'I'm not going to be cancelled', minister says ahead of no confidence motion

Paul Givan says he has been "vilified" over his trip to Israel but vowed to continue to represent his constituents
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Education Minister Paul Givan has defended using departmental resources to share images of his visit to a school in Jerusalem, describing the engagement as "entirely non-political".
Givan added he is "not going to be cancelled" and insisted he is a "minister for all".
It comes as a no confidence motion in his role as minister is expected to be tabled at Stormont later over a six-day trip to Israel.
The motion has been submitted by Gerry Carroll from People Before Profit (PBP) and is being backed by Sinn Féin and the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) and Alliance.
The motion is expected to receive the 30 signatures required to reach the floor of the Northern Ireland Assembly and push it to a vote.
It will be next week, at the earliest, before a vote can take place, but the motion is already destined to fail as it requires cross-community support from unionists and nationalists.
'No cost to the tax payer'
Speaking to BBC's The Nolan Show on Monday, Givan said the trip "came at no cost to the tax payer, at all".
The DUP minister was among a number of local unionists politicians who took part in the six-day trip which was organised by the Israeli government.
Others included DUP MP Sammy Wilson, Steve Aiken from the UUP and TUV councillor Ron McDowell.
During the trip, they received a briefing from Israel's foreign ministry; visited a Holocaust memorial; met victims of Hamas and toured Ofek School in Jerusalem.
On 7 October 2023, about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were abducted during a Hamas-led attack on southern Israel.
Israel then launched a military campaign in Gaza during which more than 68,500 people have been killed, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
In September, the world's leading association of genocide scholars declared that genocide was taking place in Gaza, but Israel continues to reject that claim.
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After photos of the school visit were shared by the Department of Education, the Northern Ireland Teachers' Council (NITC) said the department "should be politically neutral" and called for promotion of his visit to be removed from its sites.
"I would challenge anybody to point out within the statement that was released through my department, any commentary of a political nature in relation to Israel," Givan said.
"It was entirely non-political in terms of that aspect of the trip, which obviously, as Paul Givan the education minister I visited the school and it would seem entirely appropriate that would be highlighted by the department," he said.
"I didn't use the department to highlight any other aspect of this visit because I was there as a wider delegation, but it did obviously entail an element of it that related to my education remit."
He added: "I'm not going to be silenced, I am not going to be cancelled."
Post 'didn't engage in politics'
When asked if he is concerned about the children killed or injured by Israel, Givan said: "I am absolutely concerned."
He was then asked where on the Department of Education website has he spoken about that, Givan replied: "Why would I use the Department of Education to engage in political commentary?"
He said this is "the distinction that people need to make", that the Department of Education statement "related exclusively and only to a visit to a school, which one should recognise as being welcomed because of the diverse nature within that school".
"It didn't engage in politics."

CaoimhÃn Mac Colaim, teacher and lay trade unionist for INTO, attended a protest outside Stormont on Monday morning
On Saturday, PBP held a rally against the minister outside Belfast City Hall.
It was attended by teachers, Gaza solidarity supporters, community groups and some politicians.
On Monday, PBP assembly member Gerry Carroll told BBC's The Nolan Show the education minister's credibility was "completely shot" with his visit to Israel.
"What I would say to the minister is do you understand how much anger you have caused by going to Israel and giving them cover?
"I have been inundated with hundreds of my constituents.
"I am sure it is the same for other MLAs, teachers' unions are appalled at your actions."
'Givan is not a victim'
Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald said Paul Givan was "not a victim in this scenario".
She said a no-confidence motion was "merely reflecting widespread public disbelief and anger" over the DUP minister's trip to Israel.
McDonald said that Givan "should not try and portray himself as a victim because he is being held to account".

Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald (centre) with party colleagues Stormont Economy Minister Caoimhe Archibald and Pat Sheehan
Speaking to reporters at Stormont, she described Israel's offensive in Gaza as a "genocidal regime".
"Minister Givan is not a victim in this scenario," she added.
"The victims here are tens of thousands of innocent children and women and men who have been slaughtered over the course of more than two years."
Minister is 'going nowhere' - DUP
The Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) and the Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV) party have said they plan to join Givan's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) in voting against it.
Even if it were to pass, the motion has no power to remove a DUP minister from office without the support of its leader, Gavin Robinson, who has said Givan is "going nowhere".

(Left-right) A DUP delegation including Joanne Bunting MLA, Education Minister Paul Givan, party leader Gavin Robinson MP, Michelle McIlveen MLA, Deputy First Minister Emma Little Pengelly and Communities Minister Gordon Lyons, addressing reporters at Stormont on Monday
On Monday, Robinson described the criticism of his party colleague as "performative pantomime politics".
Speaking to reporters at Stormont, he said the education minister "has my full confidence".
"Sadly, Sinn Féin have been led by the nose by Gerry Carroll. They are now getting engaged in a needless discussion which arises from nothing more than a tweet."

Protesters called for Paul Givan's resignation during a rally in Belfast on Saturday
In a Facebook post over the weekend, the minister said he has been "vilified by those who have sought to call into question my character and commitment to the people of Northern Ireland".
He added: "Sinn Féin, People Before Profit, the SDLP and Alliance are fooling no one. We can all see right through this smokescreen."
Givan is likely to face questions in the chamber about the Israeli trip as some parties are planning to ask for an urgent oral question to be added to the order paper.
'Entirely appropriate' to hold Givan to account
Speaking to reporters at Stormont on Monday, Alliance Deputy Leader Eóin Tennyson confirmed his party would support a motion of no confidence.
He said the visit "at such a politically sensitive time is nothing more than provocative coat trailing".
"The minister needs to account for his judgement as to why he was part of a propaganda mission for the Israeli government."

Alliance Party Deputy Leader Eóin Tennyson says his party will support the motion
Earlier, SDLP leader Claire Hanna said it was "entirely appropriate" that assembly members have the opportunity to hold the education minister to account and to express their constituents' "deeply held concerns".
She said a number of teachers who had contacted her "struggled to have confidence in somebody who is endorsing so freely a system that has annihilated the education system and the educational opportunity for a generation of Palestinian kids".
"There isn't a motion of censure on, for example, Steve Aiken or on Ron McDowell, for choosing to go over and propagandise for Israel, it is because he implied that this was some sort of visit in his capacity as education minister," she told BBC's The Nolan Show.
"So I think it is entirely appropriate that MLAs are allowed to use parliamentary time to hold him to account and to reflect the very deep concerns."
Analysis: Destined to fail but could still hurt
It is a big step to propose and support a motion of no confidence in a Stormont minister, even though it is destined to fail.
Unlike in most other government institutions, ministers do not need the support of the majority of Northern Ireland Assembly members to stay in office.
All they need is their own party to stand by them.
But such motions of confidence are potentially damaging for relations and can hamper progress around the executive table at a time when there are so many big decisions to be made.
Don't be surprised to see more ministerial showdowns in the months ahead as we edge ever closer to the next assembly election.
Because, in truth, they play well with the respective political bases.
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