Having had my knuckles rapped for being a bit critical of loyalism and downright rude about Ulster Scots it seemed like a good idea to go away and think about them.

Major revolutionary events have impacts on an international level. The ideas of the French Revolution  enabled the United Irishmen to develop as a revolutionary movement demanding an independent republic with equal rights for the Catholic population.  Much of their leadership and social base was to be found in Belfast, which in the late eighteenth century, was a rising commercial centre and among the prosperous Presbyterian farmers of North Down and South Antrim. This radical vanguard never won a majority of Ulster Protestants due in large part to land struggles with Catholic which ensured permanent conflict.

The defeat of the United Irishmen rebellion effectively ended the Protestant republican tradition in Ireland.  Although some of the Belfast commercial bourgeoisie retained a liberal bent it was Orangeism which dominated among Protestant landlords and tenant farmers. As the city industrialised it became effectively a British industrial city forming one point on a triangle which also included Glasgow and Liverpool. In effect it was cut off from the rural southern economy with which it had very poor connections. Even today getting from Belfast to Galway is more challenging than getting to Paris and this economic separation made middle class liberalism in the north unresponsive or hostile to nationalist movements. As with transport infrastructure that cleavage still exists.

Protestants in the north were diverging politically and economically away from the rest of the island’s, overwhelmingly Catholic population. Northern Catholics were as a matter of policy kept out of the key industrial sectors and much of the rest of the country’s industry had been destroyed by the free trade which was a condition of the Act of Union.

Sectarianism in the north of Ireland is based on history and economics rather than theology and confronting it is one of the most important tasks for socialists in Ireland. It’s one they have not achieved.

There have been episodes of Republican sectarian violence against Protestant. However Republicanism’s roots lie in the emancipatory ideology of the French Revolution and it has never been a prominent feature of its practice. When it happens it is socialists’ responsibility to condemn it.

Loyalism, which we’ll define as that branch of unionism willing to use non-state physical violence, is an explicitly and self-consciously sectarian ideology. Identifying someone as a Catholic makes them eligible for physical attack, murder or having their house burned down. This applies to Protestants who live with or marry Catholics and in recent years has also been applied to immigrants.

The gullible can point to one or two statements by prominent loyalists in which they make weak criticisms of sectarian and racist attacks. Nonetheless the fact is that any campaign against sectarianism in the north of Ireland has to be clearly and unequivocally anti-loyalist. Loyalism is the ideology of sectarianism.

The typical response of socialists in the north or Ireland is to appeal for working class unity against sectarianism. This is a slightly more left wing version of religious leaders asking a community to stand united. It explains nothing and reduces offers no answers. The northern state’s own figures point to long term and continuing disadvantage among Catholics in the labour force.

  • Protestants (76%) continue to have higher economic activity rates compared to Roman Catholics (67%). However, in terms of absolute numbers, the numbers of economically active Roman Catholics has increased by 51,000 between 1992 and 2005 compared to an increase of 7,000 for Protestants.
  • The difference between the two communities’ respective economic activity rates is much more marked between Roman Catholic (58%) and Protestant (71%) females than between Roman Catholic (75%) and Protestant (81%) males.
  • In 2005, Roman Catholics comprised approximately six out of every ten unemployed people in Northern Ireland with 19,000 Roman Catholics unemployed compared to 12,000 Protestants.Overall, a higher proportion of Protestants of working age (74%) than Roman Catholics (62%) were in employment in 2005, a relative picture which has persisted over time.

In a situation with long recognised and entrenched discrimination against a group socialists and trade unions should be calling for preferential recruitment of that group. By not raising the issue as a problem the unions and socialists are complicit in the discrimination. These marginal but real privileges for Protestant workers have led to the identifying with the sectarian state. Winning Protestant workers from supporting imperialism and thinking that the sectarian state is “theirs” is a necessary step in defeating sectarianism. This is not done by appeals to people’s better nature but by arguing a political case against sectarianism. This has happened before. A small number of Protestants were radicalised by the Civil Rights movement; the IRA had members on the Protestant Shankhill road in the 1930s and Communist Party members were driven out of the loyalist dominated shipyards for defending Catholic workers.

The struggle against sectarianism is both one against the northern state and British imperialism. Reformists who offer workers’ unity as an alternative to this struggle are doing nothing to challenge its political or material underpinnings. But that fight against sectarianism is itself inadequate. The Irish working class is not just divided between Catholics and Protestants. It is divided between two barely viable states. Only an anti-partitionist socialist programme offers a real alternative to loyalism, bourgeois nationalism and defeated Republicanism

Oh, and before I forget. Even when the Unionists had complete control of the northern state for fifty years not one person in government thought it was a good idea to erect street signs in Ulster Scots, set up a department to spread it or give grants for it. That is how much of a real cultural phenomenon it was until the British government wanted to give some money to ease the loyalist gangster groups into the political process.

15 responses to “Unionism, loyalism and sectarianism”

  1. 2 quick points. I’m not so sure it isn’t the DUP that isn’t driving and benfiting from the Ulster Scots funding process.

    And republicans don’t carry out sectarian murders. Catholic nationalists on the other hand masquerading under the name republican, certainly do.

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  2. Off topic I know. But I have been informed by a reliable source that the NI screws pipe band will not be invited to Tolpuddle next year. 🙂

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  3. “I have been informed by a reliable source that the NI screws pipe band will not be invited to Tolpuddle next year”

    That is untrue.

    I was at the Exec meeting of Sw TUC this Wednesday, which is the body that organises Tolpuddle.

    We did discuss the arguments that you and others had made about this and there was no support for your position from anyone there.

    Where you may be confused is that the NI band are unavailable to come next year. But they have not been uninvited.

    hopefully they may be available in future years again

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  4. Incidently, the people representing Troops Out movement at tolpuddle have specifically disctanced themselves from those who have complained about the NI prison servic eband being there, and also amde it clear they were not the ones complaining about allegged “sectarian singing”

    I should also point out that despite Liam choosing to repeat the lies that the POA members had been singing sectarisn songs late into saturday night, they were not even on the campsite at the time.

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  5. Red Snapper

    Why do you continue to promote unreliable information?

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  6. Hello Andy. Checked it out and the reason was the cost involved in bringing them all the way with their instruments, uniforms and bling wasn’t it? Guess they were a bit high maintenance and the POA need every penny to defend their members accused of the usual racism and brutality that some of them continually excel at. I stand corrected, sorry about that. 😦
    As far as the singing and chanting it did happen around where the flag was flying, this is beyond dispute. Whether the culprits were POA members from the 6 counties or elsewhere hasn’t been proved either way and whatever TOM say and do is about this a matter for them.
    Anyway thanks to you and others for raising this issue. As they won’t be around next year, am not going to comment or take this any further. 🙂
    Why nit ask these guys over in future? Am sure they will go down a treat!

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/8552705.stm

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  7. With 24 per cent of protestants economically inactive by your own stats do you really think protestant workers and the unions that represent them are going to be won around to preferential recruitment for people other than themselves

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  8. Let’s take an analogy Reuben. Should it be controversial for unions to insist that active steps are taken against discrimination against women in the workforce? That’s a political argument that has to be won and one which unions in the north have never contemplated opening when it comes to religious discrimination.

    Andy’s enthusiasm for the POA NI continues to bewilder but we’ve all got our quirks.

    Garibaldy raises an interesting point. Sometimes, especially in times of retreat, the differences between ideology and sectarian identity become blurred. The fact remains that no Provie of any standing has ever tried to make a public case for killing random Protestants. By contrast the likes of Hutchinson and Ervine made a living out of post hoc justification of stiffing Taigs.

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  9. There is nothing quirky about Andys politics- hes an unabashed, umnashamed social imperialist and bourgeois socialist.

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  10. He probably thinks Hyndman was the dogs bollocks.

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  11. Liam is certainly correct to say that the loyalists have been very open in explaining the thinking behind their sectarian killings. Where I would diverge from him is in ascribing significance to the fact that the Provisionals have been less inclined to do so. One thing that cannot be forgotten in a discussion like this is that the current leadership of the provisionals is drawn from the generation that went, in Belfast parlance, buck mad killing protestants during their ceasefire with the British in 1974-5 – that’s on top of the other ones carried out before and after. Tragi-comically, Brendan Hughes in Voices from the Grace blamed the British for “allowing” the 74-5 murders to happen, however he worked that one out. This leaves me with an enormous amount of scepticism regardling talk about anti-sectarianism.

    More important for the current era of powersharing is the fact that all the nationalist and unionist parties deliberately seek to portray themselves as the representatives of one section of the Irish people. That is why although there can be progressive elements within nationalism and unionism, those elements will always be subservient to the communalist nature of them both.

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  12. He probably thinks Hyndman was the dogs bollocks.
    Well he does call him a Marxist here.

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  13. mark anthony france Avatar
    mark anthony france

    It was a very dirty war and hats off to the Morrison, Austin, Hartley, Adams, De Brun, Leadership of Sinn Fein for developing a strategy [equally messy] to bring about an end to the war.
    In the mid 1970’s the strenght of the English ‘Revolutionary Left’ was at its height…. 3,000 plus SWP/ 3,000 plus WRP/ 3,000 Plus RSL[militant] over 500 IMG and a CPGB with supposedly 10,000 plus members and a growing ‘Bennite’ Layer in the LP numbering 10,000 and a substaincial ‘shop stewards’ movement involving another 30,000 rank and file Trade Unionist.
    Out of these 50,000 English Socialists the numbers who came to the aid of the beleaguered Nationalist Community in the North of Ireland numbered only a few hundred…. The Republican Movement had to deal with the wrath of Loyalist Death Squads by any means necessary…. The English Left did very little to clarify the issues at stake and offered very little practical solidarity when it was needed most.

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  14. If only Ireland had been a few thousand miles away and called something like Chile.

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