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Sinn Fein facing potential split

Posted by Jim on October 7, 2017

Sinn Fein could be facing a damaging split over its internal party
management, according to reports. A number of rows and expulsions in
recent months has seen some members already link up in a potential new
national structure.

Meetings of those angry at the party over alleged bullying, control and
marginalisation are believed to be already underway.

Between 30 and 40 people are said to have turned up at one meeting in
Waterford to share grievances. The meeting, organised by Melissa
O’Neill, a councillor who was expelled from Sinn Fein last December,
agreed to form ‘support hubs’ in towns around the country. Meetings have
been planned in Athlone, Tipperary and Limerick.

The prospect of setting up a rival republican party to Sinn Fein was not
ruled out, according to Ms O’Neill. She said dozens of members and
former members attended who felt disrespected or disenfranchised from
the party.

There have long been accusations of a clique in the Sinn Fein leadership
expelling or marginalising individual activists using a tactic known as
“the big shaft”. Management processes have been described as dictatorial
and intimidating, with the goal of isolating and removing any potential
challenge or dissent.

There have been not yet been allegations of a political motivation, but
some have drawn comparisons to the Provisional IRA’s so-called “nutting
squad”, which maintained PIRA discipline during the conflict.

Last month, three Wicklow councillors were expelled from Sinn Fein after
they challenged the party in a dispute over internal leadership roles.
Lisa Marie Sheehy, who was Sinn Fein’s youngest councillor, also
resigned from the party last month, claiming she had been “undermined,
bullied and humiliated”.

Sinn Fein has repeatedly denied that there is a culture of bullying
within the party. But internal disputes which previously took place
behind closed doors have become more public.

Sinn Fein housing spokesperson Eoin O Broin denied there was a culture
of bullying within the party.

He said there were “some people who went into the role of elected
representatives and found it was much more difficult that they
originally thought,” he said.

“We also have really good republicans, really long-standing republicans
who for very long periods of time were the only Shinner in the village.
Now that the party has grown, and there are younger people there, they
are finding it difficult to adjust.”

But one councillor who left the party in County Cork said that the party
had been routinely trying to replace established party figures with more
biddable people. Cork East councillor June Murphy said the “reason they
pick them so young is because they’re perfect for grooming”.

Melissa O’Neill claimed she was aware of hundreds of Sinn Fein people,
young and old, who are not happy with the party structures but were
fearful of speaking out.

“We don’t want anyone to go through what we went through,” she said.
“The sense of the weight of the world off their shoulders, the energy in
the room of a psychological sense of relief, after being gagged for so
long. The people leaving that room were different to the ones that came
in. We all felt it.”

Tara Reynor O’Grady, a human rights campaigner who was expelled from
Sinn Fein in June, said people felt “emancipated” as a result of the
meeting. “There was a sense of encouragement, and a tremendous
conviction that they were justified in their grievance,” she said.

The management and control problems have been picked on by Sinn Fein’s
opponents recently as a reason to rule out the possibility of a
coalition with the party. Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin has
described Sinn Fein as “a cult”, while Fine Gael leader Leo Varadkar
suggested Sinn Fein politicians were only allowed to deliver
pre-prepared texts in parliament.

The party is expected to address the matter at its Ard Fheis [annual
conference] in November.

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