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Labour hits rock bottom and the second-shortest serving TD ever: 6 election records made this year

The records behind the rise of Sinn Féin during the election tell their own story.

THE VOTES HAVE been counted, the seats have been filled and the dust has finally settled. Another election is finally over.

Plenty of headlines have been written about the huge gains made by Sinn Féin and the continued decline of Ireland’s two main parties.

But behind those stories, several records were also broken which all tell their own tale about the massive change that has occurred as a result of the election.

Here’s six of them.

1. The highest poll-topper

As we explained in an earlier piece, the fact that the nine highest first-preference votes in the country went to Sinn Féin was reflective of how well the party might have performed if it had run more than 42 candidates.

Nevertheless, it meant that Denise Mitchell won the country’s biggest first-preference share in Dublin Bay North with an incredible 21,344 votes – 9,409 votes over the quota.

That stands as one of the highest numbers of first preferences in the history of the State, comparable to Richard Mulcahy’s general election record of 22,205 votes in Dublin North in 1923.

2. First Taoiseach in second

Sinn Féin also pulled off a coup by beating Leo Varadkar to first in his own constituency of Dublin West, with the party’s Paul Donnelly elected at the first count.

No outgoing Taoiseach has ever failed to top the poll in their home constituency during a subsequent general election, but Donnelly took a staggering 12,456 votes in first, with the Taoiseach well behind him on 8,478.

Éamon de Valera is the only previous Taoiseach who took the second seat in a constituency in a subsequent election, and that was because Ceann Comhairle Patrick Hogan was automatically returned in Clare in 1954.

To make matters worse for Varadkar, the last time a Taoiseach failed to get his running mate elected was in 1987.

3. The big three

Many commentators have pointed to the election result as perhaps the beginning of a dominant three-party system in Irish politics.

Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael continued their downward share of the vote in recent years, dropping from 49.8% of first preferences to just 43.1% this time around.

Fine Gael’s 35 seats is the party’s fourth-worst performance ever, behind only 1943 (when it won 32 seats), 2002 and 1948 (31 seats) and 1944 (30 seats).

Likewise, Fianna Fáil’s 38 seats is its second-worst performance ever. It ranks behind 2011, when the party was almost wiped out and won just 20 seats.

And although we’ve seen the rise of third parties before (Labour in 1992 for example), Sinn Féin’s vote share is the first time any party has out-polled the big two.

What’s more, its 24.5% share is the highest vote ever achieved by a third party, over 5% above Labour’s 19.4% in 2011.

4. Changing of the guard

Perhaps what illustrates this new type of politics more than anything is the fact nearly a third of Ireland’s 39 constituencies elected Sinn Féin TDs for the first time since the party took its modern form in 1970.

Voters in Clare, Dublin Bay South, Dublin West, Galway West, Kildare North, Kildare South, Laois-Offaly, Longford-Westmeath, Mayo, Meath East, Roscommon-Galway, Tipperary and Wexford will all be represented by the party for the first time in the 33rd Dáil.

While some of these constituencies are relatively new, parts of the country they cover have never had a Sinn Féin TD at all, going back to the civil war.

On the other side, some constituencies will not be represented by one or both of the big two for the first time in generations.

Fine Gael failed to be elected in the new-ish Dublin North-West and Roscommon-Galway, Cork South-West or Waterford for the first time, the latter a run that stretches back to the foundation of the State (excluding the 1952 and 1966 by-elections).

Meanwhile, it is only the third time since 1923 that no Fianna Fáil TD will sit in Louth, while Dublin South-Central will not be represented by either party for the first time ever, in what is seen as a changing of the guard.

5. Labour’s demise

With an unofficial transfer pact in place among parties on the left, Labour could and probably should have improved upon its showing in 2017, when it won just 7 seats.

Instead, the party had its worst-ever general election result, winning just six seats – half that of the Green Party and the same as the Social Democrats, who appear to be hoovering up the party’s vote with younger candidates.

It appears as if the party is still suffering for its performance as a junior coalition partner in 2011, and it certainly didn’t help itself by placing old faces – including Joan Burton and Joe Costello – at the front of its campaign.

A fresh leadership contest beckons.

6. The second-shortest serving TD ever

Spare a thought for Malcolm Byrne. The Fianna Fáil TD won a seat to the Dáil for the first time in the Wexford by-election on 29 November last year.

By yesterday evening, he was out again, usurped by Johnny Mythen, Brendan Howlin, Verona Murphy, party colleague James Browne, and Paul Kehoe.

His 71-day tenure makes him the second-shortest serving TD ever, after Anti-H-Block TD Kieran Doherty, who died on hunger strike in August 1981, just 52 days after his election.

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    Mute Brendan Cullen
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    Feb 12th 2020, 7:31 AM

    When Labour aligned themselves to austerity & water charges they effectively signed their own political death warrant, and Joan Burton persuing her “captors” through the courts was the final nail in the coffin.

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    Mute Peter Hughes
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    Feb 12th 2020, 1:10 PM

    @Brendan Cullen: They are just a extension of FFG……same keep the gravy train rolling for certain sectors and screw everyone else.

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    Mute paul gurney
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    Feb 12th 2020, 1:19 PM

    @Brendan Cullen: yeah it was interesting how they kept Alan Kelly hidden for the campaign…

    16
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    Mute Al Fresco
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    Feb 12th 2020, 6:26 AM

    At last! Leo has achieved something!

    173
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    Mute Rathminder
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    Feb 12th 2020, 6:45 AM

    The thought of a three party system does not cheer me. We saw Labour’s mettle in 2011 onward. The voters have spoken on that. Now Sinn Fein has a chance to show theirs and to sway the nay-sayers who fear that it will be a return to militarism. Hopefully they will do what Labour didn’t, take care of the working people rather than the elite. Mary Lou, here’s your chance. If you focus on reunification rather than social issues you will lose the votes that you got this election.

    140
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    Mute Dec
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    Feb 12th 2020, 6:30 AM

    No one should be surprised that a left leaning party has performed so well in this election. Hopefully a new government will now focus on the pressing issues for young working people starting out on their professional careers – Rent prices, house prices, the health system and pay inequality. These issues among other issues, among others, have been a blight on our country for far too long.

    126
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    Mute thomas mckevitt
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    Feb 12th 2020, 8:04 AM

    How people forgot what the greens done is shocking

    104
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    Mute Carlin Ite
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    Feb 12th 2020, 6:51 AM

    If labour stood for something they might do better. They have no ideology. No passion. I would say go back to their roots but the people in labour I know don’t have any grá for the working class.

    135
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    Mute Valthebear
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    Feb 12th 2020, 7:14 AM

    The spectacle of Burton, Stagg, Costello, O’Sullivan out canvassing was ridiculous. Not ageist, but it was ridiculous that these people didn’t have the sense to retire and encourage younger candidates to stand. Very poor leadership from Howlin. But then, how long has he been around? If Labour had stayed out of government in 2011 by forcing FG to form a minority government , they could be looking at forming an administration now. Crazy stuff on their part. Whoever advises them is clueless.

    124
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    Mute David McCartney
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    Feb 12th 2020, 12:51 PM

    @Valthebear: Simple really, The lure of the BIG wage packet!

    21
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    Mute Thomas Sheridan
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    Feb 12th 2020, 7:46 AM

    If only FG had listened to their former supporters instead of turning on them at every opportunity

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    Mute Geoff Scargill
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    Feb 12th 2020, 8:05 AM

    So now Sinn Fein might actually have to do something instead of whinging from the sidelines. No doubt their hypocrisy and ineptitude will now be exposed.

    54
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    Mute stevenw
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    Feb 12th 2020, 9:41 AM

    @Geoff Scargill: Sour grapes Geoff?? Or is just that you earn over 100k

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    Mute Barry Russell
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    Feb 12th 2020, 12:46 PM

    @stevenw: You do understand the people who are that level are already paying the highest level of tax, that is how are tax system works.

    Top 5% of earners, earned over €100,000 in income and paid 40% of personal tax.

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    Mute Kevin Lonergan
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    Feb 12th 2020, 1:02 PM

    @stevenw: The bitterness being displayed by FF and FG is extreme, trying to re-hash the campaign although they lost. Loads of people on here saying ‘but FF and FG got way more seats than Sinn Fein’, actually admitting that they are now one party in all but name. The 100K figure gets bandied about a lot, in error. According to the manifesto those earning up to 100K will pay less tax and the people who will pay most are those earning over 140K and those who have accumulated wealth (excluding the value of a family / first home).

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    Mute Daniel Kelly
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    Feb 12th 2020, 1:54 PM

    @Barry Russell: Do none of them pension park any of their earnings? You know at the lower rate of tax?

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    Mute Peter McGlynn
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    Feb 12th 2020, 6:47 AM

    The alternative was Fianna Fáil who are still looking very dates especially when you look at some of their opposites in Sinn Fein – Eoin O’Broin and Pearse Doherty. I mean they’ve little or no recognisable stars. Micheal Martin was poor on figures – MacDonald looked much more watertight – he reminded people of Adams in 2016 I reckon.

    26
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    Mute Ger O'Reilly
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    Feb 12th 2020, 10:13 AM

    They sold their political souls to the devil on more than one occasion and have paid the price. It says something about a so called left wing party that is more comfortable going into coalition with a right wing party than their more natural partners. True champagne socialists. Including their €10000 a night hotel staying El presidente

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    Mute Stanley Marsh
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    Feb 12th 2020, 10:12 AM

    Power is going to be like kryptonite for Sinn Fein if they manage to form a government.

    It’ll be interesting to see what will happen when they realise you can’t suddenly magic up houses and apartments or hospital wards / beds.

    It’ll also be interesting to see what landlords’ reactions will be when their rental income is controlled.

    Interesting times ahead for Local Authority / Health Board management once reality slaps Sinn Fein in the face.

    14
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    Mute Patman
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    Feb 12th 2020, 12:48 PM

    labour are too embedded with the Public Service unions – they only represent the Public Sector

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    Mute Pat Kelly
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    Feb 22nd 2020, 9:11 PM

    I still dont see why everyone ” killed” labour and let the other parties walk all over them.. apply the same standards to FF & FG and then no one is left standing!

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