Colum Eastwood sat on the British Government backbenches in Westminster on Wednesday
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00:00It's great to see the House so full for Northern Ireland questions, and may I congratulate
00:05all colleagues recently elected in Northern Ireland. I met the First and Deputy First
00:10Ministers twice in my first four days, where we discussed a wide range of issues. This
00:15included the Government's commitment to repeal and replace the Legacy Act, and I plan
00:20to update the House shortly on how we will begin that process.
00:24Adam Joget
00:25Thank you, Mr Speaker, and can I say it's very good to see my friends from Foyle and
00:28South Belfast down on this side of the House.
00:31The GAA is overwhelmingly a force for good across Ireland, and I was pleased to see so
00:35many in Britain enjoying the magic of the hurling final via the BBC on Sunday. GAA fans
00:42in Northern Ireland, like Northern Ireland football fans awaiting some regional stadium
00:46funding, have been let down by a decade of storm and dither by sniping, like we've just
00:51seen, and by the last Government. Had they greenlit the project when they said they would,
00:55construction would have been well underway in time for the Euros. Can the Minister give
00:59an assurance that Casement will ultimately be built and that spectacles like we're going
01:03to see this Sunday for Armagh will, in time, be hosted in Belfast?
01:08Lord Bates
01:09Well, I think we all look forward to wishing well to Armagh in the all-Ireland final. The
01:17executives committed to the Casement Park project. It's been a commitment for, I think,
01:21over a decade now, but it hasn't progressed. Windsor Park got an upgrade, Ravenhill got
01:26an upgrade, and it's important that Casement Park is built, which is why I said on my recent
01:32visit that, one way or another, that project needs to be completed.