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Archives for January 2008

A Virtual Dodds

Mark Devenport | 11:32 UK time, Thursday, 31 January 2008

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Education Committee members could have avoided all their problems with getting stuck in traffic jams if they had availed of the latest technology and appeared in the Senate Chamber in virtual form. Then a virtual Sammy could have crossed swords with a virtual Caitriona. Sounds far fetched? Well this week our enterprising Enterprise Minister Nigel Dodds attended a conference on β€˜New Ways to Create Revenue Online’ as a Second Life avatar.

I don't know what he said, but I like to imagine that his Second Life department is the Starship Enterprise Trade and Investment. "Beam me up, Doddsy!"

Walkout?

Mark Devenport | 11:25 UK time, Thursday, 31 January 2008

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When is a walkout not a walk out? Some rumbustious scenes at the Education Committee this morning when Caitriona Ruane cut her appearance dead when her allotted hour expired. She pointed out that some MLAs had been late turning up, whilst she had got up at 6.30 to ensure she began giving evidence on time. But not all the Committee members were happy. After she left the Senate Chamber they grumbled on camera about what they regarded as a discourtesy. The Committee chair, Sammy Wilson, reckoned the fact that the minister had taken her first 27 minutes in making an opening statement amounted to an abuse of the hearing. Other MLAs chimed in before Sinn Fein's Paul Butler sprang to the defence accusing Sammy Wilson of taking a partisan approach to his chairmanship.

Safe to say, after this somewhat confrontational performance, relations between the Minister and the Committee cannot be said to have improved.

"Get Some Therapy"

Mark Devenport | 18:01 UK time, Tuesday, 29 January 2008

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At a particularly heated moment during the Budget debate, the SDLP's Alban Maginnis told the DUP Finance Minister Peter Robinson to "get some therapy". Mr Robinson wanted the member to withdraw the phrase "or be withdrawn". However the Deputy Speaker David McClarty was unable to come to his aid. Mr McClarty said he had been so busy calling for order that he didn't hear the remark. So it may now fall to the Speaker Willie Hay to rule whether it is parliamentary to tell a member to get some therapy.

First Victim

Mark Devenport | 17:52 UK time, Tuesday, 29 January 2008

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Could the first victim of the new Victims Commission be a humble NI Executive press release? The Ulster Unionist Stephen Warke complained to me about the biographical material accompanying the first statement by the Commissioners designate because it described the brother of Commissioner Patricia MacBride as "an IRA volunteer" killed "whilst on active service". The unionist argued that the use of the term "volunteer" legitimised the IRA campaign and could be deeply offensive to victims.

But when I searched for the "Statement issued by the Commissioners Designate for Victims and Survivors" on the NI Executive site it had disappeared. All I could see was "WebEngine error: Page not found!"

I am not sure if the statement's disappearance is connected, but I can predict this will not be the last disagreement about terminology that the Victims Commission will have to deal with.

A word from Mervyn O'Storey

Mark Devenport | 17:21 UK time, Tuesday, 29 January 2008

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Which Sinn Feiner has been getting under the DUP North Antrim MLA's skin? He asks the Culture Minister if the practice by Sinn Fein of "gaelicising the names of members from a Unionist background, during exchanges in the Assembly, contributed to his conclusion that an Irish Language Act could prove divisive".

In response, Eamann Poots (sorry that was gratuitous...) says the practice did not influence his approach to the Irish Language Act, but does not help in developing the language in a depoliticised manner.

I have to admit that I tried to gaelicise "Mervyn Storey", but its Welsh purity has left my Irish language boffins stumped.

Prevention Is Better Than Cure

Mark Devenport | 17:07 UK time, Tuesday, 29 January 2008

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The DUP's Stephen Moutray wants to know what measures Sir Reg Empey has put in place to "prevent staff becoming ill". The Employment Minister gives him a long answer about his department's occupational health strategy. But I guess if Sir Reg had really got the business of preventing people becoming ill cracked, he might find another more lucrative niche in life, rather than holding down a job in this Executive

Β£2.5 million

Mark Devenport | 17:02 UK time, Tuesday, 29 January 2008

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That's what Arlene Foster reckons it will cost over a period of 4 years to set up an Environmental Protection Agency. The Environment Minister has yet to announce her response to the recommendation, made by an independent team called in prior to the restoration of devolution, that such an agency should be created.

Causeway proposal refused

Mark Devenport | 10:38 UK time, Tuesday, 29 January 2008

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It's official. Arlene Foster has just told the Assembly that she is refusing Seymour Sweeney's application for a private visitor centre at the Giants Causeway. The minister has told the Assembly the proposal would have an adverse impact on the Causeway's World heritage site status as it would adversely affect the character of the area. If she had done this in the first place just think of the acres of newsprint that could have been saved.

UPDATE: A reasonably lively debate followed the Environment Minister's announcement. The best one liner came from the UUP's Danny Kennedy - "It would appear that the DUP have left Mr Sweeney on his tod."

The re-appearing opposition

Mark Devenport | 21:13 UK time, Monday, 28 January 2008

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I spoke too soon. I thought the ministerial agreement on Peter Robinson's final budget signalled a truce in the executive civil war and an end, albeit temporary, to the period of "opposition within". But tonight the SDLP signalled that, notwithstanding Margaret Ritchie's extra Β£200 million for affordable housing, the Assembly group intends to vote against the budget tomorrow. In fact, after some procedural wrangling over an SDLP amendment not being taken, they ended up voting tonight against the programme for government. Other Executive parties argue this leaves Ms Ritchie in an untenable position, but the SDLP says that whilst the ministerial rules mean she must back the budget there is nothing to stop her colleagues walking into the opposition lobby. So the civil war continues.

The heavily bandaged MLA

Mark Devenport | 17:28 UK time, Monday, 28 January 2008

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The DUP's Jim Wells is jubilant because Sinn Fein's Claire McGill referred to "Northern Ireland" not the "6 counties" in her speech in the Programme for Government debate today. But nationalists pointed out that one of Mr Wells' DUP colleagues had previously talked about the "6 counties". Mr Wells joked that the Strangford MLA "was being dealt with" and was now "heavily bandaged". At the time of writing, I am not sure which of the DUP Strangford representatives is in plaster, but I am sure we can establish this before too long.

A warm minister

Mark Devenport | 15:49 UK time, Monday, 28 January 2008

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Answering questions on the warm homes scheme and other Social Development topics, Margaret Ritchie looked warm and cosy herself in a magnificent woollen jacket with an exuberant fur collar. Perhaps she was sending out a subliminal message about the need for insulation. I couldn't tell whether the fur was real, but I am sure Jim Shannon will advise me.

At one point Ms Ritchie was questioned about affordable housing and she talked about designating Seymour .... for special treatment. There was an audible intake of breath amongst MLAs before the minister clarified that she was talking about Seymour Hill in Lisburn "not that particular Seymour".

On which topic a statement is expected from Arlene Foster on the Giants' Causeway visitor centre tomorrow. So watch this space.

Four into One

Mark Devenport | 15:32 UK time, Friday, 25 January 2008

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So far we have a mixed response to the announcement that there will be a new Victims Commission with four commissioners - former UTV and ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Good Morning Ulster presenter Mike Nesbitt, mediator Brendan McAllister, former Interim Commissioner and RUC widow Bertha McDougall and Patricia MacBride. Ms MacBride has worked in PR, was a victims representative on the Civic Forum, worked for the Bloody Sunday Trust and is the sister of an IRA man shot dead by the SAS in Fermanagh,

The multiple appointment has been criticised by the UUP Deputy Leader Danny Kennedy and the Alliance Deputy Leader Naomi Long, who described it as a "damaging fudge". But the DUP's Jeffrey Donaldson and a number of his colleagues have leapt to the defence, making light of the notion that the OFMDFM will now be paying four Commissioners' salaries (c.Β£65,000 p.a.) whilst it had initially been presumed it would only be forking out for one.

When Bertha McDougall was being dragged though the courts in relation to her unorthodox appointment, few would have believed her career would outlast the man who appointed her, Peter Hain. But the two have certainly had different fortunes this week. I wonder whether this multiple appointment will ensure the matter does not return to the courts, or if some might seek a review on the grounds that they would have applied if they had known a panel of four was in the offing?

And what about the children and the elderly? Will we see them on the steps of Stormont demanding three extra commissioners?

The appointment of the new Commission is one of the topics I tackle with the UUP leader Sir Reg Empey on tomorrow's Inside Politics. We also discuss how his party will vote in next week's debate on the budget, his reaction to Ian Paisley Junior's comments on the DUP leadership succession and just how sorry he feels for the departing Peter Hain.

The programme is on air at 12.45 pm on ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Ulster, and if you miss that, the programme can be caught again on the web Inside Politics .

The Hain Murphy Merry Go Round

Mark Devenport | 18:10 UK time, Thursday, 24 January 2008

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They say never do the same job twice, but that obviously doesn't apply if you are a member of the Cabinet or a manager of Newcastle Utd. Peter Hain succeeded Paul Murphy here, and now Paul Murphy is succeeding Peter Hain in Wales, having already been Secretary of State for Wales once before.

A rumour did the rounds in Westminster that Shaun Woodward would be given the Welsh job on top of the Northern Ireland one, which would have looked like a move towards a department of the regions. But that proved erroneous.

If the logic of this merry go round reshuffle is to be sustained you might think that whenever Mr Woodward is moved his job should return to a resurrected Peter Hain. But then, in contrast to Peter Hain, Paul Murphy has always been regarded as the ultimate safe pair of hands. Peter Mandelson got a reprieve from Tony Blair, but Peter Hain will have to work his passage, and answer all the Met's questions to their satisfaction, before he can start dreaming of a return to the front bench.

"Gizza Job"

Mark Devenport | 16:06 UK time, Thursday, 24 January 2008

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People were apparently queueing out in the street in their eagerness to get a job in Belfast's new Victoria Square development this morning. But the Department for Social Development isn't having so much luck in attracting potential staff. In a meeting of Departmental Permanent Secretaries in December, the DSD's Alan Shannon said his department currently had 540 vacancies. He blamed pay as the main factor in not being able to retain staff. There's a high turnover in general administrative and supervisory staff in benefits offices and child support offices. A DSD spokesman pointed out that the department is not unique as recruiting and retaining staff is a problem in other areas of the civil service.

Retrospective Permission

Mark Devenport | 15:32 UK time, Thursday, 24 January 2008

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The Social Development Minister Margaret Ritchie has asked her Executive colleagues to retrospectively approve her decision to axe Β£1 million in funding to a UDA linked conflict transformation initiative. DUP sources portray the move, at a special Executive meeting this morning, as a belated recognition by the SDLP minister that she should have sought the approval of her colleagues before cutting the money last year. However SDLP sources say Ms Ritchie is not the only one pressing for the retrospective permission. They say it is in the interests of other Executive parties and senior civil servants to authorise the move before a judicial review begins, probably in early March. The Executive discussed the matter today but adjourned until next week. That means any decision will be made after Monday and Tuesday when the SDLP, alongside the other parties, will have to make up its mind how it intends to vote on the Executive's Programme for Government and Budget.

The vanishing opposition

Mark Devenport | 15:46 UK time, Tuesday, 22 January 2008

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With both Michael McGimpsey and Margaret Ritchie pronouncing themselves satisfied with their latest allocations from the Finance Minister Peter Robinson, Stormont is suffering a serious outbreak of sweetness and light. Okay some UUP backbenchers are calling for Iris Robinson to resign as Health Committee chair, and the party is withholding its position on water charges, but in general terms it's hard to see the Ulster Unionists blocking this budget after Minister McGimpsey (is he the Jack Nicholson of the Executive?) has pronounced this "As Good As It Gets".

Having just come off air on Stormont Live I have been asked by the main news website to write a budget analysis. Anyone au fait with my knowledge of finance will know that this task has all the promising prospects of a US sub prime mortgage. But I shall do my best, and post the analysis in the extended entry once I have it finished.

For now, although nothing can be totally taken for granted, it feels like the talk of an "opposition within" may recede for a while. When the programme for government and budget come to a decision next week the only votes certain to be negative are Alliance ones.

Read the rest of this entry

Any bids for the bunker?

Mark Devenport | 11:10 UK time, Tuesday, 22 January 2008

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Further to yesterday's story about the Ballymena bunker Down in the Ballymena Bunker it's emerged this morning that the Executive may sell its fallout shelter. Who might buy it? Someone who wants to set up a 24 hour night club?

Apres le deluge

Mark Devenport | 11:05 UK time, Tuesday, 22 January 2008

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The roads minister Conor Murphy opened up today's Stormont proceedings punctually with a briefing on a recent north-south transport meeting. Lucky he wasn't first up yesterday as he was stuck on the flooded roads around Banbridge. When you are stuck on the roads and you are the roads minister, who do you complain to?

Down in the Ballymena Bunker

Mark Devenport | 17:11 UK time, Monday, 21 January 2008

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The lightest moment during Deputy First Minister's question time today concerned the existence of a Ballymena bunker in case of nuclear war or some other disaster. The SDLP's Alex Attwood wanted to know who was on the list of 300 people to be taken there in a moment of peril. The DFM Martin McGuinness replied that he knew nothing of the bunker and hoped he wasn't on the list, whilst the Environment Minister Arlene Foster said she hadn't given it planning permission. More than one MLA joked about Ian Jr. being sent to the bunker.

If the MLAs had computers in the chamber a quick web search would have turned up the bunker, complete with a quote from Mr McGuinness's own OFMDFM.

Meanwhile when it comes to the budget the Executive parties have now climbed out of their respective silos, agreeing a final document to be officially launched by Peter Robinson tomorrow. So there's a truce in the Executive civil war. Margaret Ritchie is getting more than Β£200 million to build 5000 plus affordable homes over the next three years. The Ulster Unionists claim their settlement for health amounts to Β£150 million over 3 years, but other parties reckon that's an over inflated figure. Sir Reg Empey looks set to get his hands on around Β£40 million of the British-Irish innovation fund, and Sinn Fein are hailing committments to equality built in to the budget process.

Exterminate!

Mark Devenport | 11:18 UK time, Monday, 21 January 2008

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The ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Director General Mark Thompson gave an interview to the Guardian last week suggesting that the ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ's coverage of Westminister, Stormont, Cardiff and Edinburgh could be reinvented in the same way as our drama has been overhauled with Doctor Who and Life on Mars. I briefly pondered blogging about this but almost any line I thought of threatened to do to my ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ career what the Daleks habitually do to anyone or anything which crosses their path.

But I can now soberly note that the Sunday Life newspaper has picked up on the interview and reproduced a striking image of yours truly as Dr Who stood beside the Tardis in the company of la Purdy as my assistant, Rose.

They have not yet assigned suitable Dr Who/science fiction characters to Gareth Gordon or Jim Fitzpatrick both of whom are rattling their keyboards next to me. Any suggestions?

P.S. Gareth points out that our Stormont office is as small as an old police box, but that is where the similarity with the Tardis ends.

Junior and the DUP succession

Mark Devenport | 15:52 UK time, Friday, 18 January 2008

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Gareth Gordon is winging his way towards Dungannon where Free Presbyterian Church elders are due to meet tonight to deliberate on who their future Moderator should be.

In the meantime, I have been back at Broadcasting House, preparing tomorrow's Inside Politics. It was hard to look past the events of Tuesday, when Jim Allister published THAT Ian Jr. letter and Thursday, when Frank Millar wrote his piece in the Irish Times forecasting that Ian Snr. will stand down as an MP at the next election (a report subsequently dismissed by the DUP).

So what we now have for your delectation is a discussion involving Ian Jr. himself and the Ulster Unionist Deputy Leader Danny Kennedy who, earlier in the week, had accused him of engaging in "sordid deals".

Not surprisingly the two politicians don't see eye to eye on the North Antrim related lobbying at St Andrews. But for my money the most interesting part of the programme is at the end when Ian Jr. comments on the "battle for the succession" within the DUP and gives his most public endorsement yet of Peter Robinson as the man to succeed his father as party leader.

As usual the programme goes out on ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Ulster at 12.45pm

The Ties That Bind

Mark Devenport | 15:42 UK time, Friday, 18 January 2008

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Thanks to our Westminster Correspondent Ruth McDonald for drawing my attention to this story run by our ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Scotland colleague David Porter. The Ulster Unionists may have had no luck in convincing the Assembly last month that they should back their proposal for a Royal Commission on the UK, but the Westminster government has gone ahead and set up a cabinet committee to look at ways of strengthening the union.

According to David Porter, a senior source has said that part of the committee's remit will be to '' reclaim devolution from Alex Salmond''.

David continues "The SNP's victory in last year's Holyrood elections has forced the all political parties to re-evaluate how devolution is working...Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives have already entered cross party talks on a constitutional commission for Scotland....Now constitutional reform is back on the agenda at the highest levels of the UK government...A constitutional committee chaired by the Justice Secretary, Jack Straw and including the ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Secretary, the Scottish, Welsh and Northern Ireland Secretaries is looking at the wider question of constitutional reform throughout the UK. As part of its deliberations its likely to consider the issue of representation and MPs voting--- in other words the thorny topic of the so called West Lothian question."

So what chance a Labour committee stopping Scottish Labour MPs voting on English matters? And if they do how will any further constitutional reforms influence politics here?

Devolving Justice

Mark Devenport | 16:07 UK time, Thursday, 17 January 2008

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I took part in a conference on the devolution of justice at the Stormont hotel today. I wasn't in time to see the Attorney General Baroness Scotland tell delegates that transferring justice would be "the final piece in the devolution jigsaw" and "a clear expression of self confidence". But I did chair a debate amongst other interested parties about when the transfer might occur and how a devolved justice system should be structured.

With Jeffrey Donaldson's Stormont committee still deliberating and separate contacts between the DUP and Sinn Fein continuing, no-one is yet in a position to forecast with any accuracy exactly when the devolution of justice might be achieved. The key determinant will be the mood within the DUP. Just as republicans were unwilling to bite off participation in Stormont, decommissioning and accepting the police in one big mouthful, so the DUP is looking for time for its grassroots to digest the new realities.

One contribution I found fascinating came from the Scottish Lord Advocate, Elish Angiolini, who is Scotland's Chief Legal Officer and Public Prosecutor. She says that she can be cross questioned by Scottish committees not just about general legal policy matters but also about her decisions on individual cases. She sometimes declines to answer on public interest grounds, and she obviously doesn't comment on live cases, but if she thinks she can she will offer explanations for her decisions.

If Assembly scrutiny goes that far here after devolution it will certainly be a change from the era of a distant judiciary refusing to comment on why a certain case was stopped, or why a particular sentence might have been handed down.

Good Constituency Work or the Whiff of Sleaze?

Mark Devenport | 11:37 UK time, Wednesday, 16 January 2008

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Jim Allister called it a "bombshell". Ian Paisley Junior termed it a "damp squib". Certainly the letter, revealed under Freedom of Information, from David Hanson listing 6 North Antrim related issues raised by Ian Jr. on the day of St Andrews' Agreement has refocussed attention on the Giants' Causeway, Ballee and related matters.

Ian Junior is bullish, claiming he is just an assiduous constituency MLA. In a previous clip, repeated on last night's ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Newsline, he said he didn't mind using the "L" word (for lobbying) about the North West 200. But this morning the SDLP leader Mark Durkan used the "S" word (for sleaze), claiming the whiff of sleaze had been injected into the air and this is something both Ian Jr. and the DUP have to address.

With the junior minister enjoying the unswerving support of the most powerful politician in Northern Ireland, his father and First Minister, this may be just another storm in the media teacup. But the indications last night from some other DUP negotiators that they were unsighted on and angry about the North Antrim lobbying provoked an apology from Ian Jr. for any embarrassment which might have been caused.

It seems to me that the mood amongst Ian Jr.'s fellow DUP members will be crucial to how this pans out. Clearly other parties engaged in side deals, such as David Trimble seeking knighthoods for his supporters or Sinn Fein looking for concessions on On the Runs or the Irish language. At St Andrews, everyone was well aware that DUP negotiators were looking for concessions on academic selection and the rates. So is this more of the same or something different?

Chavez to the Rescue

Mark Devenport | 13:47 UK time, Tuesday, 15 January 2008

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More evidence Following Ken's Lead that Sinn Fein see Hugo Chavez's oil as the answer to our problems. Martina Anderson has travelled to Caracas to attend a conference organised by President Chavez to hear what she describes as "the hugely exciting developments which are taking place there", by which she means his policies on free health care and education and his "programme providing cut-rate heating oil for needy families in the US and other countries".

Martina's party colleague Willie Clarke wants the Agriculture Minister Michelle Gildernew to investigate the possibility of buying Venezuelan oil at a 20% reduction to fuel our fishing boats. Ms Gildernew says the local fleet should become more fuel efficient. She has no plans to investigate purchasing oil from Venezuela but declares herself ready to raise the matter with her ministerial colleagues in the future.

Otters and Grouse

Mark Devenport | 12:14 UK time, Tuesday, 15 January 2008

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After his Argentinian dove shooting holiday, Jim Shannon has been concentrating on other forms of wildlife. If I was an animal and I heard Jim was asking written questions about me I'd be worried, very worried...

But on the face of it all Jim wants is a fresh survey of the local otter population (the last survey 5 years ago showed a 20% decline in their numbers) and tougher penalties for those who steal grouse chicks and eggs. So nothing to worry about there, then.

But if I were you, wildlife, I wouldn't start relaxing just yet. I hear whispers that the Strangford MLA is working on an extension of the shooting season which lasts until the end of this month. Jim thinks that, in future years, it should be extended into February.

Imperial Wastage

Mark Devenport | 11:02 UK time, Tuesday, 15 January 2008

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Sammy Wilson didn't bring his newspaper back into the Assembly today, but he did bring a 1 foot 8 inches pile of written material he had received during the fortnight previous to the Christmas recess. He reckons that if you mutiplied this by a month and constructed a bookshelf which could take all the documents sent to all 108 MLAs, it would stretch from one side of Stormont to the other (around 365 feet).

Sammy thinks the Assembly could cut the amount of paper it gets through given that all the material can be accessed on the computer. The Deputy Speaker John Dallat took this on board but warned the East Antrim MP both about using visual aids and his use of imperial measurements. "We've gone metric" intoned the Deputy Speaker before taking another tome off his 111.252 metre bookshelf.

The right to rant

Mark Devenport | 17:10 UK time, Monday, 14 January 2008

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Clashing (not for the first time) over Irish language education, Caitriona Ruane wanted to know how such a young woman ( the DUP's Michelle McIlveen, who is in her mid thirties) could engage in such a rant? Which made me wonder, is it only the old who have the right to rant?

Caught Browsing

Mark Devenport | 17:04 UK time, Monday, 14 January 2008

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The former MP David Burnside and the current MP Sammy Wilson led the charge this afternoon in criticising Executive ministers in general and Caitriona Ruane in particular for taking too long to answer members' questions. Mr Burnside argued that ministers wouldn't get away with being so long winded at Westminster. The Speaker Willie Hay promised to keep an eye on the ministers and declared that question time would be reformed in the future. But Sinn Fein's Barry McElduff hit back, pointing out that Sammy Wilson had spent much of the question time browsing through "a broadsheet newspaper". Well at least it wasn't a tabloid.

Use Immunity

Mark Devenport | 16:45 UK time, Monday, 14 January 2008

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A consortium of groups representing more than 1000 mainly nationalist and republican victims visited Stormont today to unveil their proposal for an international independent truth commission. They want the focus to be on truth rather than prosecutions and are urging the IRA, loyalists and the state to cooperate. We didn't hear any further calls for an amnesty, but they did propose the extension of "use immunity" to anyone who gives evidence to such a commission. That evidence may, or may not be given anonymously.

I think "use immunity" may originally be a US concept. Monica Lewinsky successfully argued that she should get a more extensive form of immunity than "use" immunity when telling all about her liaison with Bill Clinton.

According to the San Francisco Alameda County DA's website use immunity "essentially prohibits the prosecution from using the witnesses testimony against him in any criminal proceeding. Use immunity does not prevent the prosecution from charging the witness with the crime that was the subject of his testimony, filing a petition to revoke the witness's probation, or taking any other action against the witness. It is simply an agreement not to use his testimony against him."

So could this be the way we are heading? Also in the building today (but not at the same time as the victims groups) were Archbishop Robin Eames and Denis Bradley, who have been talking to the First Minister Ian Paisley about their consultation on the past.

Owen Paterson

Mark Devenport | 16:44 UK time, Friday, 11 January 2008

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The Tory NI Spokesman Owen Paterson makes his debut appearance on Inside Politics this weekend. The discussion covers defining the troubles as a war, offering ex paramilitaries an amnesty, the prospects for devolving justice this year and whether the NIO should be merged into a department of the nations. He also praises plans for redeveloping security bases here, but adds a big "but" when asked if the MoD should hand them over for free.

Inside Politics is broadcast at a quarter to one on ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Ulster.

Opening Up The City Hall

Mark Devenport | 16:26 UK time, Friday, 11 January 2008

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I bumped into a Belfast councillor when I was strolling past the City Hall this lunchtime and we got chatting about the redevelopment work which is continuing there. Whilst asbestos is stripped out of the historic building, and other work is carried out, the politicians and council staff are around the corner at the Adelaide Exchange building.

They hope to move back in at the end of this year, when all the political functions should be reinstalled on the first floor. But a working group is studying whether council staff should be moved back into their City Hall offices, or if the building's ground floor should be opened up to the public.

It's early days but the ideas knocking around for the ground floor include a new art gallery and exhibition space or locating frontline services like building control there.

Has anyone any better ideas?

On the topic of the City Hall, the Big Wheel was due to come down at the end of March, but the company running it has asked for an extension until the end of the year. Councillors appear happy to approve this extension. Although the Wheel seems to have complemented the City Hall surprisingly well, there is some debate about moving it to another city centre location, probably Custom House Square.

Two Jobs

Mark Devenport | 15:15 UK time, Friday, 11 January 2008

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Peter Hain says he forgot to declare more than one hundred thousands pounds in donations because of the pressures of his governmental work, which at the time included trying to broker a deal here as well as keeping an eye on Wales. Is this proof positive that you can't take on two jobs, let alone fight an internal election campaign on top? If so, are there implications not just for Mr Hain, but also for Des Browne in Scotland?

Atlantic Archipelago Revisited

Mark Devenport | 15:53 UK time, Thursday, 10 January 2008

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Fr Sean McManus of the Irish National Caucus is gunning for the National Geographic for describing Ireland as one of the "British Isles" in a recent publication. β€œ And to make matters worse,” Fr. Mc Manus continues, β€œ the catalog is introduced by the National Geographic president, who bears the proud name of John M. Fahey, Jr. Surely he should know that Ireland is not a British isle but an Irish isle? If someone wants to give it a name, it is usually called the Emerald Isle, Mr. Fahey”.

We have been this way before A Meeting of the Atlantic Archipelago

Troops In in Derry

Mark Devenport | 15:43 UK time, Thursday, 10 January 2008

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Derry may be synonymous with "Troops Out", but an assiduous blog reader from Derry/Londonderry has brought to my attention a "Troops In" comment from the Republican Presidential Candidate John McCain whilst on the campaign trail in Derry, New Hampshire.

The interesting thing about this is that the video was generated by a Democrat supporter trailing a Republican candidate in the hope of picking up a damaging clip of their opponent. Some of our local parties were out and about in last year's Assembly elections making their own video diaries, but will we ever get to the point where they start filming each other in the hope of picking up a gaffe?

A question of conscience

Mark Devenport | 18:06 UK time, Wednesday, 9 January 2008

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All this talk of the need for amnesties and so on might give people the impression that noone here has a conscience. But this is not true. The Department of Agriculture has just acknowledged the receipt of Β£5900 "conscience money" sent to it anonymously through the post. These payments come in from time to time from farmers who decide they have been getting too much in subsidies.

If anyone out there wants to send the blog a similar envelope we shall be happy to acknowledge its receipt. No, on second thoughts, stick to your favourite charity.

Amnesties and Covenants 3

Mark Devenport | 16:34 UK time, Wednesday, 9 January 2008

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Some are interpreting comments from Gordon Brown in the Commons today as a squelch to any talk of an amnesty. I am not so sure. True he said "yes" when starting to answer Nigel Dodds' question calling on him to utterly rule out such a move, but it could have been a "yes" to the earlier comments from the DUP MP paying tribute to the role played by the security forces here. The PM then generalised about the need for reconciliation in what sounded like an attempt not to tie himself down too much on the issue. All a bit ambiguous.

The "government line" appears to have been articulated by the Secretary of State Shaun Woodward a few moments earlier, who dodged the question by quoting Denis Bradley's comments that "nothing is ruled in and nothing is ruled out".

NIQs was fairly predictable with Mr Woodward sticking to his hope that justice can be transferred this year, and Nigel Dodds telling him his efforts were proving counterproductive.

The Labour MP Jim Devine has been making headlines recently by telling the Duke of York that he should pay for bodyguards for his daughters Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, rather than expecting the taxpayer to provide the half a million pounds required to protect them as they "flirt and flaunt their way through the nightclubs of Europe".

Mr Devine kicked NIQs off with a question about the future of security bases here. During the exchanges that followed, the Secretary of State confirmed that discussions are continuing between Downing Street, the MoD, the NIO and the Executive over the future development of bases over and above those previously gifted to the Executive.

Mr Woodward praised the idea that two bases in Omagh could be turned into an educational village providing a home for a number of local schools, but he also said he didn't want to raise false hopes. Essentially, the Executive would like bases such as the ones in Omagh to be handed over free of charge, whilst the MoD wants to charge the market rate. It will probably take a decision from Downing Street to sort this one out.

Amnesties and Covenants 2

Mark Devenport | 12:16 UK time, Tuesday, 8 January 2008

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As the trenchant responses to the ideas floated by sources close to the Eames Bradley group on the past show, you can't expect to talk about an amnesty or to describe the troubles as a "war" without provoking an angry reaction.

The Chief Constable Sir Hugh Orde appeared before a Stormont Committee this morning to discuss the devolution of justice. He didn't comment directly on any amnesty or general pardon, but nor did he rule it out. Sir Hugh insisted it is up to the Eames Bradley group to establish if there can be a consensus on the past. He expressed doubts about whether such a consensus can be achieved.

In a news conference ostensibly about his party's response to the budget and programme for government, the Ulster Unionist leader Sir Reg Empey ruled out either an amnesty or redefining the troubles as a war. He expressed shock that the Eames Bradley group had allowed themselves to become associated with such notions.

It's all a bit of a re-run of the furore which occurred when the government proposed its "On The Runs" legislation. That envisaged a quasi judicial process after which paramilitary fugitives and former security force members who had committed crimes would walk free. With an overall deal on devolution still up in the air, and Sinn Fein coming under withering fire from the SDLP, both republicans and the government had to walk away from the scheme.

Of course talk of an amnesty is emotive. But how much practical difference it would make given the early release of prisoners under the Good Friday Agreement?

If you are an ex-paramilitary wanting to unburden yourself of your secrets who decides to walk into a police station tomorrow what would happen to you?

The cynic might suppose you would be sent away whilst the desk sergeant sorts through more pressing traffic offences. But what ought to happen is that you would be interviewed by detectives, charged, then remanded either in custody or on bail. You would be tried before a court, but then the Good Friday Agreement would kick in and, presuming you were found guilty, you should spend no more than two years in jail.

You would, however, have a criminal record. A controversial report for the Office of the First and Deputy First Ministers suggested employers should only take troubles related convictions into account if they are directly relevant to a job someone is applying for. But that amounts to guidance rather than anything stronger.

So having a criminal record could damage your prospects of employment, as well as getting insurance, taking out a mortgage and getting a visa to go on holiday in places like the USA, Canada, or Australia.

All of which amounts to a disincentive to spill the beans.

In practice even if an amnesty is declared tomorrow there is unlikely to be a long list of repentant paramilitaries queuing up to tell all. But if at some stage the leadership of the IRA and the loyalist organisations decided it was in their interests to support a "truth recovery process", the word could go out to their followers that it is good to talk.

How much credence people will give to what they have to say is, of course, another question.

NIO Christmas Trees

Mark Devenport | 11:08 UK time, Tuesday, 8 January 2008

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Forget wars and amnesties, the burning question so far as the Liberal Democrat MP Malcolm Bruce is concerned is what kind of light bulbs the NIO uses on its Christmas trees, incandescent or LED? Shaun Woodward confirms my suspicion Secretary of State Scrooge that the NIO rummages around in its loft like the rest of us, re-using its old fairy lights. So far as NIO Christmas trees are concerned, Mr Woodward tells Mr Bruce that "for reasons of economy the trees are generally artificial and can be reused over a number of years. In two departmental buildings where real trees are used, the trees are sourced from sustainable tree farms, and are recycled after use."

Sammy and Mr Bean

Mark Devenport | 16:47 UK time, Monday, 7 January 2008

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A statement from Sammy Wilson has just dropped into my e-mail box likening Caitriona Ruane to Mr Bean, because of her alleged dithering over post primary school transfers.

Something made me think that Sammy shouldn't go near Mr Bean analogies. Was it the fact that the former acting Lib Dem leader Vince Cable beat him to it with his portrayal of Gordon Brown turning from Stalin into Mr Bean?

Well maybe. But I think the clincher is the famous sketch in which Mr Bean gets locked out of his hotel room naked.

Amnesties and Covenants

Mark Devenport | 15:47 UK time, Monday, 7 January 2008

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The Consultative Group on the Past, chaired by Robin Eames and Denis Bradley, hold the first of a series of public meetings tonight at the Holiday Inn hotel just opposite the ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ in Belfast. The group is continuing to take soundings from the public until the end of this month, when they expect to have talked to around 90 different organisations. They hope to produce a report on schedule this summer.

What might feature in their report? One idea which it's understood has been floated is some way of making it easier for ex-paramilitaries and others to tell their stories without fear of legal repercussions. However that's styled it sounds like an amnesty of some kind.

Another idea is for people to sign up to a new "covenant" pledging to never again resort to political violence. If such a solemn declaration were to be made, would it provide a convenient moment for the IRA Army Council and other remaining paramilitary structures to disappear?

The group hasn't yet talked directly to the IRA or other paramilitary leaderships, but expect them to press hard for some contact before they produce their report.

Another area being explored is the expansion of the police Historical Enquiries Team, or something like it. Should such a team be an all-Ireland organisation? In the future could a remodelled HET have an input from the Police Ombudsman and even the paramilitary organisations themselves?

The group has been to see the former Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir John Stevens, to learn more details about his inquiries into collusion. There are indications that what they might say on this score could shock people, especially in the unionist community.

The group want the politicians at Stormont to buy in to what they recommend, but there's plenty of potential for disagreement amongst the parties about how all these sensitive issues might be handled.

A sticky end for Shaun Woodward?

Mark Devenport | 12:56 UK time, Monday, 7 January 2008

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Whilst the DUP was busy disagreeing with the Secretary of State over the devolution of justice, the Daily Telegraph was predicting his early demise.

An NIO merger has been predicted before, but I can't see any move of this kind at least ahead of the proposed US Investment Conference in May and the same month's target date for justice devolution.

Back from Hibernation

Mark Devenport | 12:17 UK time, Monday, 7 January 2008

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I'm just back at my desk after the Christmas and New Year break. Like everyone else here, I'm wading through a mountain of e-mails. Many thanks to all of you who left comments over the holiday period, and thanks to Martina Purdy who presented an edition of Inside Politics dealing with the devolution of justice this weekend.

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