Northern Irish Freedom Fight Turns Into Taxing Battle for U.K. Government

By Colm Heatley - Wed Mar 07 00:00:01 GMT 2012

Peter Muhly/AFP/Getty Images

Stormont Parliament buildings in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

Stormont Parliament buildings in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Photographer: Peter Muhly/AFP/Getty Images

Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

A ferris wheel is seen by City Hall in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

A ferris wheel is seen by City Hall in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Photographer: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

For Belfast clothing retailer Michael Hamilton, power is money.

The owner of the Bureau, a store in downtown Belfast selling handcrafted Alden leather shoes at 600 pounds ($952) and designer jeans for 300 pounds, wants Northern Ireland to wrest control from the U.K. over taxes levied on companies and align them with Ireland to the south. The 46-year-old reckons it would attract employers and enrich the local population.

Trading is brutal, Hamilton said at his shop on Howard Street in the Northern Irish capital. Getting corporation tax cut and attracting high-end jobs would be brilliant for us. It would be great if those people were living in Belfast.

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Northern Irish Freedom Fight Turns Into Taxing Battle for U.K. Government

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