EU Ireland prepares for 3-week campaign to decide next prime minister

[Article/Archive]

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BY BRIAN MELLEY
Updated 6:47 PM CET, November 8, 2024


LONDON (AP) — Ireland’s President Michael Higgins dissolved Parliament Friday, clearing the way for a Nov. 29 election that will determine who controls government.

Prime Minister Simon Harris, who had until March to call an election, had announced the date Wednesday.

A historic coalition government led by Harris’ center-right Fine Gael party and its center-left rival Fianna Fail has been in power since the 2020 race ended in a virtual dead heat.

“We did not agree on every issue but we did always work hard and together for the good of the Irish people,” Harris said. “The time is now right to ask the Irish people to give a new mandate.”

Fine Gael and Fianna Fail, which arose from opposing sides of Ireland’s 1920s civil war, shared a broadly centrist outlook and had alternated holding power to govern Ireland over the decades. The two set aside their differences in 2020 to work together, bringing the Green Party along as a junior partner.

Fianna Fail leader Micheál Martin served as premier for the first half of the term and was replaced by Fine Gael’s Leo Varadkar in December 2022.

Harris took over when Varadkar stepped down earlier this year.

The left-wing nationalist Sinn Fein party had won the largest share of votes in the election but was shut out of government because it couldn’t assemble enough support to govern. Sinn Fein has been shunned by centrist parties because of its historic links to the nationalist militants of the Irish Republican Army and decades of violence in Northern Ireland.

Sinn Fein said it was fielding more candidates in its effort to lead the government.

“After a century of Fianna Fail and Fine Gael, it is time to make that change, to give Sinn Fein the chance to lead and the chance to deliver,” said party President Mary-Lou McDonald. “In Sinn Fein you will get a government that will move heaven and earth to make housing affordable, to bring home ownership back into the reach of working people and to restore hope for a generation.”

Ireland, which has a population of 5.2 million, has faced many of the same challenges of other countries since its last election: the COVID-19 pandemic, economic disruptions due to the war in Ukraine and a surge of migrants from overseas.

Martin said the next five years would be challenging for the Irish economy, noting the impact from global conflicts and a potential change in U.S. trade policy change.

“The greatest threat to the Irish economy is external, and we need experience and we need leadership that has already demonstrated its capacity to weather significant events and shocks to lead us through the next challenging five years,” Martin said.

Harris said the coalition had protected people during coronavirus, supported Ukraine in its war and weathered the cost-of-living crisis.

Housing, immigration and childcare are some of the main issues for voters, he said.

He said he was pleased the government had set aside money to weather any future trade shocks.

“We used to be ridiculed for this,” Harris said. “This is exactly why we have the buffer that is there, is a trans-Atlantic shock or indeed any other shock to our economy, my children will never have to experience the austerity that our generation did.”

Ireland in 2010 faced national bankruptcy over the cost of saving its failing banks. It adopted an austerity program as one of the conditions for an international bailout but rebounded strongly after exiting the bailout in 2013.
 
Nothing will change. Irish people keep voting for the same parties, who never get a majority and keep doing the same hapless things.

They are pissing me off though (and I'm sure I'm not the only one) in European politics as of late pontificating on Palestine, Islamophobia and "nobody is illegal" when none of them have actually has to deal with them until recently.

No, really. Irish Politics are so far out of the Overton window to the left on social issues they make UK Labour and the Democrats look relatively right wing.

I cant think of a single political event when they havent been pro-anyone who dons a balaclava and causes the most trouble.
 
Feels bad man. I kind of like the Irish.
Irish people deserve a political party that actually cares.
:feels:
Don't worry too much, they've a lovely habit of kicking off and giving their politicians hell. It's in their blood and lovely to see. Once upon a time it used to be a known fact that your armies would do well with a battalion of Irish fighting for you, same thing that leaves them prone to drink also leaves them fearless in battle, you just need a good leader capable of herding them via respect.

However, like all of Britain, it doesn't currently matter what they think and they'll get whichever leader Davos or the EU or any other globalist entity wants for them. Unlike the rest of Britain they'll fight the fucks without fear of consequence, they tend not to think that far ahead.

Similar Celtic bloodlines that saw the Romans build Hadrians wall, not particularly good for the seeding of foreign influence and rule.
 
So what are the choices? Bring in millions of Pakis, or bring in millions of Pakis but be very crossed about it?
 
So what are the choices? Bring in millions of Pakis, or bring in millions of Pakis but be very crossed about it?
You forgot the Sinn Fein stance, which is bring in Palestinians on top of the Pakis. The IRA and PLO were bosom buddies back in the day of waging war against the colonialist oppressor peoples and neither the Irish nor the Pallies have forgotten that.
 
You forgot the Sinn Fein stance, which is bring in Palestinians on top of the Pakis. The IRA and PLO were bosom buddies back in the day of waging war against the colonialist oppressor peoples and neither the Irish nor the Pallies have forgotten that.
Irish are welcome to take every Palestinian they want, just keep them contained outside the rest of Europe.
 
Irish are welcome to take every Palestinian they want, just keep them contained outside the rest of Europe.
Unfortunately Ireland is part of Schengen, and that means a very rapid metastasis into the rest of the continent. Assuming the other Muslims tolerate them long enough, that is.
 
Nothing will change. Irish people keep voting for the same parties, who never get a majority and keep doing the same hapless things.

They are pissing me off though (and I'm sure I'm not the only one) in European politics as of late pontificating on Palestine, Islamophobia and "nobody is illegal" when none of them have actually has to deal with them until recently.

No, really. Irish Politics are so far out of the Overton window to the left on social issues they make UK Labour and the Democrats look relatively right wing.

I cant think of a single political event when they havent been pro-anyone who dons a balaclava and causes the most trouble.

How far-left is Ireland's politics compared to Canada? Both countries have left the immigration taps on for too long and causing massive problems with the excessive amount of new people, and both countries intentionally try to be more Leftist than their neighbors in the US and the UK respectively.
 
How far-left is Ireland's politics compared to Canada? Both countries have left the immigration taps on for too long and causing massive problems with the excessive amount of new people, and both countries intentionally try to be more Leftist than their neighbors in the US and the UK respectively.

Less authoritarian, but a lot more woke.

The Irish government isn't as directly confrontational as the Canadians. They don't tend to freeze bank accounts, and they don't have hate speech laws as of yet though they have had attempts to bring them in.

Where they outstrip the Canadians by far is virtue signalling, at home and internationally. They really love victim narratives and shame others for not engaging with it. Gender self ID came in 2015, refugees get official priority on all state services over the natives to the point there are many Irish children who can't go to school because they're full of the recent migrant waves.

What has me interested from the outside watching EU relations is they're currently rushing through a very dubiously worded bill designed to block trade from Israeli settlements in the West Bank, Golan Heights and Gaza which could actually be read to block all trade from Israel. Ireland has a huge trade surplus to Israel, but they'll cut it off purely because they need to cheerlead for Palestine.
 
Less authoritarian, but a lot more woke.

The Irish government isn't as directly confrontational as the Canadians. They don't tend to freeze bank accounts, and they don't have hate speech laws as of yet though they have had attempts to bring them in.

Where they outstrip the Canadians by far is virtue signalling, at home and internationally. They really love victim narratives and shame others for not engaging with it. Gender self ID came in 2015, refugees get priority on all state services over the natives to the point there are many Irish children who can't go to school because they're full of migrants. What has me interested drom the outside watching EU relations is they're currently rushing through a very dubiously worded bill designed to block trade from Israeli settlements in the West Bank, Golan Heights and Gaza which could be expanded to block all trade from Israel. Ireland has a huge trade surplus to Israel, but they'll cut it off purely because they need to cheerlead for Palestine.

Is there are chance that the Irish government will implement their own version of MAID, just to get rid of more "useless White people"?
 
Is there are chance that the Irish government will implement their own version of MAID, just to get rid of more "useless White people"?
Yes and without the referendum that most people assume is necessary. Ireland is, like the US, a constitutional republic, but the only reference to a right to life in the constitution was in the eight amendment which was removed in 2018, in a way that I suspect was deliberate to allow for assisted dying as well as abortion. I'd think it was a coincidence except for the fact that the same bill that allowed for same sex marriage, which was voted for in a constitutional referendum, also had Self-ID tacked onto it. So the government has a history of using popular referendums to sneak in their other shit.
 
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