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Niall Carson/PA Wire

Media face-off: Cowen and Martin take to the mics

Quotes from the Taoiseach and the Foreign Affairs Minister on their differing positions regarding Cowen’s continued party leadership…

TAOISEACH BRIAN COWEN AND Foreign Affairs Minister Micheal Martin have been appearing on national news programmes to present their different viewpoints on tomorrow’s motion of confidence in the Fianna Fáil leader.

The Fianna Fáil parliamentary party will vote tomorrow evening on a motion of confidence in Cowen as party leader.

Here are the highlights from this evening’s media appearances (although, unfortunately, they did not appear anywhere in a head-to-head):

On the confidence vote:

Brian Cowen: “We’re in a fight and we need a fighter to lead Fianna Fail into that election, to put the Fianna Fáil record straight, and I want to lead that fight. I can’t do it alone…We can have this good debate about it tomorrow and unite around that decision.”

BC: “As Taoiseach of the country, I can go out and articulate the context and content of the decisions we’ve had to make.”

BC: “Leaders don’t hold on; leaders are there based on the democratic mandate of the party.”

Micheal Martin: “The majority view of those I’ve spoken to in the party and across the country is that we’ll have a better chance of doing better in the election if we had a different leader… It might not be me…” (Martin mentions Mary Hanafin and Brian Lenihan as alternative party leaders).

MM: “My main concern is…the future of the party is at stake.”

MM: “There’s very little sign of a vibrant, vigorous election machine being put in place.”

MM: This leadership debate and discussion is “invigorating” and has been “good for the party”.

On canvassing:

BC: “I believe people are entitled to have an opinion”. He said he expects to have a “civilised chat” at the party meeting tomorrow ahead of the secret ballot.

BC: “I have no quibble with Micheal.”

MM: “It’s up to the other ministers and TDs to decide how to vote tomorrow”.

MM: The leadership issue didn’t come up before Christmas because the government had the four year plan, the budget and the IMF deal to get through and it “had to make sure those issues were dealt with”. Now that those have been “put away”,  an increasing number of TDs have been approaching Martin with concerns about Cowen’s leadership.

On the result:

BC: “I hope history will be kinder to me than that [not being able to handle the challenges he faced as Taoiseach]. They were certainly huge decisions, but we took them… Politicians are responsible to people.”

MM: “My resignation is on the table”, but Martin wouldn’t say if that means he will resign if Cowen wins the motion tomorrow. MM said he wouldn’t speak about that because he didn’t want other party members to be put under that kind of pressure as that’s not what this vote is about.

Quotes from live interviews given by Brian Cowen and Micheal Martin this evening on Newstalk’s The Right Hook, Today FM’s The Last Word, and RTÉ One’s Six One News.

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