Yearly Archives: 2017
Pas Si Vite
atFrom top: French president-elect Emmanuel Macron; Shane Heneghan
In a conciliatory speech yesterday evening, Emmanuel Macron greeted his unexpectedly strong victory of 66% to Marine Le Pen’s 34% in a slightly more sombre mood than some might have expected.
There are several reasons for this. Perhaps he has the current incumbent, Francois Hollande in mind – a man who came to power five short years ago on a message of hope and change who shall leave the Elyse Palace next weekend with negligible approval ratings and without having made any serious dent on an unemployment rate of 10%.
That 34% of voters choose a Fascist, with a capital F, over him will also be in the back of his head and despite the Front National’s loss, obtaining over a third of votes cast remains a remarkable achievement for a party that begin life as a ragbag of Vichy apologists and holocaust deniers.
Yet more sobering for the President elect is the number of people who did not bother to vote at all. At 74%, turnout was at a near record low (though by contrast, it’s worth noting that only one Irish election has reached this level in the past 35 years).
Many of those voters who sat this one out may be eager to take part in next month’s Parliamentary election and frustrate the new President’s efforts to put together a coherent majority thus hamstringing his ability to deliver on his promises.
But perhaps, one notable detail of the result is likely to stick in his mind. Unlike Brexit and Donald Trump, Marine Le Pen has remarkably strong support among younger voters. T
his will perhaps be firmly in his mind when dealing with a youth unemployment rate of nearly 24%- if he finds time to do this between restructuring the euro and reforming the French public service.
Don’t get me wrong. The rise of this guy has been meteoric. He was unknown five years ago. His party didn’t exist 14 months ago and on Sunday, he will take charge of the world’s fifth largest economy and get the codes for Europe’s largest nuclear arsenal.
But his demeanour at the very least seems to show us a man who also sees the writing on the wall. Macron has five years to succeed where Hollande failed or he will hand Le Pen the Presidency in 2022.
Shane Heneghan is a Brussels-based election and poll watcher. Follow Shane on Twitter: @shaneheneghan
Pic: Getty
Road Manners
atMeet artist John Edmark – a man whose obsession with mathematical formulae and concepts has led him to create all manner of baffling spirally sculptures. To wit:
‘instruments that amplify our awareness of the sometimes tenuous relationship between facts and perception…
The new single, from Irish singer-songwriter Susan O’Neill, alias SON.
A video, filmed live at Brooklyn Bridge, in an impromptu session.
Writes rock-journo veteran Olaf Tyaransen:
One of Hot Press magazine’s ‘Hot for 2017’ picks SON (aka Susan O’Neill) was in New York for some Propeller Palms shows this week. During an afternoon photo-shoot by the iconic Brooklyn Bridge on Friday, she decided to perform an impromptu acoustic version of ‘Only Animals’, one of the standout tracks from her acclaimed debut solo album, Found Myself Lost.
Reached over two-thousand views in under 24 hours on Facebook, no less.
Gulp.
Niall Davis writes:
The Emerald Enduro – 2017 Enduro World Series Round 4 – On May 28 -Ireland will host the fourth round of the Enduro World Series.
The world’s top riders will line out in the Wicklow mountains for a tough day of mountain bike racing over 50km of technical terrain in a rally style format with testing special stages.
This is the third year that the global series has visited Ireland and is testament to the large crowds of enthusiastic supporters who line the stages roaring on the riders.
2016 marked a turning point for Irish Enduro racing with 4 of the 5 categories won by Irish riders, an unheralded achievement, crowned by hometown hero Greg Callaghan who repeated his 2015 win in front of an ecstatic crowd…
Previously: Defiant Enduro
This afternoon
Civic office, Wood Quay, Dublin
Above from left, Ali Grehan, Dublin City Architect, Paul Keogh, lead architect, Paul Keogh Architects and Edward Jones, Dixon Jones Architects, launch the design of the proposed new civic plaza at College Green, Dublin 2.
A flagship project in the implementation of the City Council’s public realm strategy, the College Green development will remove through traffic from the area.
Subject to planning permission from An Bord Pleanála, construction is scheduled to commence in January 2018, to coincide with the start of operations on the LUAS cross-city line in December.
Fight!
Leah Farrell/Rollingnews
































