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

Tick Tock

November 22nd, 2010 · Elections, Irish Politics

Fianna Fáil Ministers are in an emergency meeting about the Green Party statement this morning. Backbenchers calling on Cowen to resign.

A pre Christmas election?

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Green Party Press Release

November 22nd, 2010 · Uncategorized

The past week has been a traumatic one for the Irish electorate. People feel misled and betrayed.

The Green Party believes three things must be done in the coming two months to safeguard the future prosperity and independence of the Irish people.

These are:

  • Producing a credible four-year plan to show we can make our Budgets balance by 2014.
  • Delivering a Budget for 2011.
  • Securing funding support from the EU and IMF which will respect vital Irish interests and restore stability to the Euro area.

We have always said that our involvement in government would only continue as long as it was for the benefit of the Irish people. Leaving the country without a government while these matters are unresolved would be very damaging and would breach our duty of care.

But we have now reached a point where the Irish people need political certainty to take them beyond the coming two months. So, we believe it is time to fix a date for a general election in the second half of January 2011.

We made our decision last Saturday after a long series of meetings.

Since entering government in June 2007, we in the Green Party have worked to fix and reform the economy. It has been difficult.  We have taken tough decisions and put the national interest first.

We cannot go back and reverse the property bubble and the reckless banking which we consistently spoke opposed. Nor can we control the market turmoil which has afflicted the Euro area.

We have taken extensive measures to recognise the losses and stabilise our banking system. However, it is now clear we need further measures to give market confidence about our banks and public finances.

We are now discussing ways of restoring stability to the banking system with the support of our European colleagues and the IMF.  We have to ensure that the terms of any such support are in the interests of the Irish people and the wider Euro area. The timeframe for achieving a four-year plan, Budget 2011 and a good outcome from IMF/EU talks is very short. These matters must at this stage take priority ahead of everything else.

Despite our difficulties and disappointments, I believe we can get out of this situation. We must all work together to ensure the best outcome for everyone.

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You’d think they would give up gracefully

November 21st, 2010 · Elections, Irish Politics

But no this is Fianna Fáil, the weekend before a bye-election. Eamon O’Cuiv who is director of elections for the bye election and his party are exhorting members to phone and email their friends who live in Donegal South West. They also encourage the use of Facebook and twitter – ah FF finally using social media to it’s full potential when nobody is feeling very social towards them.

Members are told to ‘Expose the alternative’.

“Explain that it’s the local issues that matter most to Brian: “This is about the recovery in Donegal, not politics as usual in Dublin. We need to have an honest campaign about the future.”

So there you  are – Politics as Usual are not a good thing admit FF. Previous campaigns have not been honest.

And neither is this one lads.

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Ireland Inc. bankrupt not only financially

November 19th, 2010 · Elections, Irish Politics, Personal, Recession

You have probably seen it already. I’m hoping that it was genuine anger and not thinking about the next election. My reaction and those of thousands of people was ‘at long last’ after a truly terrible week and many terrible weeks to come somebody turned to a Government Minister and said stop the lying, look at what you have done, look at the state of us.

Our country has been brought to penury alright, and will remain in penury.

Personally I do not know if anyone else can fix this. Yes the ECB and IMF will ‘fix’ it for us – and not in a good way.  But the lack of leadership in Ireland on all sides of the political divide is scary.  There are about five people in the Dáil who may be good in a government, who understand their brief before they get it and want to learn how to fix things if they don’t know and won’t be swayed by ‘Public Affairs Consultants’ on large retainers to corporate bodies or dependent on the votes of independent TD’s to stay in government.

Our banking system is broke, our economic system is in tatters but so is politics, leadership and decision making and it has been for some time.   Nobody has been able to tell us that we were in a mess and that things need to change and that yes it is going to be terrible but that they will act in the national interest rather than their own and be believable.

Candidates for an election have been selected already or will be shortly – and they are generally councillors who have worked their way up the ‘system’ or the family members of sitting TD’s – already in the system and continuing the arsing about. (Look at the Wicklow Labour Party Convention on Sunday night next if you want to see what I am talking about.)

If we remain a country who selects it’s public servants on the basis of fixing holes in roads, providing voters with a citizens information service (which is already provided for by the state) or who they were the child/wife/brother of or played GAA for then we will remain a failed nation.  We do not elect legislators or policy specialists.  We elect teachers, a few solicitors, a few doctors, publicans.  We don’t elect many scientists, CEO’s, mothers, nurses, artists, engineers, accountants, entrepreneurs, administrators, social policy researchers.

If this country is to recover we need to reform how we pick people to stand for public office, what we expect them to do and how we expect them to do it. Clientelism has got to go. We must sort out the issue of how men lead this country and women don’t want to or can’t seem to be allowed to. And stop fecking talking about quotas providing privilege and unfair advantage. It is simply un-natural in a modern world for a country to be ruled by a parliament made up of 87% men. Find a way for women who can lead and know something about running a country to be able to enter public service on behalf of their neighbours, male and female. We must find a way for all the leaders and legislators who are out there to be able to come forward, be selected, voted for and not have to climb the greasy pole to do so.  Get rid of the pole.

We also have a media that has failed us in not being able to answer the questions and sometimes being prevented in asking them.  When chairpersons of public utilities can stop the publication and investigation of stories and corruption by calling editors and making threats.  When media ownership in this country is placed in the hands of so few.  Where property sections flourished and nobody shouted stop or ridiculed those that did for talking the economy down.  It was never about people having enough, it was always about having more, wanting more, the latest ‘more’.  And it was increasingly about opinion and comment and not news or why something was being done the way it was.

All those arguments about the public versus the private sector, the haves versus the have nots, how stupid do they look now? When we see what greed, cute hoorism, turning the other cheek and then picking up the pieces by guaranteeing corrupt banks has actually done to us. This was financial BSE – banks feeding money to themselves (staff and directors) to buy developments, funding developers and offering them more like it was smarties they were giving out. Governments when they weren’t giving people tax incentives to do this were making money from these practices – cyclical systems feeding each other, and the temperature going up all the time.

We kept being told we were a rich nation, yet people still waited on hospital trollies, people died waiting for cancer to be diagnosed beause they were not ‘private patients’, basic education was far from free, transport ticketing systems could not be integrated and the Luas never joined up.  Children and adults were abused for decades in systems overseen by the state and we still could not change or enforce the laws and make sure that their rights were protected.

And then the notion of the rich country dissappeared and the banks failed. For months the European Central Bank and European Monetary bodies have been trying to get in to fix it, to get the government to admit that they made the wrong choices and that something had to be done because of the threat to other nations.  Billions were bandied about and nobody knows what a billion is anymore we owe so many of them or need so many of them to remain a nation in hock.  People outside this country speculated on our debt in the form of bonds – taking bets on us and we owed them money and it was expensive money.

Last weekend the European number-crunchers said no more and started briefing against our Government and still the denials came from Merrion Street and on international media where viewers cringed when they saw the likes of Dick Roche spinning rubbish over and over and over again.

There is still a lot of money in this country and there is still an economy. But there is also real poverty, real exclusion and a deficit of hope. There are people with disabilities worrying about whether someone will come to visit their house to get them out of bed in the morning and help them live their lives. There are families wondering how they will cope with children they can’t parent. The houses that were built and bought with mortgages that should never have been given will remain huge stressors as people can’t pay for them and worry about where they are to live.  There are people who never owned a house wondering if they ever will.  There are thousands who do not know the ECB and IMF are here and don’t want to know either. There are bags being packed and plans being made and people leaving and being lost and the pool of people to pick from to fix the country will diminish even further.

And still we have no leadership. One leader or one party is not going to fix this. Our current electoral system of checks and balances aka multiple seat constituencies has to change radically so that we can find leaders who are literate in how to do things and how to change things. And if anyone mentions needing an Obama please kick them in a place where it hurts.  If a bishop pops up his head saying we need prayer please do likewise – it won’t be long now but they will.

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Donegal South West Round Up Uimhir a Dó

November 18th, 2010 · Elections, Irish Politics

There’s Pearse Doherty on top of a pole, he’s also on top of the Paddy Power commissioned Red C Poll of how voters intend to vote in the by-election next week.  The poll conducted amongst over 500 voters (+/- 4.4%)  showed that Doherty would poll 40% of first preferences, with O’Domhnaill following in second with 19% with  Barry O’Neill on 15 per cent and  Frank McBrearty on 14 per cent.  Independents Thomas Pringle polled 8% and Anne Sweeney 2%.

Doherty does well on the transfer front from all candidates which would guarantee his election.  The poll also found that  voters thought that Labour Party leader Eamon Gilmore would make the best Taoiseach after the next general election.

More photos arriving into the hen house, this is Frank McBrearty’s family business in Raphoe, the pub is called the Parting Glass – it seems to have a VIP room. Well it definitely has a VIP wall.   Frank appeared with the other candidates on RTE’s Frontline programme on Monday Night. He was quiet enough untill someone questioned why we should be interested in Donegal.

Now Frank seems rather popular on the internet, he may be too busy campaigning to notice but he does have a Fake Twitter Account and that for some is a sign of permanent celebrity.

Some people are blogging the bye-election.  Neil Ward, a Labour Party Staff member is working on his first every bye-election. Conor McGarry went up to Donegal to canvass last weekend on behalf of Fianna Fáil and survived and was surprised by the reaction. Wonder how many will be going up next weekend.

Neil came across the first protest posters of the round ups yesterday in Bundoran.

A public information notice for internet candidate Anne Sweeney – Anne some voters want to wish you well and ask you questions – you  may wish to reply to them here.

Finally I said I would like to get all the candidates included poster wise and thanks to Joe I have a picture of a Thomas Pringle poster and so the collection is complete. (Unless Anne Sweeney has changed her mind and there are posters about? )   I believe there are Eamon Gilmore posters in Donegal too as per local and general elections.  Any sign of Brian Cowen up any poles?

As usual pics, news, posts, betting odds are all welcome to tips (@) mamanpoulet.com

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