
You might as well expect Conor McGregor and Paul Murphy to work together as Stormont to function
scale of crisis
in
Northern Ireland
's health service. 'But you have a free service in the North, so much better than the HSE.' A free service with inadequate capacity can be no service at all.
Long waits – often for several years – are standard for health treatment in Northern Ireland. Recently published analysis by the Economic and Social Research Institute concluded that while 12 per 1,000 people on waiting lists in Ireland were there for 18 months or longer, in the North the comparable figure was 86 per 1,000.
Sadly, the crisis in healthcare in Northern Ireland is
not a unique failure in political delivery
. Indeed, health waiting lists cause other problems. Health incapacity is the most common cause of economic inactivity – thousands who want to work are unable to do so because of long waits for surgery and other treatment.
Water infrastructure
is another crunch point. Lack of sewage and water supply capacity is constraining housing construction and industrial development. Around £300m (€350m) a year is being invested in water infrastructure, compared to the minimum of £500m that NI Water says it needs and the £640m a year that the construction industry argues for.
READ MORE
[
Stormont is slow, afraid of new thinking and costly, says report
Opens in new window
]
The North's infrastructure crisis – and yes, it is a crisis – is further illustrated by last week's court
judgment blocking the upgrade of the A5
, the most dangerous road on the island which connects Donegal as well as Derry to Dublin. The court found that NI's Department for Infrastructure did not explain how the scheme meets the obligations of Stormont's own climate change legislation.
Another serious failing in Northern Ireland is the
education and skills system
. The North has too few graduates, with around a third of undergraduates studying away because of lack of capacity within the local universities. Nor are there enough adults with high-level vocational skills. This, in turn, reflects a schools system based around academic selection – with many children from lower-income families not making the grade into the best-performing grammar schools.
A consequence is that Northern Ireland has lots of teenagers who switch off in school and leave the education system at an early age. Rates of early school leaving are three times higher in the North than in Ireland. One in ten school pupils in the North becomes disengaged as a teenager. These children are more likely to become economically inactive as adults, less likely to gain well-paid employment, more likely to suffer ill health and more likely to gain criminal records, becoming prisoners at high cost to the state.
All these problems (and many more) can be argued to be results of a political system that is unable to make difficult choices and allocate resources objectively. The Belfast Agreement achieved peace, but failed to provide an effective system of government. Indeed, Stormont has not even been sitting or operational for 40 per cent of the time since the agreement was signed. The Belfast Agreement never evolved beyond 'conflict by peaceful means'.
[
'People don't care that much': Frustrated sighs audible as students asked the 'British or Irish' question
Opens in new window
]
This context raises the question: can
Stormont
be reformed? After working within the Stormont system as a political adviser, I left convinced that it cannot be made to work effectively. I was astonished at the continued sectarianism I perceived from some politicians, 27 years after the Belfast Agreement and the declaration of peace.
For many politicians in the North, governing is a zero-sum game – our community loses if your community gains anything. The result is that both communities are held back by the failure to govern for the good of all. And, equally important, Northern Ireland is no longer a society of just two communities. While Catholics today outnumber Protestants, these religious groupings contain a wide range of differences and neither forms a majority. The third section – from other and no religions and arriving from elsewhere – is large and in a sense, underrepresented politically.
It is difficult to see how the existing structures of mutual veto by the senior representatives of unionism and republicanism can be remoulded to create a functional system. One wag suggested it is like giving joint government to Jeremy Corbyn and Nigel Farage and expecting it to work. (Or, it might be said, to Conor McGregor and Paul Murphy.)
The permanent impasse at Stormont and its inbuilt dysfunctionality causes many to find Irish unity the attractive alternative. But unity is not an easy option. For one thing, there is the cost. Unaffordable says Professor John FitzGerald, given the scale of the subvention (subsidy) from the UK government. Affordable argues Professor John Doyle, not least given the potentially transformative impact of unification.
Then there is the timeline, process, destination and lack of preparation. It is perhaps wrong to consider Irish reunification as a potential 'big bang' event. As Professors Seamus McGuinness and Adele Bergin have pointed out, the handover of Hong Kong to China took 13 years. The transition of East Germany is an ongoing process that has so far taken 35 years.
What concerns me most is the suggestion that Irish unity should lead to a federalised arrangement in which Stormont continues. When I argued to an Oireachtas committee a couple of years ago that the Northern Ireland Assembly is so dysfunctional that it cannot be retained within a new Irish State, the reaction from some senators seemed like suppressed horror.
Why an institution that does not work and apparently cannot work should be retained within a new island-wide constitution is completely beyond me. For many close observers, abolition of Stormont is the single most attractive element of Irish unity.
For all their faults, the Irish Government and the Irish State work and are effective. Difficult decisions are taken, with mostly good outcomes. If the Irish Government comprises adults, their equivalents in the North often seem like rowdy teenagers – more focused on arguing and scoring points than on reaching compromise, consensus and the best solutions.
It would be understandable if people in Ireland read this and think, 'why do we want them?' Despite the challenges, the emotional desire for Irish unity remains stable across the South's population. The work of the Shared Island Unit has illustrated the challenges involved – it is the practical path to be navigated that remains to be agreed.
Paul Gosling is author of A New Ireland – A Five Year Review of Progress, published by Colmcille Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
Best time to introduce alcohol health warnings is today
Sir, – In April this year, our 33-year-old daughter died as a result of alcohol addiction. The contents of Minister for Enterprise Peter Burke's letter to the Minister for Health, Jennifer Carroll MacNeill, asking her to consider pushing back on the health warning labels on alcohol products is shocking. For me the best time to introduce health warnings on alcohol products is today; the second best time was, perhaps, 33 years ago. I am aware that the introduction of health warning labels on alcohol products may not prevent alcohol becoming the most important part of someone's life, yet it might help to prevent a poor relationship with alcohol from starting. Just as speed limit signs encourage safer driving, yet not everyone obeys the speed limits. Some things in life are constant like sunrise and the harm caused by alcohol, while other things in life are temporary like storm clouds and tariffs. READ MORE Pausing the introduction of health warning labels saves no lives. – Yours, etc, DERMOT O'ROURKE, Lucan, Dublin.


Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
FSAI recalls spinach and mixed leaves products over listeriosis fears
Spinach and mixed leaves products produced by McCormack Family Farms are being recalled due to the detection of the bacteria listeria monocytogenes, said the Food Safety Authority of Ireland (FSAI) . Recall notices will be displayed at point of sale in stores, with the below branded products being recalled: McCormack Family Farms Energise Super Mix, 100g McCormack Family Farms Irish Spinach Leaves, 100g McCormack Family Farms Irish Spinach Leaves, 200g McCormack Family Farms Irish Spinach Leaves, 250g McCormack Family Farms Mixed Leaves, 75g McCormack Family Farms Baby Leaves, 100g & 200g Tesco Mild Spinach, 350g Egan's Irish Baby Spinach, 250g Earlier this week, 141 ready-made meals produced by Ballymaguire Foods were recalled from several Irish supermarkets in connection with an 'extensive' outbreak of the rare bacterial infection listeriosis. The FSAI confirmed that one adult has died as a result of listeriosis, while nine cases of infection were identified. [ What is listeriosis and how serious is an infection? Opens in new window ] Symptoms of listeria monocytogenes infection can range from mild flu-like symptoms to gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea. In rare cases, the infection can be more severe. READ MORE Some people are more vulnerable to listeriosis, including pregnant women, babies and people with weakened immune systems, including the elderly. Retailers are now requested to remove the implicated products from sale, and consumers are advised not to eat them. Further information on the recalled products, including their best-before dates, is available on the FSAI website here .


RTÉ News
16 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Von der Leyen arrives in Scotland ahead of talks with Trump
The European Commission President Ursula von Der Leyen has arrived in Scotland ahead of talks with US President Donald Trump on an EU-UK trade agreement. Discussion are expected to get under way in the late afternoon, and have been described as a "final negotiating session". Upon his arrival, Mr Trump said that there was a 50:50 chance of striking a deal. Ms von Der Leyen landed in Glasgow last night and will make her way to Turnberry on the west coast, where she will meet with him. According to officials on the European side, there is optimism that a deal can be struck, but not certainty. Negotiators are understood to have taken talks to a point where it was now felt that the leaders had to agree on final concessions. Talks are expected to get underway at around 4pm this afternoon. If a deal is struck it will be an agreement in principle, with a final document issued at a later date. It is understood the deal will involve a baseline tariff of 15% on EU goods. However, should the leaders fail to reach an agreement the US has threatened to impose a 30% tariff rate from first of August. The European Union has also promised that reciprocal measures will follow. Yesterday, Mr Trump was spotted playing a round at the famous course, which he purchased back in 2014. A massive security operation was in place as the President played golf on the course. He drove his own golf buggy, but a heavy security presence saw Mr Trump flanked by a fleet of similar vehicles. Even before he took to the course, police officers and military personnel could be seen searching the area around the Trump Turnberry resort - which has had a metal fence erected around it as part of heightened security measures. No protesters were seen while he was golfing on Saturday - but hundreds of people gathered in both Edinburgh and Aberdeen for demonstrations against his visit organised by the Stop Trump Coalition. After spending some time at his South Ayrshire resort, Mr Trump will head to Aberdeenshire, where he is expected to open a second course at his Trump International golf resort in Balmedie. During his time in the north-east, Mr Trump is also due to meet Scottish First Minister John Swinney. Speaking ahead of the talks, Mr Swinney said it was his responsibility to "raise global and humanitarian issues of significant importance, including the unimaginable suffering we are witnessing in Gaza" with the US President. Saying he wanted to "ensure Scotland's voice is heard at the highest levels of government across the world" Mr Swinney added: "That is exactly what I will do when I meet with President Trump during his time in Scotland."