General election: Foyle the arena as SDLP and SF battle for supremacy

Colum Eastwood, SDLP leader and Westminster candidate for the constituency of Foyle, takes a selfie with his canvassing team in the Creggan area of Londonderry.  Pic: Liam McBurney/PA WireColum Eastwood, SDLP leader and Westminster candidate for the constituency of Foyle, takes a selfie with his canvassing team in the Creggan area of Londonderry.  Pic: Liam McBurney/PA Wire
Colum Eastwood, SDLP leader and Westminster candidate for the constituency of Foyle, takes a selfie with his canvassing team in the Creggan area of Londonderry.  Pic: Liam McBurney/PA Wire
​The SDLP is hoping to hold off a challenge from Sinn Fein in what is expected to be a key general election battle within nationalism in the Foyle constituency.

SDLP leader Colum Eastwood says he will be a strong voice for the constituency, while his Sinn Fein challenger Sandra Duffy insists her party's MPs have wielded influence at Westminster despite not taking their seats.

Foyle, which includes Londonderry city, has been an almost exclusively SDLP stronghold since its creation in 1983.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Former party leader John Hume held it until his retirement from politics, before another party leader, Mark Durkan, held it from 2005 until 2017.

Gary Middleton, DUP Westminster candidate for the constituency of Foyle. Pic: Liam McBurney/PA WireGary Middleton, DUP Westminster candidate for the constituency of Foyle. Pic: Liam McBurney/PA Wire
Gary Middleton, DUP Westminster candidate for the constituency of Foyle. Pic: Liam McBurney/PA Wire

The winning of the seat by Sinn Fein's Elisha McCallion in 2017 by less than 200 votes was one of the shocks of that year's election.

Mr Eastwood won it back for his party in 2019 with a majority of more than 17,000 in an election dominated by Brexit and a difficult time for Sinn Fein in Londonderry.

A swift Sinn Fein reorganisation saw the party return with a strong performance in the 2022 assembly election with a total vote of 15,384, ahead of the SDLP's 14,460.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Mr Eastwood and Ms Duffy, a recent Derry mayor, both believe they can win the seat this year.

However, while Mr Eastwood is believed to have benefited from tactical voting by unionists in the past, DUP candidate Gary Middleton says unionists are wary of their lent vote being counted as support for a border poll.

Mr Eastwood recalled the 2019 campaign as “extremely difficult”, with Sinn Fein “putting on a huge show” and spending a lot of money.

“But people in Derry understood that having no voice in Westminster was a mistake and they didn't want that to happen again,” he said.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“This time, if they want to have representation at Westminster, someone speaking up for them and, I think, someone who has done a pretty good job in speaking up for them, then they need to come out and vote for that.

“The response is very good on the doors. People get it and people didn't like being silenced and didn't like having the only Derry accent at Westminster being Gregory Campbell (DUP). I don't think they want to go back to that.”

Mr Eastwood said his party and Sinn Fein are putting a “big effort in”.

“There is a good reason why Derry has done well for the SDLP, there is an awful lot of hard work, and not just at election time,” he said.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“I looked at our figures for my own constituency office over the last four-and-a-half years – we have helped 7,000 people, got £20 million back in benefits and entitlements for ordinary people in Derry, we've brought in hundreds of millions of pounds from the British government and the Irish government to develop the city and expand Magee and support Northlands Addiction Centre.

“If they want more of that they can vote for it or we can have an empty seat at Westminster. I am not sure that is what people want.”

Ms Duffy said of Sinn Fein MPs: “They do the entire job of an MP, they just don't sit in an empty chamber.

“In terms of all the issues that people want us to raise, we are raising those and we're very, very visible on the protest and on the rallies and talking directly to people that actually can have that influence and make that difference.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“We believe that, with the people's support, we can take the seat in Foyle and we can then deliver that positive change that people want to see for Derry.”

She said a Sinn Fein MP would be better placed to deliver for Foyle, working with the party's Stormont First Minister Michelle O'Neill and Economy Minister Conor Murphy .

Mr Middleton said unionists in Foyle want to vote for unionists as they fear a vote for a nationalist party being read as support for a border poll.

“The battle within nationalism is a matter for them. I think people of course want to see an MP who takes their seat, but from a unionist perspective, Colum Eastwood doesn't represent the unionist community, in my opinion, to the best of his ability,” he said.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“There is no doubt that unionist voters have lent their support to the SDLP in past elections. I think that in more recent elections, that has been less of a factor, and we want to highlight to people, when you vote for Colum Eastwood, those votes are counted sadly as nationalist votes and have been used in the past in a way that would be seen to show support for a border poll.

“That's not what we want to see, we want unionists to come out and vote for a unionist party which best represents who they are and what they believe in.

“I think in this election, that is going to be less of a factor than on previous occasions.”

The remaining candidates are Janice Montgomery (UUP), Rachael Ferguson (Alliance), Shaun Harkin (People Before Profit), John Boyle (Aontu) and Anne McCloskey (independent).