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Cross-community vote facts for kids

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A cross-community vote or cross-community support is a form of voting used in the Northern Ireland Assembly according to the provisions of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. It requires the support of both main communities in Northern Ireland, in other words majority of unionists and the majority of nationalist members of the Assembly. Among other reasons, it arises when the petition of concern procedure is invoked.

Background

Upon taking their seats members of the Northern Ireland Assembly are required to designate themselves as either "unionist", "nationalist" or "other". Members may change their designation of identity only if they become a member of a (different) political party or they cease to be a member of any political party.

The election of the Speaker, appointment of the Minister of Justice, any changes to the standing orders and the adoption of certain money bills must all occur with cross-community support.

This was originally set out in the Northern Ireland Act 1998.

Petition of concern

Votes in the assembly do not ordinarily require cross-community support. However, if a "petition of concern" is raised successfully about proposed legislation or executive action, the speaker must call a cross-community vote. For a petition to be raised successfully, at least 30 of the 90 members from at least two parties (counting all independent signers of a petition of concern who were elected as independents as members from different parties) must sign the petition.

In a cross-community vote, the majority of unionists' and the majority of nationalists' votes are each required to pass a motion put to the assembly. .....


Arising from the St Andrews Agreement, an "Assembly and Executive Review Committee" was set up. Among its Terms of Reference, the committee was to consider "provisions for voting on an Ad Hoc Committee on Conformity with Equality Requirements prior to the vote on a Petition of Concern." It also "considered the possibilities of restricting Petition of Concern to certain key areas, changing the 30 MLA threshold, and alternatives to Petitions of Concern (e.g. a weighted majority vote). There was no consensus on any of the issues.".

In January 2020, negotiations between Northern Ireland's political parties and with the UK Government led to the New Decade, New Approach agreement, in which the parties agreed to greater restraint in their use of the Petition mechanism and to raise the threshold for its use. This agreement was set in law through the Northern Ireland (Ministers, Elections and Petitions of Concern) Act 2022.

Procedure

According to the standing orders of the assembly, "after the signing of the Roll a Member may enter in the Roll a designation of identity, being Nationalist, Unionist or Other. A Member who does not register a designation of identity shall be deemed to be designated Other for the purposes of these Standing Orders."

Designations

Designations 1998 2003 2007 2011 2016 2017 2022
Unionist 58 59 55 56 56 40 37
Nationalist 42 42 44 43 40 39 35
Other 8 7 9 9 12 11 18

Note: These figures include the assumed designation of the Speaker who, having a non-partisan role, does not officially declare a designation. Note also the effect of the Reduction of Numbers Act, which partly accounts for the significant changes in 2017.

Parties

List of current and previous assembly parties by designation.

Unionist

DUP 1971–present
NI21 2013–2016
NI Unionist 1999–2008
PUP 1979–present
UKIP 1993–present
UK Unionist 1995–2008
UUP 1905–present
TUV 2007–present
United Unionist Coalition c. 2000–2012

Nationalist

Sinn Féin 1905/1970–present
SDLP 1970–present

Other

Alliance 1970–present
Green (NI) 1983–present
NI Women's Coalition 1996–2006
People Before Profit 2005–present

See also

  • Consociationalism
  • Demography and politics of Northern Ireland
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