The party advocates a united Ireland but not one in which a new minority is simply created. It also proposes the abolition of the 11+ exams, greater protection for agricultural and rural communities and greater environmental standards.
The SDLP were the first to advocate the so-called principle of "consent" recognising that fundamental changes in Northern Ireland's constitutional status could only come with the agreement of the majority of the people of Northern Ireland. This was eventually a principle that Sinn Fein agreed to as part of the Good Friday Agreement.
Unfortunately the Good Friday Agreement was largely the undoing of the SDLP. Having been the largest nationalist party in Northern Ireland during most of the previous two decades, and in 1998 the largest of all the political parties in Northern Ireland, it began to see its vote shift to Sinn Fein. Sinn Fein overtook the SDLP in the 2001 general election and Northern Ireland Assembly election in 2003 for the first time.
Much of the decline of the SDLP has been attributed to the retirement of John Hume. In the 2004 European elections, Hume stood down and the SDLP failed to retain the seat he had held since 1979, losing to Sinn Fein.
However, since the collapse of the Ulster Unionist party in the