The headline in that article is misleading, as popularity of Sinn Fein hasn’t “soared”. They’ve just remained more or less steady, while there is a scramble for the minor places:
The DUP supporte Brexit in theory but rejects any feasible implementation of it: that in fairness is not really their fault as as far as NI is concerned there isn’t one.
It will probably mean a new first minister tho come the next election.
It was probably a mistake trying to do NI politics on here :-)
What has really affected it is the perception that they haven’t been hard enough on the government over Brexit: slightly unfair probably as the days when the Tories needed them are long gone.
And they’ve never recovered from the fiasco of Arlene Foster’s defenestration, which turned off many more liberal supporters
When the next election comes around the DUP will say that a vote for any other unionist party risks giving seats to republicans.
That's worked for them in the past. Could it again?
“When the next election comes around the DUP will say that a vote for any other unionist party risks giving seats to republicans.
That's worked for them in the past. Could it again?”
I can’t Sandy get my head around how that would work in the STV voting system.