According to the full tally released on Sunday, Sinn Fein won the most seats in Northern Ireland’s local council elections, in which over 1.38 million people registered to vote began casting their ballots on Thursday.
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In all, candidates competed for 462 seats in 11 local councils. With all seats counted, Sinn Fein secured 144 seats, the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) took 122 seats, with the Alliance Party in third place.
Northern Ireland’s councils are responsible for setting rates, planning and waste collection, as well as leisure services and parks.
Sinn Fein is now the largest party at the Northern Ireland council level and in Stormont, or the Northern Ireland Assembly, for the first time. Sinn Fein captured the largest number of seats in Stormont in May 2022, beating the DUP, which had long dominated the legislature.
This is an historic election result, with Sinn Féin councillors elected in many areas for the first time.
People have voted for positive leadership, and for a new Assembly that works for all.
The Sinn Féin mandate is stronger than ever, and I give you all my commitment that I… pic.twitter.com/LzyCNdh2zk
— Michelle O’Neill (@moneillsf)
May 20, 2023
Sinn Fein’s Vice President Michelle O’Neill described the local elections result as “historic” and called on the DUP to end its boycott of power-sharing at Stormont.
In opposition to post-Brexit trade rules in the region, the DUP has boycotted Northern Ireland’s devolved government for over a year, paralyzing its power-sharing institutions at Stormont and raising concerns over political stability.
Signed in 1998 following three decades of conflict, the landmark Belfast Agreement established a power-sharing system of government, including an Executive and Assembly. It underpins Northern Ireland’s peace, constitutional settlement and institutions.