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Stormont talks: Brokenshire sets month-end deadline | Stormont talks: Brokenshire sets month-end deadline |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The latest date for a Northern Ireland Executive to be formed to pass a budget is the week beginning 6 November, according to James Brokenshire. | |
The Northern Ireland secretary said that would mean legislation would have to pass through Westminster by the end of this month. | |
Parties would have to agree a deal by 30 October for that to happen. | |
Mr Brokenshire said that the prospects of a deal to restore devolution do not look "positive". | |
The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) and Sinn Féin have been holding talks in a bid to end months of political deadlock at Stormont. | |
The executive collapsed in January and Northern Ireland has been without a power-sharing government since then. | |
In spite endless rounds of discussions, a deal to restore devolution has proved elusive with the introduction of an Irish language act seen as the main issue. | |
'Pressure over MLAs' pay' | |
Mr Brokenshire gave his assessment of the negotiations to the cross-party Northern Ireland Affairs Committee at Westminster. | |
He also told MPs that progress in the intensive talks had "stalled at the end of last week". | |
The stumbling blocks between the DUP and Sinn Féin are on language and culture, he said. | |
Mr Brokenshire also told the committee that he "recognises public pressure" over the issue of MLAs' pay. | |
He said he would will keep issue "under examination" and will deal with it if there is no progress. | |
The Westminster select committee is charged with investigating Northern Irish matters, including the role of the Northern Ireland Office. | |
Sinn Féin's Michelle O'Neill said she is still hopeful of a positive resolution, but added: "Clearly we are quickly running out of road." | |
The party's Stormont leader said "considerable challenges still remain" if the Stormont institutions are to be restored. | |
'Callous disregard for patients' | |
Other political parties in Northern Ireland have voiced their frustration with the situation. | |
Ulster Unionist leader Robin Swann said Mr Brokenshire had a responsibility to "look at options to allow other parties to get on with the job". | |
SDLP leader Colum Eastwood said the two main parties "have brought us to the brink of direct rule." | SDLP leader Colum Eastwood said the two main parties "have brought us to the brink of direct rule." |
"For the nationalist community, after years of trying to bring power back to Irish soil in order that local people could make local decisions, it should be a source of great anger that all of that power and progress is now being handed back to a Tory/DUP government in London," he added. | |
The Alliance Party's health spokeswoman Paula Bradshaw accused the parties of "showing a callous disregard for patient care". | |
"Issues such as missed targets and long waiting lists have direct consequences on people's quality of life," she said. | |
"Yet still we see parties putting their own narrow sectional interests ahead of the livelihood of hundreds of thousands of people," she added. |