Britain Share Responsibility
However, it wasn’t the British Government’s intention to run Northern Ireland directly on a permanent basis, as it knew as well as anyone else that this did nothing to solve the intense hostilities between the different sides. A new Northern Ireland Assembly was set up in 1973, for which elections were held in May. The British Government also entered into negotiations with the Irish Republic to try and create a power-sharing agreement that would satisfy both Unionists and Nationalists. An agreement was reached by the British and Irish Governments in December 1973, known as the Sunningdale Agreement. It would create a power-sharing Executive for Northern Ireland that would be picked from the Northern Irish Assembly. Responsibilities for running Northern Ireland would be shared by the Executive and the British Government, with the Irish government also having a consultative role.
The Unions Strike
However, hard-line Unionists were not in favour of all this, viewing it as being a step towards Northern Ireland being handed over to the Republic. On 15th May 1974, a Unionist group called the Ulster Workers’ Council called a general strike. It lasted for two weeks and led to riots and shortages. The strike demonstrated that the power-sharing agreement did not have enough Unionist support to be workable, and was therefore abandoned.