The Guardian view on the DUP back to the past Editorial

about 4 years in The guardian

Northern Ireland has a new executive. But unionism’s main party seems to be reverting to protest, not power
Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist party was originally a party of protest. Founded in 1971 by Ian Paisley, the DUP stood for no surrender. It opposed every attempt by successive British governments to build power-sharing institutions, including the Good Friday agreement in 1998. Then, in 2007, the DUP decided to be a party of power, with Mr Paisley becoming Northern Ireland’s first minister. Since then, it has been the main party of government, first under Mr Paisley, then Peter Robinson and, until last month, Arlene Foster. Now, under Edwin Poots, the DUP is on its way to being a protest party once more.
Mr Poots’s ousting of Mrs Foster was essentially an act of bloodletting between the free presbyterian base of the original Paisleyite party and the DUP’s less doctrinaire members. Some of the latter, alienated by Mrs Foster’s mistakes over Brexit and the Northern Ireland protocol, had already begun to drift away. But the ousting was a coup without a strategy for winning such voters back; it may easily lead to further defections. Instead, Mr Poots has doubled down on the old religion. His priority is to redirect the party, not to govern Northern Ireland. Continue reading...

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