How Irish Unification Is Boosted by Brexit and Demographics

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In May 1921, the island of Ireland was split in two, giving rise to Northern Ireland as part of the UK and to what would become the independent Republic of Ireland. A century later, the idea that reunification could eventually happen has taken on new life. There’s little prospect of a referendum being held in the near future, but shifting demographics, along with the forces unleashed by Brexit, suggest a ballot one day is possible — assuming the British government chooses to hold one.

The 1921 partition was cemented by a peace agreement between British authorities and Irish rebels seeking independence after centuries of British rule. Northern Ireland, with a majority Protestant population (mostly descendants of settlers from Britain), remained part of the UK. The largely Catholic southern part of the island became the Irish Free State before formally declaring a republic in 1949.