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Michael D Higgins has been elected President of Ireland for a second term.
The incumbent president was re-elected with 822,566 first preference votes, the public overwhelmingly backing him to serve another seven years in the post.
His 55.8% of the vote is just shy of the record 56.3% achieved by Éamon DeValera in 1959.
Peter Casey has become a massive side-story of the day after surging from the bottom of the polls to take second place.
And let’s not forget the blasphemy referendum – which looks to be passed by an almost 2:1 majority.
In the hours after the exit polls were released Gavin Duffy was the only one to acknowledge them.
@rtenews exit poll. President Higgins 58% Casey 21% Ní Riada 7% Freeman & Gallagher 6%, me last 2%. Thank you to those who voted for me. I value every vote. I wish our President every good wish for his second term. pic.twitter.com/ElURaSFMIv
The exit poll results suggest that Michael D Higgins will be elected on the first count.
We’ll have the first boxes opened from 9am this morning at the 28 count centres across the country. The first job will be to determine the quota – the number of votes required to be elected president is 50% of the total valid poll plus one vote.
Seven years ago, Higgins reached the quota and was elected after the fourth count.
There has been a lot of discussion overnight about the man expected to come in second place. Peter Casey surged from 1% just two weeks ago to an expected 21% if the exit polls are accurate.
During that time, Casey was accused of racism for several comments he made about the Travelling Community.
This jump in support after the controversial comments is likely to be the major talking point today.
Peter Casey’s 21% result was predictable. But what is needed now is a considered careful analysis of what it reveals. Not jumping to a lazy analysis that says it was about just one issue. Not just looking to attack or dismiss it. We all need to look at ourselves. #Aras18
I don’t believe all those who voted for Peter Casey are inherently racist. Disillusionment with politics, the way the country has been run, and memories of the devastating economic crash, could be factors.
Peter Casey getting 21% is unspeakably grim, but honestly that’s what we get for amplifying his views, giving him reams of coverage and making him the story of the campaign 🤷♀️
The first appearance by Peter Casey this morning on Newstalk with Pat Kenny. He said his campaign team asked him to pull out of the race after the first week of campaigning.
He said the vote is just a “little blip in the road”. He’s promised to campaign heavily to create mandatory retirement at the age of 80 for politicians.
Casey also ruled out running for local elections as “that’s too much hard work”.
We’re going to take quite a long time, probably till lunchtime to decide what to do next.
Referring to the exit polls showing President Micheal D Higgins has won the election Casey said: “By the way this isn’t over yet.”
Newstalk
Newstalk
On his comments about Travellers during the election campaign: “I regret not coming down harder on Martin Collins – he’s the person responsible for showing leadership at Pavee Point, he’s a disgrace.”
When asked whether he felt like he had stoked up anti-Traveller sentiment, he responded: “I brought to the fore something that was there already.”
We’ve been hearing from our reporter Cónal Thomas, who is at the Convention Centre in Dublin. He said counting kicked off at 9am sharp and “is going at a steady clip”.
“There are over 200 (217 to be exact) counters here today checking ballot papers. Boxes still being opened.”
Sinn Féin’s Pearse Doherty has been speaking to RTÉ’s Morning Ireland about his party’s candidate Liadh Ní Riada.
He said he is disappointed about the exit poll results, but he thinks Sinn Féin made the right call.
Doherty also said that one feature Ní Riada introduced to the debate was discussion about Irish unity. He said there were discussions in the debates that would have have happened without her participation.
Peter Casey back on the radio again there – this time with RTÉ. When asked whether he thought his comments about the Traveller Community gave him that last minute bump, he said: “No, absolutely not.”
He said those comments had “nothing to do with” his surge in popularity.
It was the fact that I pointed out that middle Ireland, people who get up in the morning and get out to work, they’re just feeling tired. They’re feeling nobody is listening to them.
RTÉ News
RTÉ News
He has indicated that this isn’t the last we will be seeing him him. He won’t be drawn on whether he’ll run in the next general election but he said he will do something that “makes a difference”.
Kathleen Lawrence of Pavee Point has been speaking to Morning Ireland. She, not surprisingly, disagrees with Casey’s view on how he managed to move into second place.
“There is no way he would have jumped from 1% to 20% without making those comments about Travellers and people on welfare. It’s a very worrying development in Irish politics that he used negative election stuff from America and brought it to Ireland – and used the race card,” she said.
Kathleen Lawrence said it was disheartening to see the exit poll results. RTÉ News
RTÉ News
All he has done is made the country more divisive.
Lawrence said it was “disheartening” to see the jump in support after Casey’s comments.
I am very proud to be Irish but also very proud to say I’m an Irish Traveller. It’s a shame and a disgrace that he feels it’s okay to turn around and say we shouldn’t be recognised for who we are.
She said the media needs to realise that it “can be manipulated” into giving space to anti-Traveller rhetoric “just by giving the news”.
“I am jubilant that Michael D Higgins has been re-elected as a President who has symbolised inclusion equality and respect during his term in office.”
“The people have spoken and said racism division and hatred has no place in the Irish democratic process. It will not be tolerated.”
The Pavee Point spokesperson, responding to Casey’s personal attack on him this morning, said he has “represented his community at national and international level for several decades and will continue to do so”.
Just to add to the spoiled votes, our reporter Cónal Thomas at the Convention Centre in Dublin said he’s been told of others with “Bobby Sands” and “Gemma O’Doherty” on them.
O’Doherty, of course, had hoped to gain enough local authority support to make it onto the ballot but was unsuccessful.
Michael D Higgins’ campaign team are obviously happy campers today.
“People voted for dignity. People see Michael D Higgins as a competent President who we can all be proud of, who in inclusive and speaks for all of us” Bernard Harbour, Communications Director on @morningireland#aras18#APresidentForUsAll
Cónal has the latest tally from Dublin South-Central, where Higgins is at 63% with 40% of boxes open.
Dublin South Central - 40% of boxes open - has Higgins at 63%, Casey at 13.3%, Ní Riada 9.3%, Freeman at 6.9%, Gallagher at 4.2% and Duffy at 1.5%. pic.twitter.com/VgLAoVyU1u
Cónal has also give us some more detail about spoiled votes:
“At the bottom of each clipboard sits the ‘spoiled votes’ box where markers tick off how many invalid votes have been counted.
With just over two hours of counting complete, we’re told that so far we’ve had a “Gemma O’Doherty” and a handful of “No abortion” messages scrawled across ballot papers.
“Bobby Sands” has featured too here this morning as have some, we’re told, “tastefully” drawn male body parts.
“Dustin the Turkey” is always a feature on election days, one counter tells us.
“Another says they have seen anti-traveller comments written above Peter Casey on the ballot paper.”
It will get much busier there later though, and Nicky will be bringing us the latest, as will our political reporter Christina Finn who will be shortly joining him there.
Activist Eileen Ní Fhloinn, writing for TheJournal.ie today, says this is “a worrying time for Travellers”.
“Is every fifth person I meet a Traveller hater?” she asks.
My community was once welcomed into communities, we brought our tinsmith skills, our poetry, our stories and songs. Sadly Irish society changed; it has become obsessed with wealth and property and that property is worth more than the life of any Traveller.
Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald, speaking to RTÉ’s Marian Finucane, said she believes the party “fielded the best candidate in the election”.
She also spoke of how Liadh Ní Riada brought discussions to this campaign that would not have been there if she had not taken part:
“It would be irresponsible not to talk about Irish unity. I dearly wish for unionists to be part of that conversation.”
Mary Lou McDonald speaking to reporters at the Covention Centre in Dublin earlier. Cónal Thomas / TheJournal.ie
Cónal Thomas / TheJournal.ie / TheJournal.ie
When asked whether she would be blamed for Ní Riada’s poor performance, she said:
“I’m tempted to be flippant and say I get the blame for everything.”
Gemma O’Doherty has weighed in on the voters who wrote her name on their ballots.
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We’ve just heard from the Convention Centre that there were 20 ballot papers with her name written on them in one box from Terenure in South Dublin alone.
Seán Gallagher has released a statement congratulating Michael D Higgins.
Today the most important thing is not just that the people have spoken but that they have had an opportunity to speak in the ballot box. That is the true value of our democracy. #Aras18#Aras2018 (1 of 2)
It is clear President Michael D Higgins @MichaelDHiggins will be re-elected for a second term and I congratulate him and wish him success in the years ahead. #Aras18#Aras2018 (2 of 2)
We should not forgot that there was a second vote yesterday – on whether to remove the offence of blasphemy from the Constitution – so let’s talk about that.
The count centres are focusing on the presidential vote count at the moment, so only have very early tallies on the blasphemy referendum vote. But the Irish Times exit poll last night has the referendum passing by 69% to 31% while the RTÉ exit poll has it passing by 71% to 29%.
To help voters decide, we had a debate in TheJournal.ie office earlier in the week between campaigners on either side of the debate.
One of those people was Colum Kenny, emeritus professor of communications at DCU and a former member of the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland and our reporter Nicky Ryan caught up with him this afternoon at Dublin Castle.
Kenny, who had been advocating for a No vote, said he was “not very surprised” by the exit poll results.
Sam Boal
Sam Boal
He was encouraging people to vote against removing blasphemy from the Constitution because he “felt it was a move by the government to show they were doing something”.
I think the referendum is the minimal you can do to look like you’re doing something.
He said he believes there are “far more serious issues that need to be attended that make this country look far more backward”.
“It’s an excuse for not tackling bigger issues like control of schools and the health service by denominational institutions,” he said. “More in relation to freedom of expression, defamation law and the way it’s used by the rich and powerful to chill free speech. And the cost of law to assert any rights citizens have.”
“Let’s not kid ourselves that this is a great, progressive day. “
Atheist Ireland members are celebrating already as it looks like they will have a comfortable win:
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Atheist Ireland and the Labour Party at the Dublin Count Centre, celebrating what looks like a comprehensive win in the #BlasphemyRefpic.twitter.com/cDnpOyh6hI
In a statement last night, the association thanked everyone who had campaigned for nearly a decade to make this referendum happen.
“If the exit polls are accurate, this will be a great result for freedom of religion, belief, and speech, and for Irish politics based on integrity instead of nods and winks.
“We will have removed a medieval crime, that was added to our constitution in 1937, and crowbarred into our statute books a decade ago.
“Our laws will be able to protect people from harm, not protect ideas from criticism, and our media outlets will no longer have to self censor themselves.”
Speaking to Newstalk, former Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams TD was asked whether the decision to run a candidate was a strategic error by Mary Lou McDonald.
“It was the right thing to contest the election and Liadh, who I know, was an exemplary candidate,” Adams said.
The Louth TD said that he felt a “sense of irrelevancy” among voters in his area yesterday but that party activists must also take responsibility for not getting the Sinn Féin vote out.
“I’m also acknowledging that we who are active in Louth and East Meath, we failed to get the vote out.”
If the exit polls are correct, only Michael D Higgins and Peter Casey are likely to get their expenses back.
Candidates can recoup a maximum of €200,000 of their expenses from the State.
But in order to do so, each candidate needs to geta quarter of the quota in that particular election at any stage during the count. That’s 12.5% of the total unspoiled votes.
How the candidates funded their campaigns:
Independent Senator Joan Freeman was given €120,000 from an old friend and businessman Des Walsh to fund her campaign.
Millionaires Seán Gallagher, Gavin Duffy, and Peter Casey funded their presidential campaigns through their own private funds.
Liadh Ní Riada was funded by her party, Sinn Féin.
Michael D Higgins, who received €70,000 in funding from his former party, Labour, also started an online campaign for costs such as posters and leaflets.
We only have one official declaration so far, but if you want to keep an eye on them as they come in, or check back later on your own constituency, we’ll have all the results here for you.
“It was hard if you were somebody who wanted to talk about the challenges that we’re facing in our society,” he tells reporters. “It was hard to find the space to do that, but I can only accept the blame for that myself.”
He said he acknowledges that he didn’t do enough to connect with the people of Ireland.
Duffy, whose share of the vote is predicted to be around the 2% mark, has said he has no regrets about running.
“The first thing I want to say is the people have spoken and they’ve spoken very very clearly with a large mandate, we’ll learn later on it could be a historic mandate for my president and your president Michael D Higgins. And I want to wish him all the best and extend every good wish to him.
“For myself, I am disappointed when you contest and you don’t really compete. But no regrets, genuinely. I think the issues that I’ve raised, and I accept the blame here, if they didn’t resonate with the public it’s perhaps that I’m slightly ahead of where the public concerns are around the changes in society.”
Our reporter Cónal Thomas has been given a peek at some of the spoiled votes from Dublin North West.
Can you spot the one that says “Would prefer Bertie 2025?”. Keep an eye out for the voter who brought their own red pen along too, so they could scrawl ‘None of the above’.
As we await the results for Dublin Central at the Convention Centre here are the spoiled votes from Dublin North West - plenty of anti-abortion messages in there. pic.twitter.com/h7zjRwzs6f
Reports suggesting extremely low turnout in some areas:
9% turnout in some boxes in Jobstown according to RTE...not one person on that ballot represented working class people like the good people of Jobstown. Plain and simple #Áras18
Lest we forget about blasphemy referendum, Justice Minister Charlie Flanagan wants us to know he’s delighted with the exit poll projections.
Delighted with exit poll projections in the #BlasphemyRef - another reflection of the strong public support for a modern liberal Constitution pic.twitter.com/LN8iCKmoDJ
Sinn Féin candidate Liadh Ní Riada was just speaking to RTÉ. She said she wants now to see Michael D Higgins lead a discussion on a united Ireland and she is “confident he will do that”.
The said the rally she did in Belfast was the high point of her campaign.
Seán Gallagher has also made an appearance at Dublin Castle, telling reporters “democracy has spoken”:
Seán Gallagher on whether today’s defeat is worse than 2011: ‘In the life of anybody who has ever stepped forward to do anything, you take the highs and the lows’ #Aras18pic.twitter.com/AQVsiJl3iz
Some more from Seán Gallagher, who has said that he is “disappointed that the vote is not higher”.
“Like everything in my life I participate and then I move on – I learn the lessons I can and then continue to participate best I can,” aid Gallagher. “
The 2011 runner up said he didn’t decide to run until August and he got the feedback from local authorities that they would support him.
But he also laid some of the blame on the fact it was such a short election, when seven years ago he had five months to prepare for the election and build momentum.
He said that there was a failure to get the electorate engaged in the election, and that the candidates were “facing an incumbent who has half a century of political life behind him”. “It was very difficult for anyone to break through of that,” he said.
He added that he wishes President Higgins and his wife Sabina well.
Asked if it mattered that he was one of three Dragons’ Den stars in the race, he said “you can only participate with whoever else is in the race”.
Regarding his previous run, he said that Ireland was in a different place then with different issues.
He said that the high point of his campaign was the launch of his campaign in Cavan, and the low point was “just hearing the result”.
Joan Freeman has released a statement saying that she’s disappointed, but added that Michael D Higgins will “will continue to be a great ambassador for this country”.
She also said that “This campaign made me fall in love with Ireland all over again.”
Presidential candidate Joan Freeman has released a statement saying that she's disappointed, but added that Michael D Higgins will "will continue to be a great ambassador for this country". #Áras18pic.twitter.com/Cuhhq7kcLP
Liadh Ní Riada has thanked her supporters and said that Sinn Féin’s campaign has ensured “that there was no coronation & that a united Ireland” was on the agenda.
A cháirde, I want to say a big míle buíochas for all your support and hard work over the past six weeks.
We certainly made sure that there was no coronation & that a United Ireland is firmly back on the agenda. We've just started to climb the mountain, agus beidh lá eile ann. pic.twitter.com/EPLzvpKo0u
Peter Casey is on RTÉ’s Six One News speaking about his result. He says the support he received was because of a variety of reasons.
“The result I received has come from the ordinary person who gets up for work and can’t see the light at the end of the tunnel,” he tells Caitríona Perry.
Pushed on whether he will run for office again in Ireland, Casey is non-committal but insists he’s not going away:
Taoiseach Leo Varadkar is also reacting to the results now. He describes it as a “historic” win for Michael D Higgins.
“What’s certain now is he’s ahead of the poll in every constituency in in the country and it’s a very strong endorsement of Michael D Higgins,” Varadkar states.
He is asked about Peter Casey’s vote but says “it’s important not to lose sight of who’s won here”.
“In terms of Peter Casey’s vote there were different elements to it, certainly some of it was anti-Traveller sentiment and I can’t condone that, but some of it was people making a protest at various different things and when people register a protest, whether it’s on the streets or in the ballot box the government has to listen to that,” Varadkar says.
The Taoiseach also says that the exit poll result, which puts Fine Gael at 13 percentage points ahead of Fianna Fáil, does not put him the mood for a general election.
He notes that Enda Kenny’s government recognised Traveller ethnicity but that they “never thought for a second that that was the end of it”, he says that education is vital.
Taoiseach says he wants the Travelling community to know this government respects them. He says there was an anti-Traveller sentiment in the vote and he cannnot condone that pic.twitter.com/wrIHPuZfrj
The counting on the referendum has to wait because the presidential election has priority and will be concluded first before formal results of the referendum come in.
Once the presidential count is concluded though, referendum results could come quickly as many constituencies will have them started, or even completed, before the presidential result is official.
But they’re very likely to hold over on announcing anything until tomorrow.
“I accept that mandate with humility but also with excitement,” he says.
He says that the Presidency of Ireland draws its strengths from its mandate, and that the President represents Ireland “in all its strengths and vulnerabilities”.
In his victory speech, Michael D Higgins also thanks “his great partner in public life” Sabina.
27 Oct 2018
7:54PM
“I will also represent your voice, Ireland’s voice, in challenges that are global,” Higgins says, referencing climate change and Brexit.
27 Oct 2018
7:56PM
“We are in a time of transformation… Ireland is in a new independent space where new possibilities can emerge,” Higgins says
“We must also face the future with inclusion and creativity,” he says, referencing the 1919 centenary celebrations next year.
I will be a President for all the people, for those who voted for me and for those who did not because I love this country.
Dublin Castle is now hearing concessions speeches from the defeated candidates.
Sean Gallagher says it has been an honour, and thanks all who supported him.
‘Cynicism does not create change,’ says Gallagher, adding that change happens when people step forward and away from the sidelines pic.twitter.com/pJrMW7SUIm
Here are the final results. Higgins 822,566 votes is the biggest number of first preference votes ever received in a presidential election.
TheJournal.ie
TheJournal.ie
27 Oct 2018
8:41PM
It’s now confirmed that, this has been the lowest turnout in Irish presidential election history.
The turnout for the presidential election was 43.87%, with 1,492,338 casting a vote, resulting in 1,473,900 valid votes. The Irish electorate comprises of 3,229,672 people.
The lowest turnout had been in 1997, when 47.6% of the electorate or around 1.26 million people voted, and Mary McAleese won.
Another confirmation, and this one bad news for one of the candidates.
Gavin Duffy’s 2.2% of the vote makes his first preference share the lowest ever by a candidate for the presidency. Less than Mary Davis and Dana in 2011.
In this election and the previous two, there has been a greater number of candidates contesting for the presidency, diluting the vote and making smaller votes more likely.
Spare a thought for Michael Nugent and his colleagues from Atheist Ireland who are waiting patiently for a result of the blasphemy referendum. Literally, judging by this photo.
On that, the returning officer will be announcing the results at any point in the next hour or so.
This liveblog is finishing up now, so we won’t be writing about it here.
But we are still collating all the results of the blasphemy referendum as they come in. At present 13/40 constituencies have reported their results, with the Yes vote leading by just under 2:1.
So with that blasphemous update we’ll bid you goodnight.
Michael D Higgins is president again for seven more years, join us tomorrow for all the reaction.
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News reports last night were saying people were surprised to get a second ballad paper , did not know anything about the blasphemy law referendum, Well if people are that badly informed when casting a vote, not surprised Higgins has a huge lead.
@Dáithí O Raghailaigh: the blasphemy referendum was just a ball of smoke…the coverage / information about it was practically non existent and all-in-all whether it’s changed doesn’t make one iota of difference. As regards the presidental election the field of runners was of such a low calibre that it’s no surprise the incumbent keeps the reigns/ what would be of concern to fg&ff is that this was the lowest EVER turnout for a Presidential election that cost €15million. Also the fact that Peter Casey in spite of Leo & co saying NOT to vote for him looks like attaining 20%+ of the votes….1 in 5 of the people who actually did bother to vote.Not a good election for the ‘ establishment’ no matter what Leo’s spin machine says
@Frank Dubogovik: Non existent Frank? I saw ads about it on TV and heard the topic being debated on radio and TV news. Also received information to my house. Where have you had your head for the last few weeks?!
@Reg: , if there was a minimum IQ requirement to vote this current shower wouldn’t be allowed sweep the car park in Dail Eirann.
Gift horse and all that !!!
@Dáithí O Raghailaigh: higgins is no saint but casey supports his bank balance and isnt is a rebel for anything, hes just using hate as trump did to get ahead he’ll rob your taxes same as the establishment, casey lost put that trump wanna be back in his box if you are with casey you arent with humanity, maybe he can relaunch renua lol I didnt vote for casey but I did vote against him dont let anti democratic forces like casey or leo mislead you unless you are a divisive white/corporate supremacist then both should get your vote
But Casey’s surge in popularity has to resonate with the Irish political class.
We don’t want to be spoon fed waffle and empty promises, we want people to come out and give an honest account of reality, and then we can judge the credibility and application the politician is putting forward. Not lies.
Don’t see how Casey’s ideas about Travelers was going to help, but he said it like it was for many people. Leo and co need to come out next General Election and give it to the public straight about the Health service, homelessness, and the myriad of other problems that can at minimum can be alleviated to a degree with the right attitude.
@Hellenize Dublin: Not a chance of that happening unfortunately. Leo, Murphy and Harris are constantly on the airwaves stating that things are improving in their respective departments when clearly things are getting worse. To report such nonsense and keep a straight face is actually quite frightening when you think about it. They have no morals or integrity and to force feed such lies and nonsense down peoples necks is very shocking indeed.
@Hellenize Dublin: That’s it. Next election we’ll have candidates mumbling incoherently like Casey. They’ll get in after a few comments about a minority in society, and like Casey will support Irexit, or some other suicidal notion. Hopefully people will see through the Trump playbook.
@Hellenize Dublin: a lot of people are missing huge issues with Casey’s surge. these are not right wing lunatics to counter the leftist lunatics. it is fairer centrist politics to counter the right leaning conservatism of ff/ff/lab. people don’t see fairness in systems that can be abused by anyone, individual or group, and they need people to agree with them. Higgins won by votes from sleepwalking over 50s and blinkered millennials (my own kids voted him “because he’s squiggledey” or some vacous reason) not being engaged in politics, and that will change once we get a political version of Casey.
@Gulliver Foyle: ‘right leaning lab’, you might need to read their policies prior to making such comments rather than just following the PBP rhetoric, the other 2 are right of centre alright.
Oh, and I’m a professional in his 30s who voted Higgins, so not sure how I match your stereotype of a Higgins voter
@Hellenize Dublin: The renua party got nowhere in elections at 0%. but i would say a far right party based on hatred to minorities would do well going on casey’s success.
@Joanne Martin: Do you think that you would benefit if there was no welfare at all? it goes straight back in to the economy anyway. it wouldn’t go to the sqeezed middle. the wealthy just want to divide and rule
@Hellenize Dublin: So I guess you would have no issue with folks in the UK saying we are all filthy washed up drunk Paddy’s?, its ok because its the truth right?….you type of people have no idea the dangers of people who single out the weak for their own gain…..I know someone in Germany who done similar but I can’t think of his name for some reason can you?
@Hellenize Dublin: So I guess you would have no issue with folks in the UK saying we are all filthy washed up drunk Paddy’s?, its ok because its the truth right?….you type of people have no idea the dangers of people who single out the weak for their own gain…..I know someone in Germany who done similar but I can’t think of his name for some reason can you?
@TheHeathen: and you just follow the hype and media like the sheep you are Higgins came across as pompous arrogant and self entitled and if the campaign went on longer more people would have seen that
@ Martin O Donnell: More irony, it’s everywhere today. The hype was Casey. The sheep were Casey’s followers. One comment about a minority, a political bogeyman, and away you went. ‘A man of the people’, ‘saying it like it is’. Such rubbish, such hype, such sheep. A member of the elite, a loon that supports leaving the EU, a mumbling populist, a man looking to get his deposit back. Since he wanted to bring up an inconsequential issue to the role, why didn’t he bring up a bigger issue in society? Health, housing, debt? Because that would shed some light in his golfing buddies and because he read the Trump playbook on how to fool sheeple, and he needed his deposit back. Probably has a tax bill in the US coming up.
@TheHeathen: are you for real Higgins acted arrogantly by not doing all the debates so u are quite happy to have someone who gets paid a huge salary but yet uses the 300k fund for his personal use u my friend are one of the 55 percent so a sheep by definition follow him just like ur masters told you
@Hellenize Dublin: Not sure why folks are even talking about Casey, he got approx 20 percent, its nowhere taxi for him and his merry band of racist followers period.
@Martin O Donnell: I hope you have evidence that he uses the 300k for personal use. No body has ever accused him of that. I hope he sues you for slander.
Miggledy was always gonna be a sure thing. But we’ll done to Peter Casey. For a few minutes a politician told the truth. THATS what the people want. Honesty.
@Kath Noonan: Peter Casey may as well have said “If I get elected I’ll give everyone in Ireland €10,000″ unreal that there is less than 5% of the population who fall for such simplistic sound-bites, we have a pretty good educational system by OECD standards, some people just aren’t suited to it though it seems.
@PaulineSmith: what’s worse is that 55 percent bought into the spin about Higgins unreal he never answered about dipping into the 300k for personal use even though he on a huge salary crazy that people go with the flow rather than look deeper into things
@The Bull McCabe: Paveee point Administrative expenses a few years back were 1,631,698 thats tax payers money, they are very comfortable without the Aras
It is clear evidence that it is time for a Rural Political Party based on Law and Order . FFG /Sinn Fein play lip service to dealing with Rural Crime and the concerns of Rural People .
A Rural Political Party is the only solution to this . The other Political parties have had more than enough time to get their finger out but they have done nada and are going to do nada .
@Pl O’neill: Yes, have your rural Party but recognise most of the money you get is from City PAYE workers paying your subsidies (without which you wouldn’t add survive).
No doubt the FF, FG and labour shower will spin this as an overwhelming endorsement of themselves but the fact is, if the turnout was around 50%, and higgins got say 58% of that, it means less than 30% of the electorate bothered to come out to vote for higgins, hardly as popular as they’d like to fool you into thinking.
@Adrian: reminds me of some time last year when pascal was on the radio trying to sell the results of a survey on the what public sector workers though of politicians, 56% bothered to reply, and about half said they trusted and valued the work of the politicians. So it was around 25% but to pascal, he was spinning the 56% as an overwhelming majority, discounting the crowd that didn’t reply!
@Neal Ireland Hello.: and that also applies to michael d. To emphasize a point, say if only 100k people voted, and 90k of them voted for michael d, does that mean that michael d is overwhelmingly popular, as popular as the establishment want you to believe, no!
Miggledy was always gonna be a sure thing. But look at what a moment of truth did for Peter Casey. THATS what the people want. Honesty in the politics.
Unbelievable how set in yer ways ye are, afraid of change? And then you all say the president has no say at all, doesn’t matter who it is up there, but vote for this buck who already had his turn he should be relaxing with his feet up in his own house enjoy retirement as anyone else does at 70 but no at 77 greed set in… I want more, and the Irish followers bowed down to him,
Good luck to ye.
@Mr Mystery: Set in our ways? I didn’t vote for Michael D. but I certainly wasn’t going to vote for a candidate whose rhetoric was more suited to 1930′s Europe, it’s Casey supporters who want to drag us back to the Dark Ages, thankfully there’s feck all of them.
@Mr Mystery: if he’s all about greed and milking the system, explain to me why he’s handed back to the state every year for the past seven years (and will presumably continue to hand back), pensions worth around 100 grand a year? Pensions he would be perfectly entitled to claim.
@Tweety McTweeter: disastrous result for the country 45 percent of the people actually showing some sense unfortunately still a majority are like sheep and believe the media hype and can’t think for themselves
@Martin O Donnell: @Dáithí O Raghailaigh: so Michael D with 55% of vote, then the bigots of this country voted for Peter C (because he says ‘what we’re all thinking’- heard that from 2 taxi drivers yesterday as well as every Trump supporter I’ve ever met) then the other 25% is split over 4 candidates most likely just their Geographical area of where they came from or those that they have known over the years- so basically your some of the country have sense comment is null and void. The country disagrees with you basically… resoundingly.
@Glenn O’hAilpín: not really the spin and the media got Higgins in Casey jumped from 1 percent …If this had being a much longer campaign the majority of people would have seen the spin for what it is Higgins came across as arrogant and entitled just not enough time for everyone to see that
@Martin O Donnell: or the people who see that Higgins is the best representative for the country got him in. Peter Casey jumped because he decided to spout shite that he knows people would buy and he would get some of his money back.
@Martin O Donnell: today I learned that anybody who holds an opinion that’s different from Tweety is a sheep and unable to this k for themselves. Some logic there
@Sam Harms: If Higgins is that good why didn’t he attend all the debates why did he lie about using the 300k for personal use get a grip man he is laughing all the way to the bank knowing that he has enough sheep to believe the spin
If MDH had been fair and announced his running in a timely manner there would have been more time to have better candidates. Once he did he was basically handed the Presidency by FF/FG/labour and the media and it was going to be an uphill battle for anyone without that Political Support. Delighted Casey got so many votes, not because of Travellers but because Leo said not too and hopefully its Trend and Leo is not elected again
Casey has been a poor candidate who transparently used negative tactics throughout his campaign. Yes, there are genuine concerns about elements of the Traveller community, but likewise settled citizens can be violent, criminal, dysfunctional, entitled, drug-addicted, bullying, abusive, irresponsible, offensive, etc. I’ve suffered directly from many members of a settled community in which I’ve lived in Dublin. It’s an issue that runs across all parts of this society.
It will be interesting are the exit polls accurate saying Casey is 21%. When the votes are counted will it actually be quite a bit higher than that? I am not sure these polls are in any way accurate.
@Accounting Pro: So you’re saying the people counting the votes can’t count? Think you’re getting mixed up with Casey voters there, the ones who all spent their money at the bookies backing him for a Number 1. Fools and their money!
@John O Brien: There’s 40,000 of them? We have bigger issues, like the near million on waiting lists, 200billion debt, schools falling down, corruption, squeezed middle and hard working lower class unable to buy houses, homelessness, useless political class in the pockets of the elites… even the fines coming from Europe on our inaction about climate change should be higher on the agenda than some tiny minority.
@Mark Murphy: I guess they don`t have the support they have??
Best thing you can do is to stick to your American politics along with all your tweets about your heroine killery Clinton.
@Pixie McMullen: they thought they had. For what’s it’s worth I actually gave her my number 1 vote. I thought she was a very good candidate. My point was I was very surprised so didn’t poll higher given I Pressumed they had much more support out there. Anyhow you clearly got upset about my comment so maybe go have a walk in the fresh air and clear your head for a while , you sound stressed.
Very clear that Peter Casey, whatever you think of his comments, struck a chord with the rural communities in this country. Wonder will any of the politicians take note?
Depressing day on one hand for Ireland but bit more optimism around as anti establishment rhetoric starting to ring true now only if we could have a GE and get the sock monster out
Looks like it’ll be full steam ahead with the Gravy Train for another seven years. As a nation we get the leadership we deserve. It’s not like the UK where they’ve no say in who their head of state is.
Poor Liadh and SF had a disaster. Understandable when she showed that the SF clatter about the average industrial wage is nonsense. She also had a very poor understanding of the constitution. A very limited candidate overall.
SF supporters were quick to abandon her – but then they always do less than the polls indicate in elections.
Poor Liadh and SF had a disaster – understandable when she showed that the SF clatter about the average industrial wage is nonsense. She also had a very poor understanding of the constitution. A very limited candidate overall.
SF supporters were quick to abandon her – but then they always do less than the polls indicate in elections.
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