A United Ireland Gerry OShea
The census
figures for Northern Ireland released last September show Catholics, broadly
understood, at 45.7%, and Protestants or people brought up in the Reformation culture
at 43.5%. Ten years earlier, the figures were 48.45% Protestant and 45.1%
Catholic.
The statelet
that was officially designed in 1920 to have a permanent Protestant-unionist
majority has failed the test of time. During the ensuing century nationalists
of all stripes have complained that they
were not even consulted about the partition of the island and their leaders
have always advocated for reunification.
The census
results are significant, but they are far from the whole story. Today, one
person in fifteen – a growing number - living in the North was born outside of
the United Kingdom and Ireland, and there is a vibrant Muslim community
accounting for 0.5% of the population.
A recent
major professional study involving polling and some in-depth interviews, led by
The Irish Times in collaboration with the Royal Irish Academy and the
Keough-Naughton Centre for Irish Studies at the University of Notre Dame – they
use the acronym ARINS - provides some interesting perspectives on the Irish unity
question.
A clear
majority of those interviewed living in the South favor unity and in a border
poll would vote accordingly. It is important to realize that this strong
showing may well wobble when they realize what they have to give up in terms of
flags and anthems and the poll measures feelings prior to clear information on
the costs to the Irish exchequer. Nevertheless, it is fair to assume that a
referendum in the South would very likely show that a clear majority supports
unity.
The
situation in the North is much more fluid and the ARINS research suggests that the
voters there would strongly reject a unity proposal – at this time. Their
polling shows that 50% would say no, predictably coming mostly from the
unionist community, but surprisingly, 21% who identify as Catholics, would vote
the same way.
Why have one
Catholic in five abandoned a core historical dogma of the nationalist creed? I
recall a conversation dealing with this very issue many years ago in a bar in
the Bronx with a thoughtful Tyrone republican.
He explained that while all Catholics carry a
strong sense of grievance because of decades of discrimination and disrespect,
it did not follow that they favored a united Ireland. He pointed out that the
status quo has its attractions. Many nationalists are nicely settled and enjoying
a comfort level with the advantages of British citizenship.
He gave an
example of the British National Health Service (NHS), until recently the envy
of Europe and, even still, providing a free doctor and hospital service for all
citizens. He told me about the Donegal lady who needed a hip replacement and
who could not afford the operation in Dublin but, by using her sister’s address
in the Falls Road she was able to get the procedure done in Belfast at no cost.
That was
twenty years ago. Today, unfortunately, under a conservative government in
Westminster, the provision of excellent healthcare is not a top priority in an
ailing post-Brexit economy, and over 100,000 nurses throughout the UK have
given notice of a January strike for the first time in the history of the NHS.
The South is
also grappling with too few hospital beds resulting in long waiting lists for
treatment, including for some acute patients. Nurses there also seem to be
moving towards industrial action for better wages and conditions.
However, all
the political parties in the South agree that the state must provide an
adequate medical and hospital service for every citizen. Major improvements
have been made, especially in caring for the old and infirm. It is significant
that Irish longevity is rated above-average in the European Union and slightly
higher than in Britain.
Not
surprisingly, the ARINS report points to the type of health service on offer in
a united Ireland as having massive influence on whether the people in Northern
Ireland would vote for unity in a referendum. Some 50% of Northerners say that
they are more likely to vote for unity if the South can provide medical and
hospital care comparable to the UK.
This NHS
effect is rated more important than if, somehow, 4000 euros were added to the
annual income of individuals in the North. Ironically, the Ulster Unionists
Party vehemently opposed the introduction in Westminster of the NHS by Nye
Bevan after the Second World War; today it is their biggest bulwark against a
united Ireland.
Flags and
anthems and tribal allegiances shouldn’t be underplayed, but as the time for a
poll grows closer, day-to-day issues like pensions, housing and employment
opportunities will loom larger as people weigh the pros and cons. The ARINS
research makes clear that unionists right now – 78% - are more firmly committed
to maintaining the British connection than nationalists – 54% - favor breaking
it.
Close to 20%
of unionists are not only opposed to unity but they say that they couldn’t
accept it under any circumstance – true-blue loyalists. This raises the specter
of violence and, according to the poll, this factor might well be a major
influence in the way people vote in the South.
If unity seems likely to bring bombing and
mayhem similar to what prevailed in the North prior to the Belfast Agreement in
1998, that prospect would be a major negative influence with Southern voters.
Hopes for a
successful unity referendum are not encouraging for nationalists right now, but
there is a large bloc of undecideds, around 20%, who will make their minds up
closer to the voting date.
Months
before the Scottish independence vote in 2014 polls showed that support for
this major change for the Highlands registered in the high twenties. After the arguments
were heard, 45% of Scots voted to leave the United Kingdom.
The campaigns
waged after the voting date is announced by the British Secretary of State will
play a big part in the outcome. None of the southern political parties, except
Sinn Fein, is pushing for a proximate referendum date. In broad terms, Fianna
Fail and Fine Gael seem to be thinking of at least a ten-year time frame while
Sinn Fein rhetoric suggests a preference for a first constitutional showdown in
half that time.
The ARINS
report claims that a majority of both communities in the North as well as among
Southern voters favor a border poll in the near future. The same report
indicates clearly that without a working national health service in the South
the referendum in the North will fail by a mile. Clearly, this crucial and
complex issue has to be sorted out first in Dublin and - with the best of
intentions – that will take many years.
Gerry
OShea blogs at wemustbetalking.com
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