brexit trading arrangements.

He said he was determined to provide reassurances to the unionist community that the Government regards Northern Ireland as an integral part of the UK.

Earlier, the Northern Ireland Secretary concluded his latest round of talks with party leaders over the Stormont stalemate at Hillsborough Castle.

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The Assembly has been in flux for more than a year amid DUP protest action over the Northern Ireland Protocol.

The Windsor Framework was agreed by the EU and UK earlier this year as a way to reduce red tape on trade between Great Britain and Northern Ireland created by the protocol. But the DUP has insisted it will not return to Stormont until Westminster provides further legislative assurances around Northern Ireland’s place within the UK internal market.

Mr Heaton-Harris said: “We are making good progress. More work is being done because there are some questions that the DUP want answered and there is also some clarification (needed) on what their actual ask is.

“We are working to do that, when we get to the culmination of that work I would like to think that will be the place where Stormont can come back,” he said. “If legislation is part of the answer I’d like to think we’d do it.”

Mr Heaton-Harris said the negotiations with the DUP were not about money and there was no prospect of renegotiating the Windsor Framework.

“Things are moving forward, that is what I can assure people on,” he said. “We are getting to a place where, I think, the clarity that will be required to give the DUP the clarity that they require to say yes, they want to go back into Stormont.”

However, following her meeting with the Secretary of State, Sinn Fein vice-president Michelle O’Neill said the ongoing Stormont stalemate is “totally unsustainable”.

Ms O’Neill said the British and Irish governments had to do more to bring Stormont back.

“We have just had our meeting with the Secretary of State and we have made it very clear to him that the current position is totally unsustainable, this vacuum isn’t good enough, all it is serving is to punish the public.”

UUP leader Doug Beattie said he maintained that government would be operational before the end of the year.

“I made an assessment that we would have Stormont up and running by the autumn, I have not changed that assessment that we will have Stormont up and running by the autumn,” he said. “But I’m also a realist and I realise that the timings are getting tight.”

Mr Heaton-Harris held talks earlier this week with the DUP, Alliance Party and the SDLP in London.

DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson said after his meeting on Wednesday that the “ball is in the government’s court” with regards to action which would see the restoration of the Stormont powersharing arrangements. – PA