Interview with NORTHERN IRELAND MPS, JOHN TAYLOR Ulster Unionist, JEFFREY DONALDSON Ulster Unionist and PETER ROBINSON Democratic Unionist.




 
 
 
 
................................................................................
 
                                 ON THE RECORD 
                          NORTHERN IRELAND INTERVIEW  
 
RECORDED FROM TRANSMISSION BBC-1                                 DATE:  17.5.98 
................................................................................
 
JOHN HUMPHRYS:                         Good afternoon. On Friday the people of 
Ireland vote on the peace agreement. It's expected they will give their 
approval, but will most UNIONISTS vote "yes" and if they don't what then? I'll 
be talking to three leading unionists with three different views after the News 
read by CHRIS LOWE.   
                                                                                
NEWS 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              There seems little doubt that when the 
people of Ireland, North and South, vote in their referendums on Friday they 
will say yes. But it's the size of the majority that matters and, in 
particular, whether both Nationalists and Unionists give it their approval. The 
Unionists are deeply split. The DUP, Ian Paisley's party, is totally opposed. 
The leader of the Ulster Unionists, the biggest party, signed the agreement but 
there are many in his party - including some very senior figures - who say he 
should not have. Some of them see it as a capitulation to the IRA. Others say 
it will lead to a united Ireland.   
 
                                       So let's discuss that with three leading 
Unionists who represent three different views: Peter Robinson of the DUP; he 
will vote No. John Taylor of the Ulster Unionists; he will vote Yes.  And 
Jeffrey Donaldson another Ulster Unionist MP who's always said he doesn't like 
the agreement but could, in theory, be persuaded. 
 
                                       Let me begin, if I may, with you Mr 
Robinson. Why will you be voting No?   
 
PETER ROBINSON:                        Well there's a number of reasons, chief 
among them is the fact that it puts terrorists into the government of Northern 
Ireland, it ensures that we have an assembly which is rigged and undemocratic. 
But perhaps the key reason is that it sets up an All-Ireland body with 
executive powers, the capacity to develop and expand.  And on the side of all 
of that, you have the fact that terrorist prisoners are to be released, all of 
them within two years. The facility is put there to destroy the RUC and on the 
back of that there is no requirement at all for decommissioning of illegal 
weapons to take place.  Now any one of those reasons would have been sufficient 
for me to say No to this agreement. Put them all together and it has to be a 
resounding No from anybody in the Unionist Community who really loves their 
country.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              On the other side of all of that is 
that you do have an agreement and if it works, you will have peace. If you 
don't have this agreement, if it doesn't work out, you are condemning 
yourselves, your country, to another twenty/twenty-five years, who knows, of 
what you've had for the last twenty-five years and that must be unacceptable, 
surely.  
 
ROBINSON:                              Well you say we have an agreement but 
what is called an agreement seems to mean different things to all of those who 
signed it.  You say we are going to have peace. I have in front of me the 
present issue of An Phoblacht, which is the IRA's newspaper, and in it under 
the heading of 'Prepare For The Next Phase Of The Struggle', they make it 
abundantly clear that there is difficulties, both physical and political on the 
road ahead. So there is a physical struggle as far as they are concerned, as 
well as a political struggle.  So we are not going to get peace by saying Yes 
to this agreement.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But if there is a majority on Friday, 
you as a Democrat will have to accept that, will you not? 
 
ROBINSON:                              If there is a majority saying Yes on 
Friday then I have to work the terms of the agreement to the extent that it 
sets up a rigged assembly. An assembly which allows a majority of Unionists to 
stop any progress down the road towards a united Ireland.  And I will do 
everything that is in my power to frustrate the process towards a united 
Ireland.   
 
HUMPHRYS:                              You will try to frustrate it but you 
will work within it, is that what you are saying? 
 
ROBINSON:                              Well what happens after Friday is that 
there will be an election to a shadow assembly. The shadow assembly doesn't get 
any powers unless those who are present in the assembly agree the way that they 
are going to exercise those powers, both within Northern Ireland and on an 
all-Ireland basis.  
 
                                       What I am saying, we will be getting 
elected to that assembly on the mandate that we would not allow the process to 
go on towards a united Ireland.   
 
HUMPHRYS:                              If you failed in that and the next step 
goes ahead, notwithstanding your efforts?  
 
ROBINSON:                              Well, you have got me two steps further 
on than I am prepared to go already. I am going out to get a massive No vote on 
Friday the 22nd.  I've been up and down this country and I have no doubt that 
the overwhelming majority of the Unionist Community are saying No to this 
agreement for precisely the reasons that I have outlined. They don't want to 
reward terrorists by putting them into government and releasing them from the 
jails.  They don't want an all-Ireland body that's going to expand and develop 
towards a united Ireland, and they are going to say No.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Alright. Come back to you and some of 
those points in a minute.  But let me go to John Taylor.   
 
                                       Powerful arguments there against. Why 
are you saying vote Yes? 
 
JOHN TAYLOR:                           Scary agruments if they were accurate. 
But the trouble is with the DUP Paisley campaign which Peter Robinson 
represents, it is a campaign of half-truths and scaremongering. For example, 
yesterday in the Belfast Newsletter, we had an advertisement with a photograph 
of an IRA man wearing a Balaclava, saying is this the kind of person you want 
in the RUC.  Now this is totally dishonest politics. The Prime Minister had 
made it absolutely clear that no-one with a criminal record will be in Northern 
Ireland's police force. Insofar as the release of prisoners, I've been shot ten 
times by the IRA, ten bullets through the head and body.  I was nearly dead. I 
don't take any delight in seeing these kind of people getting out of prison. 
But I have to accept the truth, the reality of it, that they are all going to 
be out, bar eighty, within the next two years in any case. That's what happens. 
There is remission underway. There are already five hundred out on the streets, 
it's part of life in Northern Ireland.  Insofar as having terrorists in the 
Executive Assembly, the Prime Minister has, late this Thursday, of this week, 
in Belfast, made it clear that he is going to ensure that there is legislation 
in parliament to guarantee that terrorists cannot be in the new Executive in 
Northern Ireland. And it's time some people, like Peter Robinson, began to 
believe and accept what the Prime Minister says, give him a chance to deliver 
it. If he doesn't, well then certainly we can reject it.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Are you saying that you don't really 
like it, but this is what's there, this is the best you are going to get? 
 
TAYLOR:                                Yes. I think if you reacted with your 
heart you probably would say No.  But you have got to use your head in politics 
as well in Northern Ireland, as anywhere else. When I saw the document on the 
Tuesday it was dreadful altogether.  I rejected it absolutely. When I saw the 
revised on the Good Friday, there were still about eighteen points. I have the 
original page where I listed them, that I objected to. Some of those have now 
been answered adequately and here are the real benefits of this document for 
the greater number of people in Northern Ireland. And it's time that we began 
to look at the benefits and not just pinprick the things we don't like. We are 
going to get an assembly in which Unionists should be the majority if they all 
come out and vote. We are going to have the abolition of the Anglo-Irish 
Agreement, which Peter Robinson used to be against. Now we are going to get it 
done away with.  We are going to get Maryfield and the southern Irish Civil 
Service in Maryfield, cleared out of Maryfield.  We are going to get a North-
South body. Oh yes Peter Robinson mentions the North-South body but how 
different it is from the one that we have been having for the last ten years, 
the United Kingdom Government and the Dublin Government have created one 
hundred North-South bodies in which Unionists have had no input or influence 
whatsoever.   Now, under this agreement, there will be a North-South body in 
which Unionists will have an input, so much so that we will have a veto over 
every decision of that North-South body. That's written into the agreement. 
This gives the people of Northern Ireland power to handle their own affairs and 
no longer leaves it to English ministers to fly in one day a week to make 
decisions over our heads. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Alright.  Well, thanks for that. I'll 
come back to some of those points in a minute as well, but let me go to Jeffrey 
Donaldson.  Mr Donaldson you're in the same party as John Taylor obviously.  
Why can't you accept what he's said.  He's just told us of the large number of 
things you're going to have and the reasons why some of the things you're 
worried about you shouldn't be worried about. 
 
JEFFREY DONALDSON:                     Well, can I say I do recognise that 
there are pluses in this agreement, and what we all have to do is weigh up what 
we see as the pluses and the minuses and come to our own decision.  I respect 
the decision that John Taylor has come to.  He and I were both in the Unionist 
talks team, and we were there on Good Friday.  Both he and I shared many of the 
concerns about this agreement.  I reached the conclusion that I couldn't 
support it, and John on balance reached the conclusion that he could.  I 
respect his position and I hope that he respects mine. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Is your main concern to do with the 
constitutional arrangement? 
 
DONALDSON:                             My main concerns relate to the kind of 
issues that Peter Robinson was talking about.  First of all I can't support the 
basis upon, in this agreement, upon which people who represent paramilitary 
organisations are entitled to become ministers in the government without first 
- without first - being required to end their campaign of violence for good, 
and to engage in the decommissioning of their terrorist weapons.  And there is 
nowhere in this agreement that requires them to do that before they are 
entitled to become ministers in the government.  Equally with the release of 
prisoners, I think that society is entitled to demand of the terrorist 
organisations that they end their campaign of violence for good and that they 
engage in decommissioning and dismantling their terrorist machinery, and then 
when we're getting real peace, then we can think about the release of terrorist 
prisoners.  What's happening here is, the society is required to release the 
prisoners in the hope that the IRA and the other terrorist organisations might 
some day end their campaign of violence.  Well, I for one am not prepared to 
support that kind of thing.  I think after thirty years of violence, society in 
Northern Ireland is entitled to expect the terrorists to end their violence, 
and then we have the benefits of the agreement. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But you've been getting a lot of 
reassurances on all of those points this week from the Prime Minister Tony 
Blair, who went to Northern Ireland to outline - or let me remind people what 
he said.  Safeguards - and these satisfied your leader David Trimble - 
safeguards will be enshrined in legislation - that no more prisoners will be 
released.  Nobody can join the executive unless they renounce violence for 
good, unless they co-operate with the decommissioning body, unless they 
guarantee there'll be no violence at all even through proxies, parties with 
whom they're not officially associated, but who are operating with a kind of 
nod and a wink.  Why isn't all of that good enough for you? 
 
DONALDSON:                             John. with all due respect, that's not 
what the Prime Minister said.  The Prime Minister did not say," before they 
join the executive".  He did not say, "before the prisoners are released" 
HUMPHRYS:                              I heard him say it this morning? 
 
DONALDSON:                             He did not use the words "before", and 
with all due respect go back and check the speech that the Prime Minister made. 
If he'd said that I'd be a lot happier, but he didn't actually say that.  What 
he did say was:  Well, of course they can be removed from office by a 
cross-community vote, which requires actually Nationalists to vote Sinn Fein 
out of government if they feel in time to honour their commitments, but it 
doesn't prevent them from taking up office in the first place, and I believe 
that the mechanism for a cross-community vote is hopelessly inadequate, and the 
Prime Minister said - all that he said this morning was : Well if it doesn't 
work we'll think about changing it.  Well, quite frankly that isn't good 
enough.  If you're going to allow the representatives of terrorists into the 
government you must first require them to end their violence and to dismantle 
their terrorist machines.  That is not what the agreement says, that's not what 
the Prime Minister has said.  After the elections in June Sinn Fein will be 
allowed to take their seats in the executive and nothing can stop them provided 
they sign up to the Mitchell principles which we've seen during the talks they 
will drive a cart and horse through as they did whilst they were in the talks. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              So what does Tony Blair have to do 
between now and Friday to persuade you to put your cross next to the Yes? 
 
DONALDSON:                             Well I think, with all - with respect to 
the Prime Minister, and I appreciate that he has made an effort here to try and 
reassure people, but having looked at what he said I've come to the conclusion 
that the Prime Minister can't actually provide the kind of assurances and 
safeguards that I need, because to do so would require him to change and alter 
the terms of the agreement, and he is unwilling to do thatand therefore I think 
the Prime Minister's hands are probably tied in terms of what I need to insure 
that democracy and justice are safeguarded in Northern Ireland. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              So there's no point in you trying to see 
him again.  You've decided you will vote No. 
 
DONALDSON:                             Well, on the basis of what the Prime 
Minister has said I don't believe he can deliver the kind of safeguards now in 
the legislation.  I think that's quite clear because to do so in his opinion, 
would be to alter the terms of the agreement, so we have to vote on what is in 
the agreement, and based on what is in agreement I will be voting No.
         
HUMPHRYS:                              Given that most people, we presume, will 
vote Yes, the majority across the board will vote Yes, does it matter very much 
or at all if most Unionists do not vote Yes? 
 
DONALDSON:                             I think it matters considerably, because 
what we need in order to achieve real stability in Northern Ireland is an 
agreement that can command the support of both traditions in Northern Ireland.  
After all, every political initiative in the past has failed, we're told by the 
government, because it failed to attract the overwhelming support of both 
traditions, and if a majority of Unionists are against the agreement for very 
very real, and I think, reasons that are understandable, then I think the 
agreement is in trouble.  But can I say this, fundamentally I want to see peace 
in Northern Ireland, but I don't see anything in this agreement that actually 
requires the terrorists to deliver peace.  The terrorists are getting a one-way 
ticket - a free ticket to democracy.   Now, the Prime Minister says that he 
will ensure over time that they hold to that peace, but are we going to get 
more than just a mere tactical ceasefire?  I hope not, I hope we get real 
peace, but I have to say that society is entitled to require the terrorists to 
actually deliver peace, and I wish the agreement required them to do it but it 
doesn't. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Mr Donaldson, thank you for that.  I 
won't be coming back to you because I know you don't want to be seen to be 
debating or arguing with a member of your own party. So let me go to John 
Taylor again at this stage.  
 
                                       Your leader David Trimble said this 
morning, if the vote is equivocal, the Unionist vote is equivocal, there will 
be serious problems. Now, what is equivocal? 
 
TAYLOR:                                Well I think if it were less than 
sixty-five per cent For, that we would have a problem in Northern Ireland in 
making the assembly work successfully.  I've been in all the counties of 
Northern Ireland campaigning during the past two weeks and I'm quite satisfied 
that the majority of Catholics are going to vote Yes and that the majority of 
Protestants are going to vote Yes. And in every county of Northern Ireland, 
County Fermanagh until after midnight last night, and there again I'm convinced 
that the majority of Protestants are going to vote Yes.  The question is what 
will be the size of the Protestant majority voting Yes.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              And that's a crucial question isn't it.  
 
TAYLOR:                                That's crucial because if you had simply 
a fifty-fifty split, then it does mean that the wreckers, you know like the 
DUP, the Paisley people, the kind of mobs you have shouting around in some of 
the halls around the country at the moment, they would certainly be able to 
wreck it, and you know they are offering no alternative, this is the problem. 
Everyone who says they are going to vote No, what is their alternative? 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Let me come back to that in a moment. 
But let's just stay with the majority for a moment. On your calculation, if 
it's a sixty-five per cent vote, that would mean, complicated arithmetic but 
nonetheless that would mean only just over fifty per cent of Unionists had 
voted Yes. Now is that going to be enough, that's not really unequivocal is it. 
 
TAYLOR:                                That's what I say, that's the minimum. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Yeah. 
 
TAYLOR:                                But if it's less than that- 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But would that be enough is what I'm 
asking you.  
 
TAYLOR:                                I think on that basis we could then 
proceed to win in the General Election because you just heard Jeffrey Donaldson 
there saying that even though he's inclined to say No, that he's more or less 
prepared to accept the decision of the referendum.  I think there will be many 
people who will come on board after next Friday.  At the moment they are 
scared, they are alarmed, they are saying things which aren't really  in my 
opinion correct. You know for example the question of the agreement. You just 
don't decide on the agreement alone.  There have been further promises by the 
Prime Minister, letters and writing, his statement in Northern Ireland this 
week. You know these terrorists are not going to get into the Executive. We 
must keep repeating that. And incidently there doesn't need to be an Executive  
until next year because the powers are not going to be transferred to the 
Northern Ireland Assembly until February 1999, yet decommissioning must start 
in June this year. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Right, so Tony Blair's assurance, 
reassurance, is good enough for you? 
 
TAYLOR:                                It's good enough for me because you must 
remember that when we get this assembly we can do exactly what you are 
suggesting could happen.  We could bring it down, oh yes, we will have the 
power to do that.  Why stop the thing now, let's give it a chance, let's try 
and make it work. No-one else is providing an alternative, if we make this work 
it's great for everyone in Northern Ireland, Catholic and Protestant alike.   
But if the terrorists misbehave, if they don't carry out the requirements that 
the Prime Minister says they must, well then the thing collapses.  And they 
will be the reason it collapses, not us. I don't want to see the Unionists and 
Protestants being blamed for this collapsing.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But you would be prepared to bring it 
down if necessary? 
 
TAYLOR:                                Oh absolutely, in such circumstances, in 
no way are we prepared to sit with people who are involved in terrorism.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Well in that case, let me go back to Mr 
Robinson.   
 
                                       Peter Robinson, now why isn't that good 
enough for you? 
 
PETER ROBINSON:                        Well I really have heard it all now. He 
points the finger at those in the No campaign, calls them wreckers, then 
indicates his preparedness to be a wrecker as well.  I have in front of me the 
independent Chairman's draft document. When John Taylor saw this document he 
said he wouldn't touch it with a forty foot bargepole. When this document came 
out there were two significant changes between this document and the one that 
John Taylor is now advising the people of Northern Ireland to sign.  The two 
changes made it worse- 
 
TAYLOR:                                Oh no. 
 
ROBINSON:                              -the two changes first of all related to 
decommissioning.  There is now no requirement to decommission, there was in the 
first document. The second change was in relation to the important issue of 
terrorist releases.  There was no requirement to have them released within two 
years in the first document, there is in the second document. If it couldn't be 
touched with a forty foot bargepole in the first case it couldn't be within 
half a mile of being acceptable on the second occasion.  Further can I say, it 
is absolutely untrue to say to the people of Northern Ireland that they have to 
vote on this agreement, plus some assurances from the Prime Minister. The vote 
they will take will be on this agreement and this agreement alone, nothing else 
will be included in it.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              What he is saying to you Mr Taylor is 
you rolled over.  
 
TAYLOR:                                Not in the least.  I was involved in the 
talks. As you know Peter Robinson ran away from the talks and that's his 
decision.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Chose not to take part.  
 
TAYLOR:                                Yes, exactly.  
 
ROBINSON:                              No, that's not right either.  
TAYLOR:                                We were involved in the talks and I was 
there on the Tuesday.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              What's not right. Let's just clear that 
up because he's saying that's not right.  You chose not to - if you wanted to 
be part of the talks you could have been part of the talks.  
 
ROBINSON:                              I was part of the talks. I was in the 
talks for fourteen months. Unlike Mr Taylor, I kept my manifesto pledge. Mr 
Taylor and myself both pledged that we would not sit down with terrorists who 
had not decommissioned their weapons. Mr Taylor ran away from his election 
manifesto - I did not.  
 
TAYLOR:                                We stayed in the talks to defend- 
 
ROBINSON:                              You broke your manifesto- 
 
TAYLOR:                                -in Northern Ireland. We didn't 
negotiate or speak with Sinn Fein.   
                                                            
ROBINSON:                              You did.  
 
TAYLOR:                                We defended the Unionists- 
 
ROBINSON:                              You did. 
 
TAYLOR:                                We defended the Unionists of Northern 
Ireland. The DUP, as ever, ran away.  
 
ROBINSON:                              You ran away, broke your pledges, broke 
your pledges. 
 
TAYLOR:                                Now could I get to the- what was the 
point he was making about- 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              What I want to pick up with you is the 
alternative. Let us assume...
 
TAYLOR:                                No sorry, he did make the point about 
the Tuesday document and that's very important because once again the DUP are 
selective. There was a major change in the Good Friday document.  In the 
Tuesday document there were three indexes of North-South institutions, 
they were all removed and that's the important point.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Let me go back to you Mr Robinson. Point 
that John Taylor made earlier. What is the alternative, if this collapses where 
do you go from here? 
                                                  
ROBINSON:                              Well, the alternative to Mr Taylor 
supporting a process that allows prisoners out is to keep them in.  The 
alternative to having a process that leads to Dublin rule is to remain under 
British rule.   The Prime Minister- 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Where have you been for the last 
twenty-five years? 
 
ROBINSON:                              I was going to come to something very 
specifically.  The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom thinks it's acceptable 
to give Scotland a strong form of devolution.  That's an alternative, and it's 
one that I will accept.  He's prepared to give the people of Wales a softer 
form of devolution.  That's an alternative, and it's one that I will accept.  
The people of England are allowed to have a strong form of local government.  
Again, they're going to have on this occasion directly elected mayors.  That's 
an alternative, and again it's one that I will accept.  I am prepared to be 
ruled here in Northern Ireland as any other part of the United Kingdom is being 
ruled.  What I am not prepared to do is to have the Union destroyed by setting 
up all-Ireland bodies which will develop and expand, and will become a United 
Ireland.  Mr Taylor can sell his country, but I will not. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Are you prepared for the war to go on 
the way it's been going? 
 
ROBINSON:                              The people who will start the war again 
are the people who are sitting alongside John Taylor in the talks process.  
Those are the only ones who are going to go out fighting. It'll not be the 
people in the No cmapaign that will be starting up any violence. 
 
TAYLOR:                                Could I come back on this now.  First of 
all Peter there says, his alternative is one that keeps the prisoners in.  But 
of course that's misleading the public in Northern Ireland.  The prisoners are 
being let out on a weekly basis for years.  As I said  earlier- 
 
ROBINSON:                              Only when they serve their sentences. 
 
TAYLOR:                                -and when there will be only eighty left 
at  
 
ROBINSON:                              Only when they serve their sentences.  
 
TAYLOR:                                They're getting out all the time under 
remission-  
 
ROBINSON:                              When they serve their sentences.  
 
TAYLOR:                                It's very important that people realise 
this. But his alternatives - he says he wants to be ruled like the United 
Kingdom.  So would I, and he then says he wants the Prime Minister to give 
Northern Ireland what he gives Scotland and Wales.  They're getting devolution 
yes, but you know what the weakness and Peter Robinson's and the DUP's problem 
is?  We're different from some of the other parts of the United Kingdom.  Wales 
and Scotland, the people there give consent to what the Prime Minister is 
doing.  The people in Northern Ireland are divided.  They do not give consent, 
and both the Conservative Party and the Labour Party with a very big majority 
are saying:  You've got to get agreement within Northern Ireland, amongst 
yourselves, on the type of administration you want, and that's what we're now 
trying to achieve.  It doesn't guarantee peace, but what it does guarantee, it 
guarantees the people of Northern Ireland will control their own affairs on a 
daily basis, Health, Education, Public Services, and in any further North-South 
agreements we will have a veto over what happens, and we haven't had that for 
twenty-five years. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              And should you not, in the last few 
seconds Mr Robinson, should you not be sitting there now and say: I'm opposed 
to the agreement okay, but if they vote for it on Friday, I will do my 
damnedest to make sure it works for the future of Northern Ireland.? 
 
ROBINSON:                              First of all the people who will have a 
veto will be the Nationalists, and John Taylor knows it very well. I will never 
consent to any arrangement that is going to allow Northern Ireland to be taken 
away from the United Kingdom and put into a united Ireland, whether it is under 
John Taylor's progressive and developing process or indeed through any other 
way. I say No to this agreement because it puts terrorists in government, 
because it sets up an undemocratic assembly, because it sets up an all-Ireland 
body which will develop and expand towards the united Ireland. That's the sad 
reality.  
 
TAYLOR:                                -the Republican Sinn Fein. 
 
ROBINSON:                              - this agreement that John Taylor has 
accepted is one that will lead to a united Ireland and everybody in Northern 
Ireland should be know that. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Final quick word. 
 
TAYLOR:                                Republican Sinn Fein has just issued a 
statement in Dublin saying that the Stormont agreement is the signal for a 
national surrender across the board and the chairman of Sinn Fein himself says 
that the new assembly does have a controlling input in both the establishment 
of the North-South bodies and their functions. That's what the Republicans are 
scared of.  We have won the constitutional argument.   
 
HUMPHRYS:                              John Taylor, Peter Robinson, thank you 
very much.  That's it from this shorter On The Record. The full hour next week. 
Until then good afternoon.  
 
 
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