>From MCELROY@zodiac.rutgers.edu Sun May 23 13:42:00 1993

           Martin McGuinness on the upcoming elections
                                
Sinn Fein is standing 85 candidates in the local elections across
the Six Counties on 19 May. With 44 sitting councillors, director
of Elections Jim Gibney says the party is "confident that at a
minimum we'll secure those 44 and we'll be going all out to
increase our representation." The following interview originally
appeared in An Phoblacht/Republican News and was re-printed in
The Irish People of May 15, 1993.

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AP/RN: How well do you think Sinn Fein will perform on 19 May?

MM: I am confident that the party will do well. Let me explain
why.

The ten years that Sinn Fein has been involved in local councils
have transformed the way in which northern nationalists look at
council politics. Up to 1970 local councils were the institution
through which the Orange Order and the unionist parties dispensed
their patronage and privilege.

Even after the reform of local government in 1970, unionists
continued their control virtually unchallenged. Nationalist 
councillors, particularly the SDLP, seemed to accept their lot
as second-class councillors.

All of that changed in 1983 when Sinn Fein began to take seats 
on the councils. It was like a breath of fresh air amidst the
stench of corruption and discrimination. Sinn Fein's first
achievement was to expose unionist bigotry. Its second was to
successfully confront that bigotry in the council chambers and
in the courts. Even our political opponents accept that in the
last four years Sinn Fein councillors in Belfast have espoused,
for example, the scandal of junkets involving the squandering
of huge sums of ratepayers' money. Several times they have forced
unionists to reluctantly agree to a fairer distribution of 
resources to local community groups--a fight which still
continues.

Our councillors have led the campaign against privatization and
the resulting job losses and reduced council services to the
public. Finally they have defeated unionist efforts to exclude
nationalists from any say in the everyday running of  
the council.

Belfast is not the only success story for Sinn Fein in local
government. Our team in Derry, in Strabane, and in councils
across the Six Counties have done tremendous work..


AP/RN: This success was achieved against the backdrop of an
escalating loyalist campaign against Sinn Fein. How has it
affected the party?

MM: The fact is we have 85 candidates standing for council seats
in all those areas in which we stood in 1989. Our party
membership, and those candidates, have shown remarkable
resilience and courage,and we are all very proud of them.

Their courage is all the more remarkable when you recall that
since 1989, 13 members of our party have been killed, including
three of our councillors. The most recent to die, Alan Lundy,
was shot dead in an attack on Councillor Alex Maskey's home.
Many more have suffered injury or had their home and family
attacked.

These attacks had the vocal support of unionist councillors.
Many of these attacks relied on intelligence information from
British and RUC sources. The guns and grenades used in these
attacks were part of the shipment supplied to loyalists with
the knowledge and approval of British intelligence. These weapons
have not been used exclusively on republicans, of course. With
those British supplied arsenal, loyalist death squads have killed
90 Catholics in Belfast alone in the last three and a half years.

In addition to the British arming and aiding the Loyalists, the
RUC has sought to ensure that our councillors and their families
are defenseless against loyalist attacks. They have refused to
issue firearm certificates and have delayed DHSS grants for 
securing homes by not confirming that threats had been made to
individuals.

Let us not forget that while all this has been going on the
British have also silenced our elected representatives by way
of the 1988 Broadcasting Ban.

In spite of all of that our councillors have played a
constructive
role in their local communities and in the local councils. They
have refused to be cowed. They have refused to be gagged. We will
continue to pursue the rights of the nationalist community no
matter what obstacles are thrown in our way by the British and
their unionist allies.



AP/RN: What is the particular significance of these elections?

MM: For the first time since partition, and since the unionists 
gerrymandered local government in the Six Counties, there is the
possibility that a large number of councils which are currently
unionist-controlled will pass into nationalist hands. I can 
envisage a situation after these elections in which the west
of the Bann will have gone green on a local government map. It
is also clear that the days of unionist domination on Belfast
City Council are numbered--and well they know it.

The message to nationalist voters in Fermanagh, Magherafelt,
Dungannon, Cookstown, Strabane and Belfast is quite clear. A
strong nationalist vote can put an end to decades of unionist
abuse.

AP/RN: What about nationalist voters in other areas. Why should
they go out and vote 19 May?

MM: Well, of course they should elect as many Sinn Fein
candidates as possible, not only because of our work record
on the councils but also because we lead the way in the
struggle for national self-determination.

Every election since Sinn Fein embarked on its electoral
strategy in October 1982 has been used as a barometer of
the strength of nationalist opinion. This election is no
exception.

John Major, Albert Reynolds, and even the Clinton Administration
have gone on record in the last few months as saying that they
were awaiting the results of the local elections before
deciding on their next move in regard to the Six Counties.

A strong Sinn Fein vote on 19 May will send them a clear
message that nationalist determination is unshakable, that
northern nationalists are not interested in partial solutions
or internal  solutions, that what they want is their right to
set up their own democracy free from British interference.


AP/RN: Do you really believe that a vote for Sinn Fein can
influence British policy on the North?

MM: Definitely. The British are under pressure domestically and
internationally. The financial  cost of their war in Ireland
is taking its toll. Patrick Mayhew's recent comment to a German
magazine that it cost them 3 billion sterling a year "for one
and half million people!" is now grossly underestimated.

Coupled with the financial cost is the damage which the British
inflict on their political credibility with all their failed
attempts at cobbling up some internal arrangement. These costs
will continue to mount as long as Britain pursues this dead-end
strategy.

I believe that there is a growing debate among the British
establishment about the cost of the war in Ireland. Of course
there are those who are advocating more repression. a return 
to supergrasses, more covert operations, even internment. But
there are also those who say armed roadblocks on the streets
of London are bad for business, the financial burden on the
British economy is too high, and the British government's
political strategy in the North is not working.

I am personally convinced that a strong Sinn Fein vote
in this election will strengthen the hand of those
advocating a fundamental shift in British policy and
a real basis for peace. I believe there is a growing mood 
for change both in Britain and in Ireland. That mood for
change has been reflected in the positive response within
the nationalist community which greeted the discussions
between Gerry Adams and John Hume.

While it is too early to predict the outcome of these
discussions, the joint statement by the two leaders of
nationalist opinion in the North was in itself an 
important development.

The republican struggle has been the major catalyst fir
political movement in the last 20 years, not least because
of the strength of the Sinn Fein vote. As I said earlier,
although this is a local government election, its political
impact is potentially much greater. On 19 May we as Sinn Fein
voter can help to realize that potential. We can each
individually contribute to winning this struggle. 



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