N. Ireland Power-Balance Hangs On Election
Votes Counting To Determine Which Catholic, Protestant Parties Will Form Coalition
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Counting of votes cast in the election for the Northern Ireland Assembly is under way at a count centre in Belfast, Northern Ireland, Thursday, March, 8, 2007. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison)
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Ian Paisley, leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, smiles as he waits for the results of the Northern Ireland elections at Ballymena, Northern Ireland, Thursday, March, 8, 2007. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison)
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Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams out canvassing after casting his vote in west Belfast, Northern Ireland, Wednesday, March, 7, 2007. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison)
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Interactive Troubles Of Northern Ireland History of the bloody conflict and a look at the long and rocky road to peace.
Adams, 58, topped the poll in his longtime power base of Catholic west Belfast. He was among the first declared winners for the 108-member assembly following Wednesday's election.
Sinn Fein activists cheered wildly in the major ballot-counting center, the King's Hall conference center in south Belfast, as Adams took the winners' podium. Nearby activists from Protestant parties booed or stood stony-faced.
Electoral officials were counting ballots to find out which Protestant and Catholic parties will control the Northern Ireland Assembly — and hold the key to revived power-sharing in this British territory.
The vote-counting is likely to take two days before all winners of the assembly are declared. Northern Ireland's complex system of proportional representation allows voters to pick candidates in order of preference, requiring ballots to be counted several times.
At stake is achieving the central dream of the Good Friday peace accord of 1998: an administration drawn equally from the British Protestant majority and Irish Catholic minority that can govern Northern Ireland in stability and a spirit of compromise.
A moderate-led coalition collapsed in 2002 and hard-liners triumphed in the last assembly elections in 2003, making power-sharing harder to revive.
Political analysts and opinion polls universally forecast that Wednesday's vote will reinforce the strength of the two hard-line parties — the Protestants of the Democratic Unionists and the Catholics of Sinn Fein — versus their moderate rivals.
This outcome would allow Democratic Unionist leader Ian Paisley to claim the top power-sharing post of "first minister," while Sinn Fein deputy leader Martin McGuinness would be his party's candidate for "deputy first minister," a position with equal powers despite its title.
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