BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) 鈥 Former U.S. President Bill Clinton said Tuesday he was optimistic that one of Northern Ireland鈥檚 main political parties would soon end a boycott that has kept the regional government on ice for more than a year.
Clinton said he had met with Democratic Unionist Party leader Jeffrey Donaldson on Monday, and 鈥淚 left that meeting more optimistic than I entered it.鈥
to mark 25 years since the ended . The deal established a Northern Ireland government with power shared between British unionist and Irish nationalist parties.
The DUP walked out more than a year ago to protest post-Brexit trade rules that imposed a customs border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K. It has refused to return, despite in February to remove many of the border checks.
Clinton said the deal, known as the Windsor Framework, had gone a long way to resolving the political impasse.
鈥淪o I expect that, in the not too distant future, the barriers to bringing up the government again will be removed,鈥 he told the BBC. 鈥淏ecause everybody knows that economically, socially and politically, they would be worse off if they packed it in over the current level of disagreement.鈥
U.K. Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris also urged the DUP to go back into government, saying those who valued Northern Ireland鈥檚 place in the United Kingdom should 鈥減ut the union first, restore the devolved institutions and get on with the job of delivering for the people of Northern Ireland.鈥
鈥淭he biggest threat to Northern Ireland鈥檚 place in the union is failing to deliver on these priorities,鈥 he told a Good Friday Agreement commemoration conference in Belfast.
The political impasse has left Northern Ireland鈥檚 civil servants running a skeleton caretaker government, with no politicians in place to make big decisions amid a cost-of-living crisis and a creaking public health service.
The other parties in the Northern Ireland Assembly have expressed frustration, but Donaldson said Tuesday that his party would not be 鈥渂rowbeaten into submission."
鈥淭he great and the good can lecture us all they want for a cheap round of applause but it won鈥檛 change the political reality,鈥 he wrote on Twitter, adding: "Berating unionists won鈥檛 solve the problem."
Doug Beattie, leader of the smaller Ulster Unionist Party, warned that putting too much pressure on the DUP would be counterproductive.
鈥淚f you try and batter people 鈥 they just go to their trenches and they dig in," he told reporters.
But Beattie said he was confident the government would be restored.
鈥淚鈥檓 in no doubt whatsoever that the DUP is going to go back into the executive," he said. "I鈥檇 put money on it. I would sell my house on it. I鈥檓 telling you, they are going back in. But it鈥檚 all about when.鈥