2025 must be the year our local institutions see reform, says Long

2025 must be the year the local institutions finally see reform and we remove the possibility of ransom politics, Alliance Leader Naomi Long MLA has said.

Naomi Long


 

She said although 2024 had seen the return of the Assembly and Executive, issues still remained on the table, which were exacerbated by the possibility of another collapse in future.
 
“As a party which rightly criticised the DUP for collapsing the institutions and Sinn Féin for doing likewise before, we very much welcomed their return. However, Alliance was always clear restoration was not a silver bullet to resolve all of the challenges still facing us as a society,” she said.
 
“That includes putting public finances on a more sustainable footing, delivering health transformation and stabilisation, making our streets safer, tackling education underfunding, ensuring we have a thriving economy and building a vibrant, prosperous and united community.
 
“While having two Alliance Ministers in the Executive has allowed us greater influence and control over the work to address some of those challenges, the legacy of our system and previous collapses means it is often an uphill battle, and the constant risk of further collapse remains live.
 
“The institutions are as stable as they were the day before the last collapse. That ongoing instability has caused immeasurable damage, not only to public confidence but also to our public services, finances and our community.
 
“The need for institutional reform to remove the ability of any single party to hold us all to ransom and paralyse the entire system in the process remains pressing.
 
“With new Governments in London and Dublin and relative stability here, 2025 offers an opportunity outside of crisis and chaos to reflect on how we can improve the stability of the institutions and make progress on reform to end ransom politics for good. The people we serve deserve nothing less – together, we need to deliver for them.”