The Minister for Justice and Law Reform, Dermot Ahern has signed the commencement order which sees the Civil Partnership and Certain Rights of Cohabitants Act 2010 come into effect.
GLEN released photos of the signing event – it is very unusual to see a signing event take place in Ireland, reminiscent of President Obama and other US presidents who have signing ceremonies in the USA when bills are enacted.
(Minister for Justice and Law Reform signs the Order enacting the Civil Partnership and Certain Rights of Cohabitants Act 2010 looked on by Kieran Rose, Chairperson of GLEN – Pic:Tommy Lee)
Couples wishing to enter into a civil partnership will have to give three months notice to the Civil Registrar and can do so from January 1 or the date that the office reopens. This means that the first Civil Partnership Ceremony will take place in early April. Those who have civil partnerships or marriages from other jurisdictions will now have their relationships recognised in Ireland from early January.
Also the tax and social welfare codes will come into effect then which means that couples will be assessed for social welfare and those cohabiting will be classed as dependent on each other.
I know that other countries are not coping with the weather very well either.
And I know this is an ‘unique weather event.’
However from being stuck at home for most of this month so far due to the risk of injury and lack of mobility I have been able to listen to a lot of media and watch the Government Emergency preparedness briefings where spokepersons go through the motions and don’t get much questioning at all.
Sean O’Neill from the National Roads Authority has been most spectacular in his spinability and the way he has ducked and dived and indeed had no questions lobbed at him. In Sneachta1 it was clear that the NRA was in charge of ordering the salt and ordering how it should be used. It’s the same in Sneachta2 but he is now saying that local authorities could also do their own thing. Over the border there is a salt mine and local government who ‘seem’ to do their job well – well better than us and better funded (although not for much longer). On the salt mine Sean O’Neill says they don’t order from there and can’t go get any now as it’s all promised to others and told listeners on the Last Word last night that ‘we’ don’t understand international salt ordering politics. We’re waiting on deliveries from Egypt and other places.
The lack of funding available to local authorities to get any money of their own to buy salt to do local roads and paths is really scandalous. And there will be no money for any emergency in Dublin next year according to the City Manager and Dublin is one of the ‘richer’ counties in terms of rates.
Outside of Dublin there are thousands of people who have not been out of their houses for weeks and have had little let up at all between the two cold periods. Our lack of an effective social services sector and the way that responsiblity is given to the non profit and volunteer sector means that people living in different areas are receiving very diverse types of support.
We don’t see ministers out shovelling snow or managing the emergency and there are advertisements in papers telling those that notice that they can clear their driveways without fear of being sued. However as we are a country with no leadership we have no leader that can stand up and call on people to clear the paths or face questioning about why we can’t cope or why the roads are not prepared.
The Interagency Emergency committee tells people to take public transport however getting to the bus or from the bus or train was near impossible as the paths were not treated for days as the car/truck was far more important.
Last night South County Dublin came to a standstill as roads were not treated and the local authorities even if they had the salt do not have enough ploughs to treat them.
We have spent millions and millions building roads under the Celtic Tiger which the NRA are very precious about. Very little on public transport or pathways. Loads on bikes and cycle paths too.
This is what happens when a country spends money on roads but not enough on how to keep them open – last night in Dublin.
Meanwhile Junior Minister Mary White is sleeping rough in Carlow tonight to ‘raise awareness’. This will do little to help the two homeless people who died in Dublin over the weekend. It won’t count the rough sleepers in Dublin who now have to be counted by volunteers. It won’t provide more social housing or it won’t replace the social housing to be sold off by her government as announced in the budget earlier this month. It won’t finish the ghost estates and apartment blocks transferred to NAMA. Does the Minister not think after the third significant cold spell in one year that people are not aware of homelessness already?
If she did it and told nobody about it till afterwards then I might respect her decision a little bit. If I heard something about housing as a human rights issue. There are a whole lot of if’s but there’s been a press release and a decision somewhere that this was a good idea.
The parties are getting their houses in order or maybe in a spin – news from Fine Gael. Warning! US based election guru’s are on the Irish horizon. Visiting Ireland recently was founder and CEO of Electionmall.com and former candidate for the Republican Party, Ravi Singh.
Singh has been travelling Europe recently and advising members of the European Peoples Party which of course include Fine Gael. Ravi has been hired by EPP with a view to advising on the 2014 European Parliament Elections and he’s talking to Fine Gael with #GE11 looming quickly. ElectionMall has been around for a while but recently got some Microsoft juice.
In partnership with Microsoft, Election Mall recently launched a product called “Campaign Cloud,” which allows candidates to create a Website, create and store a list of supporters, map out their districts, manage campaign events and import fundraising widgets that make managing funds and donors simple and easy.
Ravi helpfully tweeted a picture of himself in Dublin at the beginning of the month during a recent visit.
I’m really looking forward to seeing all this Fine Gael online engagement and voter management!
Maybe they can hold a briefing on the subject for those of us interested in online engagement and election management?
Talking of engagement I heard that over the weekend Amarach Research were polling for Fine Gael (phone research) asking people what they think of election slogans like ‘End the Crisis’ or ‘Get Ireland Working’. Thrilling eh?
Seeing a tweet after midnight on a Saturday night from a Cabinet Minister had me wondering about who was up so late telling his constituency and followers about the latest programme they could benefit from (Cabinet Ministers are rare on twitter and they never engage, it’s usually to announce something in terms of funding or a new road, never to slag off their oppenents – all that might change next year though!).
I don’t think it’s usual for TD’s to use PR companies for local work. The website is the Minister’s personal site rather than departmental.
Now it’s possible that he is using allowances for constituency staffing to pay the PR company but he would have additional resources as a Minister which mean that he can free up the constituency support available to TD’s to hire the PR company. (Thus placing opponents at an even greater disadvantage in terms of the resources available to them.)
No word of Minister Killeen retiring from politics so possibly this move to using a PR company and getting online is in preparation for his election campaign. I look forward to hearing more about who is paying the bill.
A flurry of selection conventions and resignation announcements have been taking place in the past month or so as preparations commence for a general election in the spring. It is hard to keep up with them all though some selections are more memorable than others.
At the time that the statement was made (which the Councillor stood by and did not retract) Labour LGBT made a complaint regarding the Councillor’s comments to the Labour Party for internal investigation.
A recent enquiry to the Labour Party has established that the party could not proceed with the investigation. A copy of a letter from the party general secretary to Labour LGBT stated that the party’s legal advisor said that as Keaveney ‘has not called for discrimination against transgendered persons, rather he has called for priority to be given to what he sees as more urgent medical needs’, no action could be taken.
The party’s General Secretary stated that she would not associate herself with the Councillor’s comments, and believed that ‘all citizens should be treated with respect and dignity.’
Comment has been sought from Labour LGBT who made the complaint but no reply was received.
Shortly after Cllr Keaveney’s selection a second candidate was added to the Labour ticket in Galway East by head office. Lorraine Higgins is a barrister from Galway who ran as an independent candidate in the local elections in 2009.