Election posters are arranged so as to spell out on a grand scale what they also individually say: Vote Sınn Féın Adams X”. Falls Road, Belfast, just above Northumberland St.
Tricolour and Sunburst flags with a simplified version of the Sınn Féın logo. Above can be seen an old graffiti: “Damn your concessions, England; we demand political status.”
“Vote Sınn Féın 1 2 3 4” and “Tıocfaıdh ár lá!” have been painted on top of a 1981 mural based on a poster sent by the Iranian Ayatollah Khomeini, which featured the head of Bobby Sands against a backdrop of skeletal bodies, one of which can still be seen in the top middle of the wall. Somewhat ironically, the original mural also included the quote to the right: “The Irish Republican Army is right: The British government does not listen to the ballot box in Ireland and the only thing they will listen to in Ireland is what they listened to in other colonies: agitation, rebellion, and armed forces”.
(An image of the original mural can be found in the Paddy Duffy Collection – T00048)
The Sinn Féin symbol of the letters “SF” on the island of Ireland at the centre of a tricolour in AMCOMRI Street, Belfast. (“AMCOMRI” = “American Committee For The Relief Of Ireland, a U.S. charitable organisation founded in the 1920s.)
Voting for Sınn Féın is seen as the way to address the social issues named on placards carried by protestors – culture, houses, Brits Out, jobs – in order to bring about a new Ireland.
“Vote Republican”: In the old Unity flats, a board promoting Sinn Féin and specifically Harry Fitzsimmons, in the 1985 elections for Belfast City Council (ARK). Unity Place, Belfast.