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Anybody in politics is probably ready in their mind for government, but whether you can address it and carry out the action when you get it is another thing.
CHRISTY BURKE HAS said he believes Sinn Féin should remain in opposition following the next General Election.
Dublin’s Lord Mayor was a long-time member of the party until he became an independent three days after the local elections in 2009.
Burke told TheJournal.ie that Sinn Féin is “as ready as anybody” to enter government but said, if he was still a member, he wouldn’t favour such a move.
Time will tell and then the people will tell if they are [ready] … If I was a member of Sinn Féin I’d probably say: ‘No, stay in opposition because if you go into government as a junior partner it’s a poisoned chalice and you’re hung out to dry.’
Have a look at the history: PDs, Greens, Labour … the smaller one will take the hit. You go anywhere in the Dublin central constituency, no one mentions ‘Fine Gael are cutting the children’s allowance’, they say Labour cut it.
He said Sinn Féin will need to “tread carefully”, but added: “It’s their call, they’re more than capable … let them at it.”
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Mary Lou McDonald, Gerry Adams and Lynn Boylan (File photo) Sam Boal / Photocall Ireland
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Burke said anyone who described his decision to leave the party so soon after being re-elected as disingenuous had their “head in the clouds”.
I would have got elected on my work record. If there were a few die-hard Shinners in the area who believed they voted me in, I did tell them they were welcome to have their votes back in the next election and I’d prove them wrong – and I did.
“It was time for me to move on. It was time for me to vote with my conscience, not the whip.”
Independent Alliance
Burke is considering running for the Dáil in the next election. He has seven previous failed attempts under his belt, but isn’t put off by that.
He’s considering joining the Independent Alliance being set up by Shane Ross and Michael Fitzmaurice.
The addiction of politics is in me: 92% up there is saying ‘Go’, but there’s 8% saying: ‘Do you want it?’
Burke doesn’t have much time for Lucinda Creighton’s new party, describing it as “noise”. He said Fitzmaurice is more likely to set up a successful party despite being “only a wet day in the game”.
As for the current coalition? Burke said he’s “disgusted” with Labour for failing to protect the working class, as they had promised pre-election. He’s no fan of Fine Gael either, saying its handling of issues such as overcrowding in hospitals, medical cards, emigration and the introduction of water charges leaves a lot to be desired.
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With the policies SF have they can’t go into Government. Their populous policies are undeliverable and they know that, even if 20% of the electorate don’t.
Where as Ciaran I voted Labour last time and the shiiiite they and FG have poured out have turned me towards SF, all I hear is SF.. “if they get into power it will ruin us,” that seems to be it, thats the whole argument where as FF,FG and Labour have shown their true colours and there’s not a country to ruin any more the only good bits left are now owned by foreign investors who don’t give a shite about the rest of us
With so many political groups in this country, nobody gets the government they want even if they told the truth…. two parties join together who barely get 50% of the votes and then have to compromise on everything…. no wonder nobody is happy…
They would hang the country out to dry as well now that the Greek left has been exposed.
Bond spreads now over 10%, billions wiped off stock exchange, billions in cash leaving the country every day and Syriza committing extra public spend as we speak but yet rowing back on debt defaulting as if that will fix it anyway.
Most of us feared it here and now it’s happening in front of pur eyes.
They were warned and still pressed the self-destruct button.
Going to be very interesting hearing Paul Murphy, RBB, Sinn Fein etc defending this aporoach and blaming everybody else here for this aporoach failing.
James it’s early days in Greece,I’ll reserve judgement for just a while longer.Someone is going to blink and I think the Greeks have decided it’s a staring competition.
James I think you’ll find George is making the point they only formed a government 4 days ago,things will get worse for them before they get better.
How long do you think the EU will harangue Greece for if Moscow starts making overtures to Athens?
“sinn fein blaming everyone else for this approach failing”? Were Sinn Fein or Syriza or left wing parties governing in the times that led to the crisis? Did SF sell out the citizens of Ireland to the IMF in the first place? Dont worry about spreads when you cant afford any more debt in the first place! Would be hard to see how SF could f*** it up any worse than FF or FG/Labour.
If anybody thinks it would be harder to mess up an economy worse than the centre governments in Europe then keep an eye on Greece.
We don’t need to wait and ‘give Syriza a chance’ because it’s happening in front of our eyes.
No debt writedown will compensate for economic policy suicide and expanding a public sector beyond an economies capacity.
The left experiment is in full flow and it’s fascinating but sad to watch. Their choice is to row back or regress to a Third World country. As it stands Syriza have rowed back but it’s not half enough yet.
James – you may be omitting the fact that the economies in question have already been completely messed up by centre right parties. Debt levels are not sustainable. There are no good options for Greece now precisely because of what transpired under centre/ right governance. At this stage if a centre/ right party were to continue on in Greece it would be more of the same (debt) until something gives – and something has to give (default). Syriza may just burst the balloon sooner for them that might be a better option for the country in the longer term.
Jim you make complete sense. To be fair I feel the Greeks just got so broken down and frustrated at the prospect of being beaten down for years more. Had we been the same we might vote that way too out of frustration. But things have improved I’ve noticed it and personally felt it.
But while this country is 90% right wing the 10% will flock here to boost their perceived support.
James – i dont know that for certain and obviously nobody does – including you. My point is that if Greece continued on the same path then I am sure that they would be worse off than they are now. So something had to change. And what were the other options?? The people of Greece, who are closer to their own situation than we are, chose Syriza as their option and good luck to them.
Vincent the options were to continue as they were and when the European economy was back in growth then get the breaks.
Greece cannot maintain its previous standards of living because they were based on borrowed money.
They had their budget deficit fixed, were getting back to the markets, debt repayments were being met and now they are throwing it all away and they will be left to swing.
Personally I don’t want to see a right down of the €350 million that Greece owe Ireland. They don’t agree with austerity, not much sign that they accept they lied true there teeth about the state of their finances when borrowing way beyond their ability to pay. Greece debt is not quite the same as Irish debt, They should be at least showing some responsibility around the mess they are in.
You’re entitled your opinion, but not you’re own facts.
Before the election, Greece was already about to need another bail out, but this was put on hold pending the election. Whilst the budget cuts dictated by the Troika have destroyed the country, they have only achieved a surplus EXCLUDING debt interest payments. But this is no where near enough anyway to repay €7 billion in bonds coming due in July this year.
Greece had no access to a bond market before the election. Secondary bond market interest was never below 5% last year and had been over 7% since October when it was already clear Greece would need another Troika program very soon. These are not sustainable interest rates for any country with 175% plus debt/GDP.
The various Austerity conditions carried out over the past five years have crippled the country and its ability to create the economic activity to make the debt affordable. Killing aggregate demand by slashing Gov spending does not grow an economy – it does the opposite. Syriza has been elected because Greeks know only too well the reality of this failure.
And this exact same failure is playing out in all the economies of the Eurozone – either recession or stagnation, even in Germany itself, despite its manufacturing export sector.
Like most people, you appear to conflate the finance of a household or business with that of the macro economics of a country. In macro economics, cutting back & saving ‘costs’ is not consequence free. Someone’s spending is always someone else’s income. And you do not grow a whole economy, or increase its debt service capability, by making its workforce redundant.
But I don’t think you actually want to understand macro economics properly at all out of ideological dislike of the Government’s doing anything for citizens? Which is the position of the top few percent, Capital owners, political classes etc. who can continue to increase their own wealth & make lucrative future investments in the depressed asset price conditions of recession and mass unemployment.
Do not believe a single stat for GDP, GNP, labour costs, productivity or any other economic indicators coming out of Ireland either. The various accounting practises for tax purposes, booking massive earnings thru’ ‘Irish’ companies little more than nameplates, and recent other changes in measurement procedures, render the official stats worthless.
Even things like unemployment stats are not what they appear.
Have a look at Michael Hennigan’s Finfacts blog to see the full extent of the data mess.
So your opinion is the only one that matters and if someone has the opposite view albeit expressed respectfully then it’s acceptable to be personally abusive and derogatory to them.
Mike Hall, I agree with you, most people don’t understand the difference between the economics of the householder and the macro economics of running a country.
A country cannot use high taxation and austerity to turn around a recession. Growth is required and to stimulate growth there must be demand. Demand can only be created by putting money in peoples pockets and restoring confidence to spend and invest. The Greeks must be allowed a reasonable time to see if their anti austerity policies will work. One thing is for certain and that is that the last 5 years have not worked for them.
I think that if nothing else, it will be an interesting experiement for the rest of europe, which if it suceeds, will provide us all with a pathway out of this.
In fact Syriza’s proposal is for restructuring of debt (not a default), via a Eurozone debt conference, and to apply such a policy across all Eurozone countries in order to counter the disastrous failure of Austerity universally.
Irish economist Rory Hearne explains here… very reasonable in my opnion. The Eurozone system, as a currency union, is still deeply flawed, but this proposal would enable recovery to begin whilst these issues are addressed, and if no long term agreement on reform can be reached, orderly exits would be possible from positions of economic health.
“…. Syriza is calling for a European debt conference similar to the ‘London Agreement’ after the Second World War, which wrote off around 60% of Germany’s debts and extended the timeline for repayment by decades.
It proposes a writedown of all eurozone debt over 50% of GDP. This is not to be done through unilateral debt default but requires the ECB to play a central role. Under the proposals, the ECB would buy up the excess debt and convert it to zero-coupon bonds which would ultimately be paid back by governments. This includes a five-year grace period (a moratorium) on debt repayments. It is obvious how Ireland would gain dramatically from this.
Our debt would be more than halved from 108% of GDP to 50% and interest payments would fall to just over €3.5bn. If interest payments were suspended for five years, that would leave us with an additional €7.5bn per annum…. ”
Why didn’t you bother to do even some basic research (like 5 mins) before peddling your fiction as fact (and dumb concluding opinions) ?
Is there a polite way to say you’re an idiot? Or perhaps your intention here was to deliberately deceive with ‘facts’ in order to peddle your political/ideological view? Is that why you have nothing to reply on the issue of your false ‘facts’ and prefer to deflect by whining about my using a mild pejorative iteration on your name? (Grow a pair please, and take your ‘facts’ somewhere else.)
While you ignore having the manners of a 2 year old do you really think I’m going to engage with you. Answer my question above and il happily respond then.
I really don’t care if ‘engage’ or not. You’ve shown zero respect for facts or diligence in the peddling of your opnion that Greece was somehow recovering before this election – it plainly wasn’t & was about to need a further bail out program. No surprise at all, and predicted by many of us, with sound +macro+ economic reasoning.
Have you bothered to read the Hearne article? Somehow, I doubt it, as it won’t accord with your predjudicial views will it?
I think its fairly obvious now that if you don’t agree with what someone posts here you think it’s fair to personally abuse and post derogatively about them.
I wouldn’t expect anybody to debate with someone on those terms and I certainly won’t while you hold that entitlement. Pity.
Basic manners doesn’t require much upbringing or education.
James basically as Mike pointed out you haven’t a clue about your “facts” but will use a slight which Mike shouldn’t have used to avoid backing up your comments.
Btw check out BBC news there’s a bit of info there that totally contradicts you.
Until the Debt is paid off and Irish TDs are actually allowed make decisions, we should just send a load of people on jobs bridge into the dail. We’d save loads on politicians wages and pensions and the people getting 50 quid on top of their dole would be able to avail of the reasonable prices in the Dail bar
The EMC (a cabal of 4)at the moment is making the decisions which according to our constitution is of questionable legality. The Dail is nothing more than a very expensive rubber stamp.
Minimum of 7 Ryan …… maximum of 15
The fact that this Government has recognised the maximum – it must also recognise the minimum or breach the Constitution …
This is sloppy journalism – Christy Burke said they should not go in to government as the “junior partner”. Because Junior partners carry the bulk of the blame in coalitions – look at Labour, Greens etc. Your headline is misleading.
“You go anywhere in the Dublin central constituency, no one mentions ‘Fine Gael are cutting the children’s allowance’, they say Labour cut it.” Didn’t the increase it by 5euro?
Yes, it has been increased by €5. You have to be semi brain dead in order to join SF in the first place and leaving SF does not mean that brain function will automatically increase.
Christy -
Listen to the 92% – your generation caused or allowed the problem to fester – make way for the generation that have been forced to shell out for it –
That or we will have to clean out the pipes in the Dail Bar and put barrels of Complan instead !
If there is a minimum age for The President – then there should be a compulsory age for the retirement of politicians – In fact any politician who is entitled to a pension is by definition denying someone else a job and blocking progress from the nextgeneration – new ideas innovative Ideas etc.
And no it’s not ageism – look at the army , the gardai and indeed the civil service – compulsory retirement ! – But the “special ” ones in the Dail can ignore these rules – “Equality in the eyes of the law ” – ????
Couldn’t be worse then the skum in it currently, it’s only the middle class and upper class who fear the shinners, they know there time will be up lording it over the working class peasants, they don’t want equality with the working class and poor.
The middle class in Ireland is shrinking every year.
I have friends from college who consider themselves middle class because of what their Dad did or the school they went to, yet they are living paycheck to paycheck on a schit salary to rent a substandard apartment. Middle class my hole.
I reckon SF will be ready for government soon enough – every party that come to power at one time were smaller, less polished, less experienced, more idealistic and less practical. Parties evolve over time as they get more experience and exposure. The council seats they are now governing will help them develop the skill sets they need. Step by step.
Sick and tired of this type of talk! Let’s concentrate on the here and now shall we? Peace in the north, equal opportunities for all that type of thing. Oh and while we are at it lets have a chat about the social and economic issues that are crippling our country?
Yes lets just ignore everything that happened before today, agreed? FF didn’t waste a fortune, FG didn’t promise no property tax, Labour are still against water taxes aren’t they etc etc…….
Emily you do realise that Mary Lou won a seat in the Dail then lost it, won a seat in the European Parliament…then lost it?
Christy has an exceptionally better record of actually holding his seat than former FFer Mary Lou.
Good few years since know it all Christy was even in SF. It’s a much larger and more powerful party now. The brains, youth, determination make it the strongest party now. The shake up since Christy left has literally made SF unrecognizable from pre 2009 days.
His biased information is inaccurate and out of date.
Sinn Féin, the anti-Water Fluoridation party who also plan to repeal the Law of Gravity, set up a department to hunt down UFOs, replace medicine with Homeopathy, ban childhood vaccination and make Tin Foil Hat wearing compulsory. Oh, and make everyone leave school at 14 so the rest of the population become as thick as they are.
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