Leo Varadkar steps down as Taoiseach and FG Leader - Irish PM announces resignation

Source -RTE News / Archive

Leo Varadkar steps down as Taoiseach and FG Leader

Updated / Wednesday, 20 Mar 2024 13:34

By Mícheál Lehane, Political Correspondent

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Speaking at Leinster House, Leo Varadkar said that being Taoiseach has been the most fulfilling time of his life (Pic: RollingNews.ie)


Leo Varadkar has announced he is stepping down as Taoiseach and Fine Gael leader.

Speaking at Leinster House, he said that being Taoiseach has been the most fulfilling time of his life, with Ireland becoming a more equal and modern place, including for women and LGBT people.

He said that he is resigning as Fine Gael leader now, and will remain as Taoiseach until a new party leader is elected after the Easter recess.

His successor will have a full two months before the local and European elections in June, he said.



"My reasons for stepping down are both personal and political ... I believe the re-election of this three party Government will be the right thing for the future of our country," he added.

"After careful consideration, and some soul searching, I believe a new Taoiseach will be better placed than me to achieve that.

He added that "after seven years in office, I don't feel I'm the best person for that job anymore".





The Cabinet had been meeting in Government Buildings in advance of the announcement.

This morning there had been intense speculation about the Taoiseach's future.

The Government parties say that they do not expect today's announcement to trigger a general election.

Leo Varadkar: Ireland's youngest Taoiseach moves on after two terms

First elected in 2007, the now 45-year-old Mr Varadkar has previously said he would not stay in politics beyond the age of 50.

In 2011 Mr Varadkar was appointed as minister for transport by then-taoiseach Enda Kenny, before taking up the health portfolio in 2014.

He became Taoiseach in 2017, after beating Simon Coveney in the race to succeed Mr Kenny. He was the youngest person to hold the post.


Leo Varadkar with Micheál Martin and Green Party leader Eamon Ryan in 2022
Following the 2020 general election, and the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, a coalition agreement was reached between Fine Gael, Fianna Fáil and the Green Party.

That agreement saw Fianna Fáil's Micheál Martin become Taoiseach, with Mr Varadkar in the role of Tánaiste.

These roles were reversed in December 2022, with Mr Varadkar returning as Taoiseach for a second time as part of a deal with the coalition.

The announcement has caught many of his party colleagues by surprise.

It is anticipated that a Fine Gael leadership contest will now get under way.

The stability of the coalition Government is not thought to be in question at this point.

Varadkar welcomed Stormont return in resignation announcement

Mr Varadkar's time in office coincided with two separate periods of Stormont collapse which amounted to five years where devolution was in cold storage.

The first was when Sinn Féin withdrew in 2017 for three years and then again in 2022 when it was the DUP that pulled the plug.

He cited the fact that the institutions of the Good Friday Agreement were back up and running as one of the reasons why it was as "good a time as any" to step down.

Much of Mr Varadkar's efforts in that time were concentrated on trying to navigate a route to the re-establishment of power-sharing through the choppy waters of Brexit.

He was in Belfast last month when the Stormont Assembly finally reconvened after the DUP did a deal with the British government.

Also in town was the British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, but it was a somewhat surreal experience.

Both were in Belfast at the same time for the same occasion, but it certainly could not have been described as a joint visit.

There was a feeling in British circles that Mr Varadkar had inserted himself into a day that rightly belonged to their man.

But the Fine Gael leader’s efforts to right the ship of devolution were appreciated in many circles.

SDLP leader Colum Eastwood said he always found him to be "direct, supportive and willing to do whatever he could to support the political process in the North".

He had been a "relentless ally", Mr Eastwood said.

Unionists had a more jaundiced view.

They blamed him for Irish Sea border checks accusing him of raising the potential of a return of violence if they were to be established along the 300 mile land border between North and South.

They also did not welcome his talk about the possibility of a united Ireland in his lifetime and the need for a Plan B if the political institutions at Stormont could not be restored.

There was a muted response in unionist circles to the news that he was going. The only immediate public comment was from Ulster Unionist leader Doug Beattie who acknowledged it had come as a surprise.

He wished Mr Varadkar well, adding: "We look forward to working with his successor in a constructive manner, fostering good relationships."




I think its safe to say that someone's cranky about the recent referendum being btfo lmao.

Apologies if format is shit, this is babby's first A&N OP
 

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Means band or military formation of Fál (Fáil is genetive) which can mean anything from Ireland to learning but is translated as Destiny so 'Soldiers of Destiny' as the coronation stone of the old Irish kings on Tara, the Lia Fáil, came to be seen as the Irish version of the Scottish Stone of Destiny (or Scone), so Fál became 'destiny'. I think most Irish people might see them as the Army of Fail.
Fianna Fáil (pronounced fee-nah fall) is iirc taken from our national anthem which contains that phrase in the main chorus. It does indeed mean soldiers of destiny but frankly they've never been as badass as the name would make them out to be.


Speaking as Irish and as someone who was born on this island and lived here all my life, people aren't happy with current events. We've more migrants than we can handle, the health service is underfunded and over demanded and the welfare system is incredibly easy to game which is why we have so many opportunistic migrants coming here in the first place. I've worked as a civil servant and I can tell you right here right now, that the state DOES have money for funding shit, but they're allocating it to the wrong places. People are riding all their hopes on Sinn Fein now as they haven't realized that they're full Marxist and believe that they will fix all the shit we're in and make rent affordable again, but realistically that's not going to happen if they do get in as every single one of these motherfuckers are extremely self serving. Europe meanwhile doesn't understand it either as they don't get that we're a small country compared to most other EU member states and we don't have the same capacity or infrastructure to deal with shit as they do (inb4 muh famine level population was much bigger than modern days). Everything is centered in Dublin which is why all of the bullshit happens there and the city has a homeless epidemic. We have reached the point where we have no housing for migrants and refugees and we put them up in literal tent cities.

I'm seeing more and more "Ireland is Full" stickers and anti migrant graffiti whenever I leave the house. Something is going to happen eventually and it's going to be within the next couple of years if not this year, and it's going to be very unpleasant.
 
Is there any party in Ireland that isn't total shit on immigration, woke degeneracy, etc.? What are the minor parties like, do any of them have anything interesting to offer that could conceivably make them attractive enough to become a major party or at least a real contender on the Irish political scene, like a migrant cap that's even marginally below 'infinity and you're racist if you disagree'?
 
Is there any party in Ireland that isn't total shit on immigration, woke degeneracy, etc.? What are the minor parties like, do any of them have anything interesting to offer that could conceivably make them attractive enough to become a major party or at least a real contender on the Irish political scene, like a migrant cap that's even marginally below 'infinity and you're racist if you disagree'?
Honestly, only Aontu (one member in parliament) and The National Party (glows in the dark) are the two parties that come to mind that oppose any of the things you've mentioned. However, regardless of what problems we have, people routinely keep voting for the same few parties and I think a lot of that is because they really don't understand how serious the issues we have are, they take candidates and their promises at face value, and most of all, they want today to be like yesterday and tomorrow to be just like today. On top of that, we have a proportional representation system when it comes to votes, so it's possible that the party that actually got the most amount of votes in a general election could be superseded by two parties who combine their votes and form a joint party coalition to rule as is the case with the current government in power.

Putting it bluntly and looking at the past 30 or so years of parties in power, the fact all these motherfuckers are basically a family business and the amount of scandals regarding bribery and finance that came out over the years: we are so fucked that it's unreal.
 
Im not kidding when I say that Ireland has probably the most ineffective, powerless and brainless leadership of any country in the western world and thsts really saying something. The only reason we’ve somehow bumbled our way down the years without collapsing into anarchy is because of gibs from the EU, but now they’re expecting repayment in the form of twenty billion rapeugees, and our leaders are more than happy to throw the gates open wide for their globohomo masters.
 
Speaking as Irish and as someone who was born on this island and lived here all my life, people aren't happy with current events. We've more migrants than we can handle, the health service is underfunded and over demanded and the welfare system is incredibly easy to game which is why we have so many opportunistic migrants coming here in the first place. I've worked as a civil servant and I can tell you right here right now, that the state DOES have money for funding shit, but they're allocating it to the wrong places. People are riding all their hopes on Sinn Fein now as they haven't realized that they're full Marxist and believe that they will fix all the shit we're in and make rent affordable again, but realistically that's not going to happen if they do get in as every single one of these motherfuckers are extremely self serving. Europe meanwhile doesn't understand it either as they don't get that we're a small country compared to most other EU member states and we don't have the same capacity or infrastructure to deal with shit as they do (inb4 muh famine level population was much bigger than modern days). Everything is centered in Dublin which is why all of the bullshit happens there and the city has a homeless epidemic. We have reached the point where we have no housing for migrants and refugees and we put them up in literal tent cities.
no sorry, you're wrong. according to the shit skins it's actually because Ireland is controlled by Zionists despite being the most anti Israel country in Europe:

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I now know where all the vowels that the Welsh lost went, they floated across the Irish Sea.
Aontú are (Provisional) Sinn Féin without the support for abortion, moderation on mass immigration and no links to crime. They were created after a parliamentarian was expelled for opposing abortion. The problem as shown by another called the National Party who split over the ownership of unprovenanced gold bars is small parties can have nasty personal issues and unprofessional, often compromised members.

I will say that mysterious fires erupting in accommodation intended for migrants and the riots in O'Connell St (a regular protest followed by violence and looting by a mob who were frankly multi racial. They might argue, but Adidas is eternal) have had a bigger role. The police and army together have barely 20k personnel, so rowdy laws have to be respected.

I see vids of slightly menacing looking characters who say they're approaching accommodation owners who then assure the character there's no migrant in his hostel / hotel / pub. What works works 💪.
 
Aontú are (Provisional) Sinn Féin without the support for abortion, moderation on mass immigration and no links to crime. They were created after a parliamentarian was expelled for opposing abortion. The problem as shown by another called the National Party who split over the ownership of unprovenanced gold bars is small parties can have nasty personal issues and unprofessional, often compromised members.

I will say that mysterious fires erupting in accommodation intended for migrants and the riots in O'Connell St (a regular protest followed by violence and looting by a mob who were frankly multi racial. They might argue, but Adidas is eternal) have had a bigger role. The police and army together have barely 20k personnel, so rowdy laws have to be respected.

I see vids of slightly menacing looking characters who say they're approaching accommodation owners who then assure the character there's no migrant in his hostel / hotel / pub. What works works 💪.

People in more rural counties with low population densities like Donegal and Leitrim are upset and angry because these counties do not have adequate infrastructure to house a large amount of unvetted migrants and many of their hotels that formerly brought in revenue are now being turned into direct provision centres by greedy businessmen. The inhabitants living there have pushed back like in Buncrana and Dromahair where the local population literally stopped a bus load of unvetted migrants coming in to the settlements.

There's already a demographic replacement in some areas in Ireland like Longford or Ballyhaunis in Mayo where almost 40% of the population are not even ethnically Irish. No wonder why people are calling this a new plantation.
 
I most certainly hope so.
Ireland is special in West Europe. Not a former colonial state, but basically an ethnostate that was colonized, and yet still subjected to mass migration and hate speech legislation.
This, and 'our democracy' justifies it it as payback for all the Irish who permanently immigrated overseas or were sent there by Anglo or Morrocan/Barbary slavers.
Thing is, the Irish in Ireland are the ones who stayed home and didn't impose themselves on other countries.
Is there any party in Ireland that isn't total shit on immigration, woke degeneracy, etc.?
They'd hate to be called Irish, but the Democrat Unionist party in Northern Ireland are the only real conservatives to actually hold power this decade, both in NI and London.
 
At the very least he had the decency to resign. His replacement will be another piece of shit though.
 
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