Closer to home, the Sinn Fein Finance Minister has now produced his draft Budget. This document has been published without Executive agreement and cannot be treated as settled. While we recognise the real financial pressures facing Northern Ireland, the priorities John O’Dowd has chosen raise serious concerns. Public services, particularly education, are under severe strain, and significant changes will be required before this Budget could ever secure DUP support.
The year ahead will test the Executive, and meeting those challenges will require both Ministers and the Civil Service to be focused on delivering core public services. Only this week we saw the failure of the Department for Infrastructure to even carry out basic road gritting, particularly in rural areas. When people are left stranded or at risk while resources are diverted into pet political projects like dual language signage at bus stations, it demonstrates misplaced priorities and a failure of proper governance.
But it isn’t just about day-to-day operations. Northern Ireland must also show it can deliver major infrastructure projects if we are serious about investment, jobs, and economic growth. At the Northern Ireland Affairs Select Committee this week, we heard of a major opportunity that has been caught in our planning system for nearly 20 years. That’s two decades where progress has stalled, and it sends the wrong signal to businesses who want to invest here.
A planning system that allows nationally significant projects to languish for decades is a direct barrier to economic growth. Northern Ireland must demonstrate it can make timely decisions and actually deliver the infrastructure our economy needs. From transport to energy, water, and regeneration, progress on major projects is essential if we are to attract investment, create jobs, and build confidence in our future. Every party around the Executive table must realise the urgent need to remove the roadblocks that have held us back for far too long.
A new year must bring not just new words, but higher standards and real delivery. Whether it is standing up for those who served this country, demanding fairness in how our past is addressed, or ensuring that public money is focused on the services people rely on, the DUP will continue to hold the Government and other Executive Ministers to account. Northern Ireland deserves better than drift and mis-prioritisation, and I remain determined to fight for a common sense, responsible and secure future for us all.
Yours sincerely,