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		Northern Ireland poised for watershed election result as counting begins
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		 [May 06, 2022] By 
		Amanda Ferguson 
 BELFAST (Reuters) - Sinn Fein sought to 
		become the first Irish nationalist party to win the most seats in 
		British-ruled Northern Ireland on Friday as counting began in an 
		election that could mark an historic political shift.
 
 A Sinn Fein triumph would be a victory for a party wanting Northern 
		Ireland to leave the United Kingdom 24 years after the Good Friday peace 
		accord that ended three decades of sectarian bloodshed between those 
		seeking unity with Ireland and those wanting to remain part of the UK.
 
 Though a poll that could lead to unity with the neighbouring Republic of 
		Ireland is likely to be years away, Sinn Fein wants planning to begin 
		north and south of the border, where it is by far the most popular party 
		three years out from a general election.
 
 Support for Sinn Fein stood at an average of 25% across the final 
		campaign polls, giving the former political wing of the Irish Republican 
		Army a six-point lead over its nearest rival, the pro-British Democratic 
		Unionist Party (DUP), whose popularity has shrivelled over the past 18 
		months.
 
 Sinn Fein benefited from a jump in turnout to 65% five years ago when it 
		closed the gap with the DUP to just one seat. Analysts said incomplete 
		turnout data suggested fewer people turned out this time, with the first 
		results due at around 1300 GMT.
 
 
		
		 
		"Sinn Fein need to have the type of first preference percentage 
		advantage that some of the polls were indicating if they are to end up 
		as the largest party in terms of seats won," said Chris Donnelly, a 
		political commentator and former Sinn Fein candidate.
 
 "They have the harder job on paper holding the seats they gained in 
		2017. It could be extremely close."
 
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			Electoral officers empty a ballot box to count ballots during the 
			Northern Ireland Assembly Elections at the Meadowbank Sports Arena, 
			in Magherafelt, Northern Ireland, May 6, 2022. REUTERS/Clodagh 
			Kilcoyne 
            
			
			
			 
            Under Northern Ireland's proportional representation 
			voting system, candidates can pick up surplus votes from those 
			elected or eliminated, giving a bigger party like the DUP a better 
			shot at winning the final seats in the multi-seat constituencies.
			
 In 1998, the Irish nationalist SDLP party had the highest first 
			preference vote by a narrow margin but still finished four seats 
			behind its main unionist rival.
 
 BREXIT NEGOTIATIONS
 
 The main nationalist and unionist rivals are obliged to share power 
			under the terms of the 1998 peace deal. But the DUP has said it will 
			no longer do so unless the protocol governing Northern Ireland's 
			trade with the rest of the UK following its exit from the European 
			Union is totally overhauled.
 
 Britain and the EU are at an impasse in talks on how to remove many 
			of the checks on goods entering Northern Ireland from the rest of 
			the UK, imposed under the protocol to avoid fraying the EU single 
			market via the open border with Ireland.
 
 "The assembly cannot function if the poison of the protocol is still 
			there," Sammy Wilson, a DUP member of the British parliament, told 
			BBC Radio Ulster.
 
 The outcome is also likely to reaffirm that a majority of lawmakers 
			- including Sinn Fein - in the regional assembly favour retaining 
			the protocol. A majority in Northern Ireland voted to remain in the 
			EU in Britain's 2016 Brexit referendum that yielded a narrow UK-wide 
			majority to leave.
 
 (Writing by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Nick Macfie)
 
            
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