Stormont Reform: Sinn Féin Proposes End to Executive Vetoes as Alliance Warns of Exit
Sinn Féin has proposed abolishing the petition of concern mechanism at Stormont — the veto tool that allows a bloc of 30 MLAs to block legislation — as part of a wider package of institutional reforms, but the Alliance Party has warned it will withdraw from the Executive if changes to the power-sharing arrangements are made without genuine cross-community consensus, setting up a significant political confrontation at Stormont.
Background
The petition of concern was introduced under the Good Friday Agreement as a safeguard for minority communities, allowing a bloc of 30 MLAs to trigger a cross-community vote on any piece of legislation. In practice, it has been used primarily by the DUP to block legislation on issues such as same-sex marriage, abortion, and Irish language rights. The mechanism was reformed in 2022 under the New Decade, New Approach agreement, which required petitions to be signed by members of at least two parties, but critics argue the reform did not go far enough.
Sinn Féin's proposal, published in a discussion document on Thursday, goes significantly further. It proposes abolishing the petition of concern entirely and replacing it with a weighted majority voting system, under which legislation would require the support of 60 per cent of MLAs to pass, regardless of community designation. The party argues that this would prevent any single bloc from exercising a veto while still requiring broad consensus for major decisions.
Key Developments
The Sinn Féin document, launched by Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill at Stormont, also proposes changes to the d'Hondt mechanism used to allocate ministerial positions, arguing that the current system gives disproportionate power to the two largest parties and marginalises smaller parties. The party proposes a modified system that would give parties with more than 10 per cent of Assembly seats a guaranteed ministerial position.
The Alliance Party's response was swift and unequivocal. Party leader Naomi Long said that while Alliance supported reform of the petition of concern, the Sinn Féin proposals had been developed "unilaterally and without consultation" and represented "an attempt to rewrite the constitutional architecture of Northern Ireland to suit one party's interests." She warned that if the proposals were advanced without the agreement of all Executive parties, Alliance would "have to consider its position" in the Executive.
The DUP, which has most to lose from the abolition of the petition of concern, described the proposals as "an attack on the fundamental protections that make power-sharing viable for unionists." First Minister Gavin Robinson said the petition of concern was "not a veto but a safeguard" and that its abolition would make it impossible for unionism to participate in a power-sharing Executive with confidence.
The Ulster Unionist Party took a more nuanced position, saying it was open to discussing reform of the petition of concern but that any changes would need to be agreed through the formal review mechanisms established under the Good Friday Agreement, rather than through unilateral proposals by one party.
Why It Matters
The Stormont reform debate matters because it goes to the heart of how power-sharing works in Northern Ireland. The petition of concern was designed to prevent a simple majority from overriding the interests of a minority community, but it has increasingly been used as a political tool rather than a genuine safeguard. The question of how to reform it without undermining the confidence of unionist parties in the institutions is one of the most difficult challenges in Northern Ireland politics.
Alliance's warning about leaving the Executive is significant because the party's participation has been crucial to the stability of the current power-sharing arrangement. Alliance holds the Justice Ministry and has been a moderating influence in the Executive. Its withdrawal would not only destabilise the current administration but would also send a damaging signal about the viability of cross-community politics in Northern Ireland.
The timing of Sinn Féin's proposals — coming just weeks before the Twelfth of July marching season — has been criticised by some commentators as politically provocative. Others argue that the party is simply responding to pressure from its own membership to use its position as the largest party in the Assembly to advance institutional reforms.
Local Impact
The reform debate has particular resonance in constituencies where the petition of concern has been used to block legislation that had majority support. In Belfast, the mechanism was used to block same-sex marriage legislation in 2015, a decision that was ultimately overridden by Westminster legislation in 2019. In Derry, where Sinn Féin is the dominant party, the proposals have been welcomed by community groups who argue that the current veto system has prevented progress on Irish language legislation. In unionist-majority areas such as East Antrim and North Down, the proposals have been met with alarm, with local DUP representatives warning that they represent an attempt to "green" the institutions.
What's Next
The British and Irish governments have said they will study the Sinn Féin proposals carefully but have emphasised that any changes to the Good Friday Agreement institutions would require the agreement of all parties. The next meeting of the British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference, scheduled for September, is expected to include a discussion of institutional reform. In the meantime, the Executive's Programme for Government negotiations, which are due to resume after the summer recess, will take place against the backdrop of this unresolved constitutional dispute.


