Maman Poulet | Clucking away crookedly through media, politics and life

Down with this sort of thing

June 9th, 2010 · LGBT, Same Sex Partnerships


(Enoc Burke – Campaign for Conscience, Photo from Red Mum)

You may have heard there are a few protesters against the Civil Partnership Bill 2009 outside Leinster House for the past few months.  From various Christian groups they are calling for a freedom of conscience clause for registrars and others as well as opposing rights for same sex couples. The protest seems to have increased a bit this week which is a bit strange as the bill is not being debated and indeed the Dáil is not talking about much at all this week and the Seanad is not meeting at all. But let’s not concentrate on tactics but hear about what they believe in.

Steven Conlon from the Tallyman blog today interviewed Paul McLoughlin from the Christian Solidarity and Enoc Burke from the Campaign for Conscience. The interviews (particularly with Burke) make for interesting listening.

I know that a number of other groups have been trying to get an audience (!) with the Oireachtas Committee on Justice, Equality and Law Reform to put their point across about the bill.  They have asked but got no reply so they are lobbying other Deputies to ask for intercession.  The correspondence below was sent on behalf of Women in the Home and the National Men’s Council of Ireland (love the way the women can’t do their own asking!) Roger is also Executive Director of something called the Family Rights and Responsibilities Institute of Ireland. So many organisations, so little time!

Re: Request for  an audience to submit a report on the Civil Partnerships
Bill
For the attention of:  Dail Deputies,

Dear Deputy,

The following letter was sent to Deputy Brendan Kenneally, Chairman of the
Justice, Equality, Defence and Women’s Rights Joint Committee and to Clerk
to the Committee, Mr. Alan Guidon in an effort to secure an audience with
their Committee so that we may make a submission in relation to the
proposed Civil Partnerships Bill.

As nearly a week has passed and we have not received even an
acknowledgement could you please use your good offices to assist us in
making our submission on behalf of the Family men and women of Ireland.

We believe that the Bill is flawed and that the passing of the Bill in its
current format will fail the test of Constitutionality and so to progress
the Bill through the Oireachtas will put an unnecessary further drain on
the public purse.

God bless, Roger Eldridge
Executive Director, Family Rights and Responsibilities Institute of
Ireland, Knockvicar,
Boyle, Co. Roscommon
familyrightsinstitute@eircom.net

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Attention: Deputy Brendan Kenneally, Chairman of the Justice, Equality,
Defence and Women’s Rights Joint Committee, Houses of the Oireachtas,
Kildare Street, Dublin 2.

Attention: Clerk to the Committee, Mr. Alan Guidon

Dear Sirs

On behalf of Women in the Home and the National Mens Council of Ireland,
the Family Rights and Responsibilities Institute of Ireland requests an
audience to submit a report to the Committee on the merits or otherwise of
the proposed Civil Partnerships Bill.

We believe that the Bill is flawed and that the passing of the Bill in its
current format will fail the test of Constitutionality.

To prevent any further drain on the public purse we humbly request an
opportunity to present our arguments to your Committee for the benefit of
the Oireachtas before it is passed out of your Committee.

Please contact me at the number below or by email to set up an appointment
that is mutually convenient.

God bless,  Roger Eldridge

Chairman, National Mens Council of Ireland
Executive Director, Family Rights and Responsibilities Institute of Ireland
National Office: Knockvicar, Boyle, Co. Roscommon
Website: www.family-men.com Email: familymen@eircom.net

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

“To help us advance along the path of human maturity, the Church
teaches us to respect and foster the marvellous reality of the
indissoluble Marriage between man and woman which is also the origin of
the Family. To recognise and assist this institution is one of the
greatest services which can be rendered nowadays to the Common Good and
to the authentic development of individuals and societies, as well as
the best means of ensuring the dignity, equality and true freedom of
the human person.

“Everything that serves to weaken the Family based on the Marriage of a
man and a woman, everything that directly or indirectly stands in the
way of its openness to the responsible acceptance of a new life,
everything that obstructs its right to be primarily responsible for the
education of its children, constitutes an objective obstacle on the
road to peace.”
“Whoever, even unknowingly, circumvents the institution of the Family
undermines peace in the entire community, national and international,
since s/he weakens what is in effect the primary agency of peace,”

Pope Benedict XVI’s message for the January 1 World Day of Peace in
2007

These outfits are only getting warmed up – wait for the Constitutional Referendum on Children’s Rights  where if you thought Lisbon Campaigns were nasty you will learn a whole new lesson in negative, scare tactic campaigning.

* The title for this post comes from Will St. Ledgers brilliant video of the Campaign for Conscience protest earlier this year.

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The Holiday Home Loophole

June 8th, 2010 · Irish Politics

More information comes to light regarding the matter of holiday homes and why they are not declared in members interests. Ken Foxe in an article last month in the Sunday Tribune wrote about a loophole in members interests rules which mean that TD’s and Senators do not have to list their official residence or holiday home in their declarations

This clarifies why Senator Ivor Callely owns a house in Dublin and the house in West Cork and does not have to declare them. All other properties are in his wife’s name so do not have to be declared either.

And this loophole is one exploited by other members of the Oireachtas. The reason we have declarations of members interests is supposed to be about openness and transparency and highlighting of conflicts of interests. A TD could own two houses, their spouse and children could own ten and still register that they had no property interests and people reading the register could think that the TD and their family don’t own a roof tile. The situation is as clear as mud so.

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And the winners are? Michael Lowry’s giveaway

June 8th, 2010 · Irish Politics, Social Media

Yesterday Michael Lowry TD gave away those 20 weekend Oxygen (camping included) tickets to constituents – he has youtubed the draw. Note that he knew all the acts appearing as he dropped then into the presentation with ease. No idea still if he paid for the tickets himself. He was assisted by a member of the Tipperary senior hurling team. I love the abrupt ending with no thanks or good wishes to the winners – just a direction to the lackey to turn off the camera.

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Ivor Callely’s House – more than a mileage issue?

June 6th, 2010 · Irish Politics

I’m back from the land of serrano ham, great weather and good company (fully paid for by myself) but while I was away I did catch Ivor Callely’s statement to the Seanad as he made it.  It’s on video if you missed it!

I have had a number of people get in touch about the matter making sure I knew about it (I did) and filling in a few details. Some of you remember my previous interest on Ivor’s painting dilemmas.

Many thanks to the feathered friend who has pointed out that the Senator’s Cork residence is not listed in his members interests declaration in 2008 and 2009.  The house is referred to frequently in the press as the Senator’s holiday home and it’s on the market at the moment for about €650,000. See the particulars here.

So if it’s Ivor’s principal residence (or at least it was while he was recovering from the defeat in the last general election or flipping it for the expenses) why did Senator Callely not declare it in his entry into the register of members interests?

Update

The property may well be listed as being registered in Mrs Callely’s name however the Senator refers to it today as ‘our holiday home’

“I had go get out of Clontarf. Fairly soon after the election I went to Cork, to our holiday home, and I stayed there. I was there when Bertie appointed me to the Senate.

“As far as I was concerned, that was where I was living. I didn’t want to come back to Clontarf. I stayed there in Cork for a considerable period of time.

“I may have been up and down for the Senate. I may have spent a night in Clontarf, or somewhere else in Dublin. But, as far as I was concerned, I was based in Cork.

The Sunday Times also refer to ‘his holiday home’.

The matter of joint ownerships of properties is covered by the members interest legislation but spousal ownership is not. It’s a bit convenient?

Update 2

See this review earlier this year of the Callely’s property portfolio.

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Guest Post – Universal Healthcare

June 4th, 2010 · Blogging, Equality, Irish Politics

Al writes about Universal Healthcare and the reasons behind a new Irish campaign on the subject

How many more TV or Radio programmes will we watch and listen to about the health services before we shout stop.  Prime Time, Frontline, Pat Kenny, Joe Duffy and many other shows have featured heartbreaking stories about people waiting for days to be admitted from Emergency Departments, older people whose families cannot get the help they need to look after them, people waiting months for appointments for tests, to see a consultant, children who cannot live at home and have to go to a garda station each night to try and get a bed in a hostel, children in care who cannot get the services they need.

The list is endless and it goes on and on.  Groundhog Day doesn’t begin to describe it. What is going on? Who is responsible? Is it the Minister? Is it the Department of Health?  Is it the HSE? Where does the buck stop?  Where does the money go? What is the budget of close to €15 billion spent on and how come in a country of just over 4 million people, with over 40% of it’s population covered by Private Health Insurance we are still going round in circles? How come?  How come when so many people have written about the state of the health services, Susie Long, Rebecca O’ Malley,  Maurice Nelligan, John Crown, Niamh Brennan, Fintan O’ Toole, Sarah Burke, Maeve-Ann Wren and many more we still seem to be in the same old place.

Well here’s the thing…….Prime Time, Frontline, Pat Kenny, Joe Duffy all bring in the HSE to account for what has gone wrong but they don’t mention, talk about or confront the elephants in the room.

The first one and it’s probably the biggest is how we finance our health services.  We have a health system which is unfair, it is inequitable, it is a two tier system of public money and private health insurance with a “for profit part�? element which is expanding – private for profit hospitals, co location of private hospitals, private finance to build primary care centres.  Access is based not on need but on ability to pay. How many times do we need to say that before the penny drops and we seriously look and change how we finance the health services? The next one is closely linked to the first, those working in the health services work on the basis of being individual contractors, e.g. Consultants, GP’s, Radiographers, Speech & Language Therapists, Nurses, Psychologists, etc.  They are aligned to their professional organisations, they care about their patients/clients but are they accountable?

Here’s the next one, the health services are made up of hospitals both public and voluntary (always thought that was a complete misnomer!)  and social care agencies who are aligned to their own management boards. They get public funding but their main line of accountability is to their own Boards of Management. Here’s the next one, the HSE is not an executive, the definition of Executive is “A person or group having administrative or managerial authority in an organization�? the HSE does not have authority be it administrative or managerial rather it is the Patsy for what is wrong with our health and social services.  A Patsy is the fall guy who is blamed and ridiculed. Listen to the consultants, the doctors, the nurses, the social workers, the psychologists, the radiographers, etc they talk about “them�? and who is “them�? well of course it’s the HSE. But, they don’t work for the HSE, oh they get paid by the HSE, they have HSE terms and conditions of work but they don’t see themselves as being part of or working for the HSE. Read the papers, listen to the radio, watch the television and you will know that the only people working in the HSE are administrators and managers and sure we know there are too many of them! All the HSE does is cut budgets and close services! Here’s the last elephant, its successive governments who have continued to propagate and support the two tier system alongside protecting the medical led status quo.

Well enough is enough.  We believe there is a chance to change things.  We are coming up to a general election and between now and the election we want to build a coalition for change, a coalition that says loud and clear we no longer want a two tier health system, we want a fair and equitable health service which is open to people based on need. A health service which provides health and social services based on need and not on ability to pay. A health service which is able to harness the professional expertise, knowledge and practitioner base it needs to provide the totality of health and social services for its population without a divide between public and private.  There will be no public and private, there will be one health service.  This will not be easy, it will be a mountain to climb, it will mean confronting the elephants in the room.  But, we believe it can be done and the time to begin is now.  By building a strong coalition for change, a coalition for a Universal Health Service we will be calling on all the political parties to come to the electorate with a detailed plan of how they will put in place a Universal Health Service.

You can find out more, join our coalition, support us by logging on to http://www.iuhc.org/

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