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Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald during her keynote speech at the party's Ard Fheis yesterday. PA

'I will speak to everyone, I'm a grown up' says Sinn Féin leader on forming a government

It comes as a Sunday Independent/Ireland Thinks opinion poll revealed that support for the party remains ahead of Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil.

SINN FÉIN LEADER Mary Lou McDonald has said she will speak to all parties about forming a government after the next general election.

McDonald said the party will go out to win every single seat, but once the votes are counted the Dublin TD said she will speak to everyone.

“I will speak to everybody. I’m a grown up and grown up people, in a democracy after an election, speak,” McDonald told RTÉ’s This Week in Politics. 

But she went on to say that the best option for the country would be a government that does not include Fianna Fáil or Fine Gael, adding “there are those with whom we fundamentally disagree”. 

It comes as a Sunday Independent/Ireland Thinks opinion poll revealed that support for the party remains ahead of Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil.

However, the poll also found that support for Sinn Féin dropped three points to 34%, but the party retains a 13-point lead ahead of Fine Gael at 21%, while Fianna Fáil sits at 17%. Support for both parties remains unchanged.

The poll was carried out among 1,002 people.

Support for Sinn Féin has been growing in recent years, with the party taking 22.3% of first preferences in the 2020 general election.

The party has been polling well since then, with the vast majority of its support base coming from young people.

However, McDonald said there are no “foregone conclusions in elections”.

“We will keep working very, very hard,” she told RTE’s The Week In Politics.

“I hear a lot of commentary around that things are foregone conclusions or sometimes assertions that I or we think that things – there’s no foregone conclusions in political life and there are certainly no foregone conclusions in elections.

“We will go out to win every single seat, every single vote, the confidence of every single voter that we can.”

McDonald also appeared to leave the door open for Marc MacSharry to join Sinn Féin. 

MacSharry recently resigned from Fianna Fáil, citing the failure to properly handle a complaint made against him. 

Chris Andrews left Fianna Fáil for Sinn Féin in 2012, and citing Andrews, McDonald said: “Chris actually, when he came to Sinn Féin, he always described the experience, he said, ‘I’ve come home,’ he’s come back to the Republican party.”

However, while McDonald said Sinn Féin is “certainly a growing party”, she added: “He (MacSharry) has not come knocking and I am not sure that he would.”

Elsewhere, McDonald repeated her calls for a joint authority between Dublin and London if an executive in Northern Ireland is not restored.

The Sinn Féin leader said that if the DUP continues to boycott the Northern Ireland Assembly, then the British and Irish governments should form a partnership.

She said that there should not be direct rule if an executive cannot be formed.

McDonald said: “The reason I made the point as regards direct rule is, we have to be absolutely clear on one thing and it’s this. It is not a choice between powersharing on the one hand or direct rule from London on the other.

“The best scenario is that the executive is up and running. So the British government, having said now that we won’t have an election this side of Christmas, needs to very speedily this week set out the plan of engagement with Brussels, to sort out the outstanding implementations of the protocol to get the executive up and running.

“If at that stage the DUP still are on boycott mode, then it is partnership between Dublin and London.

“I’d use the term joint authority, partnership, whatever language you use, it has to be a co-equal situation and it has to reflect not just the building blocks of the Good Friday Agreement, it also needs to take account that the politics in the North has very much changed.

“There is no longer a unionist electoral majority, that you now have for the first time a nationalist, a republican, Michelle O’Neill, as first minister designate.”

With additional reporting from Diarmuid Pepper

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