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Ministers agree draft programme for government

Ministers agree draft programme for government Ministers agree draft programme for government

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PA Deputy First Minister Emma Little Pengelly and First Minister Michelle O'Neill smiling for cameras. This is an archive photoPA

Michelle O’Neill (right) and Emma Little-Pengelly (left) head up NI’s devolved government

The Northern Ireland Executive has signed off on a draft programme for government, more than seven months after the return of Stormont.

Its failure to agree one up until now had been the subject of criticism.

Speaking at a press conference following a meeting of the executive, First Minister Michelle O’Neill said agreeing the draft programme “marks a really important step in our journey as a four-party executive”.

Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly said “despite the difficult budget we can still improve lives in a meaningful way by focusing on a small number of prioritised action that will make a difference”.

The full contents of the programme will not be known until Monday because convention dictates it is shown to assembly members first before the public gets to see it.

The executive also agreed a strategy to try to end violence against woman and girls and a domestic and sexual violence strategy during its meeting on Thursday.

Programmes for government are published by the devolved governments as a way to set and measure long-term goals.

The Scottish government published its own programme for government on Tuesday but agreeing one among a four-party mandatory coalition, with sometimes competing agendas, is more difficult.

PA Stormont archive photo showing the building above a flowerbed in the foregroundPA

A think tank recently described the lack of a programme for government as a big shortcoming

The last time a Stormont executive managed to agree a programme for government was for the period 2011-2015.

They also agreed one in 2016 which went out to public consultation. But before it could be passed the then Sinn Féin deputy first minister Martin McGuinness resigned in January 2017 and the executive fell.

When the executive returned in January 2020, Covid quickly dominated business and scuppered any chance of a programme for government being agreed.

Earlier, SDLP assembly member Matthew O’Toole, Stormont’s leader of the opposition, said the executive has “never given a clear sense of what its priorities are”.

Speaking on the BBC’s Good Morning Ulster programme, he called on the executive to tackle issues including the health service which he said was “broken”, a “house building crisis” and an “ecological crisis” at Lough Neagh.

Mr O’Toole said that in order to address these issues the programme for government would need to set “clear targets” that had a timeline and “specific actions” towards achieving them.

Ann Watt, director of the think tank, Pivotal, issued a report this week which, while recognising some progress had been made, said the failure to agree a programme for government was “a big shortcoming”.

Gerry Carroll standing on street with traffic in the background. He is wearing a dark green shirt over a purple t-shirt. He has short dark and greying hair with a beard.

West Belfast assembly member Gerry Carroll was critical of the executive

People Before Profit assembly member Gerry Carroll criticised the executive for the slow progress on reaching a programme for government.

He told BBC News NI there had been “multiple crises”, adding “they don’t seem to have any plan to deal with these”.

“They need to come clean with a plan of action to deal with some of the crises that people are facing because the credibility of the executive is wearing thin and people are seeing them as not doing much at a time of hardship,” he continued.

What is a programme for government?

Devolved governments publish programmes for government as a way to set and measure long-term goals.

A programme for government is outcomes based.

These outcomes can be things with which people can identify, such as living longer and healthier lives or attracting better jobs – and are designed to stay in place for a generation rather than a single Assembly term.

“This article was originally published in The www.bbc.com“

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