DUP leader Gavin Robinson accused Sinn Fein of being contradictory
Sinn Fein has been accused of “spoofing” over the delivery of the new A5 road. The scheme to turn the road which links Londonderry with Aughnacloy in Co Tyrone has been held up by legal challenges and uncertainty over funding. There has been a strong campaign for the new road, with the current road having seen more than 50 deaths since 2006. Sinn Fein president Mary-Lou McDonald referenced the A5 road in her speech to the party’s annual Ard Fheis last week, saying it will save lives, and that stopping this road is not acceptable. DUP leader Gavin Robinson accused Sinn Fein, which holds the Stormont Infrastructure portfolio that has responsibility for roads, of being contradictory. In his weekly letter to DUP party members, Mr Robinson claimed Sinn Fein is holding the road back.
“Sinn Fein championed that road for years. It was their flagship. Now, bound to their own net zero targets so rigid they cannot flex even where lives are at stake, they are the ones holding it back,” he said.
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Referencing a quote by Sinn Fein vice president Michelle O’Neill accusing the DUP of “spoofing” over claims Sinn Fein was not supporting the PSNI as fully as it should last week, Mr Robinson said her party is “spoofing” over the A5. “Those who have campaigned for that road – some for decades – do not need anyone to explain the irony of Michelle O’Neill accusing others of spoofing,” he said.
“They see Sinn Fein spoofing every single time they say they want this road delivered.” Mr Robinson also accused Sinn Fein of “renewing noise” around a border poll in a “familiar and tired pattern”. He said powersharing “remains the only show in town”. “Powersharing was never meant to be easy. It asks people with fundamentally different visions for this place to sit across from one another, to negotiate, to compromise, and to govern – day after day, even when trust is thin and patience thinner,” he said. “That is the design. For all its frustrations, it remains the only show in town. “But it only works if the relationships within it are taken seriously. Delivering the A5. Cutting waiting lists. Fixing roads. None of that happens without honesty, maturity, and a willingness to prioritise the people being governed over the politics or populist crusade of the moment.
“The budgets are tight. Waiting lists are long. Families are stretched. A border poll would not change any of that. It would not fix a pothole or call a patient off a waiting list. It is not an answer. It is a distraction. “Powersharing is not perfect. But it is where decisions are made, where progress happens, and where people’s lives are improved. Not in threats. Not in divisive border polls. In the hard work of governing.”
Sinn Fein has been approached for a response.
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