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23rd Mar 2021

Irish Taoiseach had ‘Brits out’ view of Troubles before Belfast trip changed his perspective

Stephen Porzio

“It was ‘Brits out’, everything would be solved”.

Ireland’s Taoiseach Micheál Martin has revealed that as a child he had a “Brits out” view of The Troubles, before a trip to Belfast changed his perspective.

Speaking on RTE show Claire Byrne Live on Monday night, the Taoiseach said: “I grew up as a child listening daily to bombs and bullets and watching it on television. I never thought the violence would end.

“I joined politics because of Northern Ireland, even though I lived in Cork. I was that passionate about it.

“I had early simplistic views about the North when I grew up. It was ‘Brits out’, everything would be solved”.

However, the Taoiseach said a Belfast trip he made when he was 21 and a member of Ógra Fianna Fáil (Fianna Fáil Youth) during the 1981 hunger strike led him to have his mindset changed.

He told the show: “I learned, I went up as a young student to meet every single party. I met loyalists, I met the UDA, I met Sinn Fein, I met SDLP.

“I went into Unionists’ homes and it was when they said to me: ‘Our uncle is murdered because he wears a uniform – doesn’t change the fact that he’s my uncle.’

“I went down to Cork after being in Belfast with all those meetings, with a changed perspective.”

The Taoiseach was speaking as part of a segment which asked: Is it time for a United Ireland?

On this question, Martin said that while he would love to see the unity of the Irish people, he was against having an immediate border poll.

Instead, he called for a similar approach to how the Good Friday Agreement came into fruition.

He said: “Good Friday didn’t happen in the twinkle of an eye with one referendum.

“Years of work went into it to get people to move position on so many different issues.

“We’ve got to evolve this. We’ve got to really build relationships with people to make the future happen”.

Tánaiste Leo Varadkar echoed these statements, stating that before setting a date for a border poll that “we have to make the Good Friday Agreement work”.

He also stressed the importance of reaching out to Unionists on the topic of reunification and starting conversations in the Republic about what would need to change to accommodate one million people on the island who identify as British.

On this, he added: “Say for example, the title ‘Tánaiste’ or the title ‘Taoiseach’, these are titles of Gaelic chieftains.

“Is that really appropriate in a reunified island where a million people are British?”