Grand Central Station: Bilingual Signage

Members' Statements – in the Northern Ireland Assembly at 10:30 am on 29 April 2025.

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Photo of Timothy Gaston Timothy Gaston Traditional Unionist Voice 10:30, 29 April 2025

Before the House rose for Easter, I placed a petition in the Business Office. It was a simple petition to refer the Infrastructure Minister's decision to impose Irish-language signage at Grand Central station to the Executive for a cross-community vote. I regret to say that not a single Member of the Assembly added their name beside mine: not one. That was despite the leader of the DUP promising that his party was "putting down a marker" on the issue. It was despite the Chair of the Infrastructure Committee describing the decision as "undoubtedly controversial". It was despite the deputy First Minister saying that it was a controversial decision that had not been brought to the Executive. To avoid anyone in front of me feeling left out, I say that the leader of the Ulster Unionist Party reminded us over recess of:

"the tradition of some republicans to believe every word spoken in Irish is another bullet fired in the battle for Irish freedom".

Some in the House like to speak grandly about unionist unity. Often, they point to my party and claim that we are the obstacle to it. However, here was the test; indeed, here was the opportunity. All unionists — DUP, Ulster Unionists, TUV — agreed that the Sinn Féin Minister's actions were controversial and provocative and amounted to poking the loyalist community of Sandy Row in the eye. Anyone with an ounce of common sense can see it. The Sandy Row community — already ignored when it came to the demolition of the Boyne Bridge and already punished by the effective sealing off of businesses around Grand Central — will now have Irish language signs imposed on it by Sinn Féin. Where was the unionist unity when it truly mattered? Unionism will rightly ask, "What did you do?".

Yes, there was plenty of tough talking and plenty of grand declarations, but, when it came to it, this was the result: a largely blank page with the sole signature of the TUV MLA for North Antrim. That is shameful. It is a blank page that gives Sinn Féin a blank cheque to act as it pleases. I tried to do something about it; others will have to answer why they did not.