Interview with DAVID TRIMBLE Leader of the Ulster Unionist Party.




 
 
 
 
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                                 ON THE RECORD 
                             DAVID TRIMBLE INTERVIEW      

RECORDED FROM TRANSMISSION BBC-1                                 DATE:   5.4.98 
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JOHN HUMPHRYS:                         And let's now go North to Belfast, where 
the leader of the Ulster Unionists, David Trimble is.  
 
                                       Good afternoon to you Mr Trimble. 
 
DAVID TRIMBLE MP:                      Good day.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              You have made it quite clear that you 
are not gonna walk out of these talks, notwithstanding some reports this 
morning that you are in there until the bitter end.  So, are there still areas 
where you are prepared to make compromises to reach an agreement? 
 
TRIMBLE:                               There are areas where we are prepared to 
continue discussing, negotiating and seeing if it is possible to evolve an 
agreement. And of course if an agreement is going to be arrived at, it's only 
going to be worthwhile if the Parties to it are happy with it and that each 
feel that it meets their needs and it will be one that their own supporters can 
endorse.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              One of those areas, presumably, is the 
status, the way in which the Northern Ireland, the elected Northern Ireland 
Assembly works. You have been opposed to having a powerful sort of Cabinet, 
executive type set-up running things.  You are prepared to be a bit flexible on 
that, are you? 
 
TRIMBLE:                               Well, our model for a Northern Ireland 
Assembly is one that departs radically from the Westminister practice and 
taking ideas from the European Parliament, seeks to achieve inclusion through 
proportion-proportionality. Distributing the posts in proportion, using what 
may be not familiar to most people in the British system, of what's called the 
d'Hondt formula. So that Parties that have any significant degree of electoral 
support will find themselves all sharing in the administration. Now that is a 
radically different approach. It is quite different to the Westminister model. 
I'm somewhat amused actually to see that those who are demanding or clinging on 
to the Westminster model, include Irish Nationalists who complained when 
Stormont ran on the same-on that basis. But, however, that's one of the ironies 
of history I suppose.  We do want to see a system which includes people and 
gives everybody, as many people as possible, if not everybody, the opportunity 
to participate and feel that they're making some contribution to the process. 
It's a rather unusual way of doing things but in the particular circumstances 
we have in Northern Ireland, I think this is the best way to proceed.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But it has been reported that 
you're-you're - I used the word 'flexible ' earlier - that is one of the things 
that you are talking about and you're not irrevocably locked into your own- 
 
TRIMBLE:                                Yes, but there isn't as much of a 
problem on this issue as some of the media would give you to think because the 
principle of proportionality is, I think, widely accepted in the process.  And 
what we need to do is to tease out our understanding of it and to see how it's 
going to operate in practice. It does create a number of practical problems, 
there's no doubt about that.  If you want efficiency in decision-taking then by 
all means go to the Westminster current system, underpinned by collective 
responsibility. So if you want inclusion you have to go a different route.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                               But you are prepared to counter, then, 
some kind of Cabinet Executive system, given that it meets other requirements 
for proportionality? 
 
TRIMBLE:                               I can see a need to co-ordinate and to 
liaise.  But look, it is important actually, for people to understand.  If you 
have proportionality with a mechanism such as d'Hondt, you cannot have 
collective responsibility. And that is, actually.  That's just a consequence of 
the system. Collective responsibility exists because Ministers are chosen by 
the Prime Minister, who dismisses them if they don't all pull together. Now, 
with proportionality, you don't have hire and fire powers vested in the 
individual. So you won't have a Cabinet.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Let's look at another area where you 
have real problems and that is the North-South Ministerial Council. You've 
said, you've been quite clear about this, that it should not be a separate 
legal entity with any kind of executive powers. Now this is fundamental stuff. 
Can that be resolved? 
 
TRIMBLE:                                Absolutely. The points that I've made 
are fundamental.  We're prepared to-and it's a huge step for Unionism, a huge 
step for Unionism, to enter into a structured relationship with an Irish 
Government and that is something that, as you say, has been bitterly opposed in 
the past. But if we do, within that relationship, we'd be bringing together 
people who, in their own right, exercise executive power. But the form in which 
they meet will not have any power vested in it.  It's not going to be an 
independent Government.  Again, I'm amazed at some of the things that people 
put around at the moment, imagining that you can create a third centre of 
Government that somehow is going to be independent from the democratic bodies 
in the Irish Republic and in Northern Ireland.  It just simply isn't practical, 
quite apart from being completely unacceptable to us.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Right.  Well, you used the word 
completely unacceptable there, which implies there's no give.  There are other 
areas of enormous difficulty, as well, that we haven't discussed this morning- 
 
TRIMBLE:                               But-but-but- 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              -decommissioning, well, I'm thinking of 
things like- 
 
TRIMBLE:                               If I can come back just to the last one- 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Yeah go on.  
 
TRIMBLE:                               While I've stated that the nature of the 
body is, as I've said, essentially consultative, although it brings together 
people with executive powers. I don't think the difficulties here-I think to 
put it around another way, I think the difficulties here can be overcome if 
people are sensible in their approach to them.  Unfortunately, we've had quite 
a bit of what I would regard as "posturing" this week and people setting out an 
impossible position, but again if we come and we work through the 
practicalities of it, I think it will not be that difficult. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Well, let's look at some of the other 
areas then that on the face of it, again, look immensely difficult: 
decommissioning of terrorist weapons, equality between Catholics and 
Protestants, policing, what's going to happen to so-called political prisoners 
- enormously difficult areas.  Now what is being said is that they perhaps can 
be left, you can do the deal, you can sign the agreement on Thursday - if 
that's when it happens - and then you can put those aside to be dealt with by 
either international or independent commissions of some sort.  Does that make 
sense to you? 
 
TRIMBLE:                               Well I think we need to look at the 
situations, we need to look at the detail of them.  Some of the areas you 
mention are difficult, some are not.  I mean, we've no problem with equality.  
We're all for it.  We'd like to have some.  Unionists have been unequal in 
Northern Ireland for the last twenty years and equality would be very welcome 
so we've not a problem with that. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Terrorist weapons? 
 
TRIMBLE:                               Well, I agree with the Secretary of 
State, Mo Mowlam, when she said to the talks on Monday that if decommissioning 
doesn't occur before the agreement then the agreement will have to contain 
effective provisions related to it. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              So that has to be sorted before 
Thursday.  That cannot be put to one side and dealt with by some sort of 
independent commission. 
 
TRIMBLE:                               I said that the agreement will have to 
contain effective provisions with regard to it, I have a fairly clear idea 
myself of what those should be and I don't see them as a problem, I must say.  
The thing that would bother me in the list that you went through, is the 
question of the police.  Now, here we are concerned at the suggestion of some 
people that the Royal Ulster Constabulary should be completely restructured, 
broken up into separate forces, two-tier policing.  We see that as quite a 
horrifying prospect because what it really means is giving an official status 
to the paramilitaries who are going around beating up people on housing estates 
these days.  I think that is an appalling prospect and I don't think that any 
responsible person should endorse it.  Unfortunately, some people in 
responsible positions have - and I think this is quite, quite, a very 
considerable move to it.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But again, is that something that could 
be dealt with after an agreement, so long as there is a reference to it in the 
agreement, could it be dealt with by some other- 
 
TRIMBLE:                               No, we are very concerned about this 
issue.  We want to look at it very carefully and I think-we want to see it 
properly dealt with in the agreement. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              A lot to be done by Thursday.  Can it be 
done? 
 
TRIMBLE:                               Well, it doesn't really matter in a 
sense. In fact, as Reg Impey regularly says, and quite rightly too, it doesn't 
matter when the deadline is it's only going to be in the last matter of hours 
when people actually face up to the issues and move off the rather impossible 
positions that they've been on - or some of them have been on.  We have a very 
clear view of the practicalities.  We hope that other people will work their 
way through from the postures they've adopted to look at the practicalities.  
It is possible that it could be done.  I must say all through this we've 
thought it's odds against but the one thing I am sure of is that there will be 
no lack of effort from the Ulster Unionists. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              David Trimble, thank you very much 
indeed. 
 
TRIMBLE:                               Thank you. 
 
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