Electoral events In May 2013,
Theresa Villiers,
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, announced that the next Assembly election would be postponed to May 2016, and would be held at fixed intervals of five years thereafter. Section 7 of the
Northern Ireland (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2014 specifies that elections will be held on the first Thursday in May on the fifth calendar year following that in which its predecessor was elected, which would be 5 May 2022; however, there are several circumstances in which the Assembly can be dissolved before the date scheduled by virtue of section 31(1) of the
Northern Ireland Act 1998. In June 2016,
the UK voted to leave the
European Union, although Northern Ireland voted to remain.
The process of withdrawal held particular uncertainty for Northern Ireland due to the
potential for customs on the
UK–Ireland border. Meanwhile, an
early election was held to the Northern Ireland Assembly in March 2017. After the election, Sinn Féin stated that it would not return to a power-sharing arrangement with the Democratic Unionist Party without significant changes in the party's approach, including
Arlene Foster not becoming
First Minister until an investigation into the
Renewable Heat Incentive scandal was complete. Over the next few years, the deadline to form an executive was repeatedly extended as negotiations continued with no success. On 18 April 2017,
Theresa May,
Prime Minister of the UK, called for a general election to be
held on 8 June 2017. The
Conservative Party lost its parliamentary majority and sought a
confidence and supply agreement with the DUP in order to remain in government. The DUP and the Conservatives reached an agreement on 26 June. In
2019, the UK experienced significant political turbulence over the question of how to proceed with Brexit. The
European Parliament election in May 2019 saw the
Alliance Party take the third MEP place from the
Ulster Unionist Party (UUP). DUP support for the Conservative government broke down with disagreements over the government's Brexit plans. The Conservative government sought a new election, held in
December 2019, which they won with a large majority. In Northern Ireland, for the first time, traditional
Irish nationalist parties won more seats than traditional
unionist parties. The SDLP and Alliance returned to the House of Commons, while the DUP and Sinn Féin saw vote share declines of more than 5%. A DUP/Sinn Féin
executive was re-established on 10 January 2020 with the
New Decade, New Approach (NDNA) agreement, forestalling an immediate new election. By the end of February 2020, the
COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have spread to Northern Ireland. On 15 January 2022, the UK government was accused of interfering in the election by reintroducing
dual mandates, which had been abolished in 2016. This would enable MPs like Donaldson to have seats in Stormont as well as Westminster, but plans were withdrawn four days later.
Leadership changes On 28 April 2021, Arlene Foster announced that she would be resigning as DUP leader on 28 May and First Minister in June 2021 after more than 20 DUP MLAs and four DUP MPs signed a letter "...voicing
no confidence in her leadership".
Edwin Poots narrowly won the subsequent
May 2021 DUP leadership election, but announced his resignation 21 days later. The runner-up in the election,
Jeffrey Donaldson, stood unopposed in the
June 2021 DUP leadership election and with no other candidates the party chose not to hold a ballot (some parties still do a leadership vote or ballot with one candidate with the other option to re-open nominations). Donaldson was ratified as the party's leader on 30 June 2021. Meanwhile, after Poots elected not to replace Foster as First Minister,
Paul Givan took up the position on 17 June 2021.
Steve Aiken announced his resignation as leader of the UUP on 8 May 2021, with
Doug Beattie taking up the post nine days later after standing unopposed.
Northern Ireland Protocol The
Northern Ireland Protocol is a
protocol to the
Brexit Withdrawal Agreement that governs the unique customs and immigration issues at the border on the island of
Ireland between the
United Kingdom and the
European Union, and on some aspects of trade in goods between Northern Ireland and the
rest of the United Kingdom.
Its terms were negotiated in 2019 and agreed and concluded in December 2020. Due to a thirty-year internecine conflict in Northern Ireland known as
The Troubles, the
UK–Ireland border has had a special status since that conflict was ended by the
Belfast Agreement/Good Friday Agreement of 1998. As part of the
Northern Ireland Peace Process, the border has been largely invisible, without any physical barrier or customs checks on its many crossing points; this arrangement was made possible by both countries' common membership of both the
European Single Market and
EU Customs Union, and of their
Common Travel Area. The DUP threatened to pull out of Stormont's power-sharing government on 9 September 2021, triggering a snap election "within weeks" unless the protocol was scrapped. Donaldson warned: "I say not as a threat but as a matter of political reality that our political institutions will not survive a failure to resolve the problems the Protocol has created." The following week, SDLP leader
Colum Eastwood accused the DUP of having a "petulant strop" and called for a new law to stop an early election. He told peers that the "delicate constitutional balance" in Northern Ireland was "too fragile for people to play games with". On 3 February 2022, Givan resigned as First Minister in protest over the protocol, which automatically resulted in the Deputy First Minister losing her role and the
Northern Ireland Executive collapsing. Conservative MP
Jacob Rees-Mogg said that the UK government would "reform" the protocol if the EU did not, whilst it was also reported that Westminster was planning legislation that would give ministers powers to abolish the protocol altogether. During a rally in
Ballymena on 30 April, TUV leader Jim Allister said that the Executive would not be returning unless the protocol was removed.
Calls for early election Following the collapse of the Assembly, Sinn Féin and the DUP both called for the election to be brought forward, but the UUP, SDLP and Alliance Party opposed the idea. Northern Ireland Secretary
Brandon Lewis ruled out an early election, saying that the priority was to get the Assembly up and running again. Two weeks later, however, Lewis claimed there was "a real risk" that the Executive would not return after the election. == Candidates ==