This afternoon.
Whaddyanuts writes:
Spotted a lost passenger just outside ‘Milltown Airport’, Dublin 14.’
From top: Fine Gael leader Enda Kenny with Former Taoiseach Liam Cosgrave at an event in the GPO in Dublin in 2014; Derek Mooney
This heave is different or at least it appears different. Unlike heaves of the past it has been occasioned by an actual political event,
Derek Mooney writes:
No one does heaves like Fine Gael does heaves. None of your subtle behind the scenes manoeuvring for them. When it comes to getting political blood on the plush Axminster the good folks at Fine Gael are major exhibitionists.
They have had plenty of heaves over the past forty years or so: most of them ill-judged, poorly timed and glaringly unsuccessful. The December 1972 heave against Liam Cosgrave is a good example of all three.
Fine Gael’s liberal wing wanted rid of the conservative, law and order Cosgrave. They complained that the party had failed under his leadership to capitalise on Fianna Fáil’s post Arms Crisis trials and tribulations, but the final straw was Cosgrave’s efforts to get FG TDs to back the government’s controversial Offences Against the State Bill – something they implacably opposed.
Cosgrave was effectively saved from the plotters by a loyalist bomb on Sackville Place that tragically killed two CIE busmen. The explosion took place just hours before the Dáil vote on the Bill. The Dáil adjourned to allow discussion between the parties.
When it resumed, Fine Gael withdrew its opposition and abstained as Bill was voted through in an all-night sitting. Three months later Cosgrave became Taoiseach leading Fine Gael into government with the Labour Party.
Fast forward to 1980s and 1990s and we enter the golden age of the Fine Gael heave. The drama and intrigue within the Fine Gael parliamentary party was so intense that RTÉ ran a TV documentary series in 2003 about the period entitled: Fine Gael: A Family at War.
For about two decades the folks in blue were regularly sharpening their knives as they awaited the opportunity to dispatch their leaders. While Dr Garret Fitzgerald managed to escape their clutches his successor, Alan Dukes, had a less happy fate.
Dukes took over from Fitzgerald after the 1987 defeat. While he started out well, Duke’s Tallaght Strategy – a less formalised precursor of the current Confidence and Supply Agreement, which facilitated Haughey’s minority government – was not too popular with FG TDs.
One TD, Austin Deasy, was so incensed that he at first resigned in protest from the party only to return in 1989 and try, unsuccessfully, to oust Dukes. Deasy was a serial heaver, launching his first one first against Garret in 1982 and finishing up with his failed November 2000 one against John Bruton.
Dukes survived, but not for long. In a snap election in June 1989, Fine Gael regained only 5 of the 19 seats they lost two years earlier. The whispering campaign against Dukes was back with a vengeance with one back bencher remarking that if it was raining soup Dukes would be out there with a fork.
Things came to a head in late 1990 when the party’s candidate in the presidential election came a very poor third behind Mary Robinson and Brian Lenihan Snr.The result had hardly been declared when Fergus O’Brien, who had been demoted by Dukes, tabled a motion of no confidence.
This was followed by a flurry of Fine Gael TDs rushing to the nearest journalist to unburden themselves. Dukes could not withstand the onslaught. Within days he resigned and was succeeded by John Bruton.
Now the Fine Gael heavers shifted into top gear. It seemed as if there was a heave brewing every few months.
Bruton survived five leadership contests during his eleven years at the top. The sixth one, in January 2001, led by two political heavy weights Jim Mitchell and Michael Noonan succeeded in toppling him. Noonan took the top job, beating Enda Kenny, but his reign was short lived. FG’s defeat in the May 2002 election was so calamitous that Noonan resigned on the night of the count. He was succeeded by Enda Kenny.
As you can see from these examples and the June 2010 heave against Enda outlined in my Enda’s 3am question is still unanswered Broadsheet column: most of them fail. The ones that do succeed have the oblique backing of the person who hopes to succeed and are usually attempted when the party is in opposition – not in government.
This later point is perhaps not so relevant today. Fine Gael spent most of the 80s and 90s in opposition and were not in office long enough to have the time to consider it. It was these long periods of opposition – and powerlessness – that led to the heaves. The breaking point, in most cases, being a bad election result or a series of poor opinion poll results.
This heave is different or at least it appears different. Unlike heaves of the past it has been occasioned by an actual political event, namely the chronic mishandling of the Sgt McCabe debacle and the confusion about who told who said what and when and if they told the Taoiseach or just one of his Advisers.
But it would be foolish to think that electoral considerations are not also a major factor.
While Enda Kenny has made it clear that he does not intend to lead his party into the next election, the abiding fear among Fine Gael TDs was that events would overtake them and that Fianna Fáil would pull down the house of cards before Enda quits and they find themselves facing an election with Enda still in place.
Up to a few weeks ago, they assumed that Fianna Fáil was neither ready nor willing to trigger an election until 2018 – but a series of good polls for Micheál Martin’s soldiers of destiny has convinced already rattled Fine Gael TDs that Fianna Fáil was preparing itself to call time on the government.
The problem with this scenario is that it shows Fine Gaelers thinking like Fine Gaelers, not like Fianna Fáilers. Fianna Fáil knows well that voters tend not to reward parties who trigger unnecessary elections for partisan gain.
Martin’s FF eschews the “cute hoor” tag that once bedevilled the party. When it eventually moves against the government it will be seen clearly do so on an issue of policy, not personality or partisan gain.
On a more practical front, 20 of Fianna Fáil’s 45 TDs are first timers. They are just starting to settle in after two or three years of intense campaigning to win those seats. They are not ready or prepared for an election yet. Most are now watching the turmoil in the FG ranks and trying to work out whether the election of Simon or Leo – or neither – means the election will be in May, June, September or later.
Meanwhile the rest should reach for the popcorn, scan our WhatApp to see if Charlie Flanagan is messaging us and just enjoy it all.
Derek Mooney is a communications and public affairs consultant. He previously served as a Ministerial Adviser to the Fianna Fáil-led government 2004 – 2010. His column appears here every Monday. Follow Derek on Twitter: @dsmooney
Same piggly wiggly, only not so bigly.
More at the Tiny Trumps subreddit.
(Extra credit: Leopold Gloom)
Yesterday.
Sammy the seal (a regular visitor to the fishmongers) at Wicklow town harbour.
He has form in this regard.
(Pic: Janet Phillips)
Who’s doing it live?
These lads, almost.
The second episode of This Ain’t No Disco – premiering on Paddy’s Day with a special screening.
Writes the team:
In association with St. Patrick’s Festival, Episode II of This Ain’t No Disco will be premiered in The Sugar Club, 6pm on St. Patrick’s Day, followed by beats from the harbourmaster himself Mr. Donal Dineen. For anyone who would prefer to watch from the safety of their own homes, stay tuned for a general release online at 8pm!
In this second episode expect more live music from breaking Irish artists, and follow Donal Dineen and Myles O’Reilly as they visit New York with one of Ireland’s brightest stars (to be revealed on the night!) who will be spending time with American contemporary composer Nico Mulhy at his Manhattan studios.
Our journey collaboration for this episode has been made possible with the kind support of St. Patricks Festival. Visit the link below for booking details, with 200 free tickets to be issued in the coming weeks.
Diarmuid Ó Curraoin (Student Union Business/Law Convenor), Megan Reilly (SU Equality Officer), Daniel Khan (SU VP/Welfare), Jimmy McGovern (SU President), Ellen Donohoe (NUIG Amnesty Society)
NUI Galway Students’ Union writes:
NUI Galway Students’ Union will be distributing free tampons and sanitary pads to students during their Equality Week on campus this week. The move is aimed to highlight the hidden costs of being a woman. Sanitary products are 23% more expensive in Ireland than in the UK which has a high impact on cash-strapped students. Volunteers from the Students’ Union Equality Team will distribute the “Tompax” – Time of the Month Packs – this Tuesday and Thursday.
During the week, the Students’ Union will also be examining issues relating to student workers’ rights with a wide range of speakers from Employment Relation representatives such as the Irish Congress of Trade Unions advising students of their rights. A recent survey found that a worrying 43% of NUI Galway students in employment do not have a contract of employment.
The issue of reproductive rights will be looked at on Tuesday evening with a panel discussion on repealing the Eighth Amendment hosted by Amnesty International Society. On Wednesday the Equality Team will be conducting an accessibility audit of the NUI Galway Campus to identify areas that need improvement for students with disabilities.
Independent 4 Change TDs Mick Wallace and Clare Daly at a meeting of the Joint Committee on Justice and Equality last October
Today.
Independent 4 Change TD Mick Wallace, in The Irish Times, writes:
Not surprisingly, the weak legislation establishing the Policing Authority has resulted in a weak Policing Authority in practice. The body was supposed to have responsibility for senior appointments from the outset, but this was delayed till January 2017. In the vacuum, Garda Commissioner Nóirín O’Sullivan has appointed more than 40 senior officers.
The Garda Commissioner still remains exclusively accountable to the Minister for Justice, and the Police Authority cannot even issue policy directives. Does that sound independent? Shockingly, after 10 days, the authority broke its silence to endorse the Garda Commissioner, which amounts to an effective slap in the face to Sgt McCabe and other whistleblowers.
…O’Sullivan’s statements in public are at complete odds with her actions in private. In October 2016, she told the Oireachtas Justice Committee that “anyone who brings forward issues and concerns will be supported”.
But Garda Nick Keogh made his protected disclosure on May 8th, 2014, to the then confidential recipient, Judge Pat McMahon. Following that, he was subjected to five internal investigations.
Readers will recall how Garda Keogh has been on sick leave since December 2015.
Mick Wallace: To change An Garda, get rid of its hierarchy (The Irish Times)
Previously: New Mick’s Tape
Lisa Wilkinson, of well-being centre the elbowroom, in Stoneybatter, Dublin 7, writes:
In support of the women of Ireland and to highlight our commitment to women-centered health care, The elbowroom will be supporting its staff’s decision to strike on the 8th of March. This means the centre will be closed for the day, re-opening on Thursday the 9th March.
We are doing this because the Irish Government still has not called a referendum to repeal the 8th Amendment.
The elbowroom will open it’s doors on the day to campaigners and supporters of the Repeal The 8th movement…Soup and tea will be served between 1 pm and 3 pm. All those who support the initiative are welcome.
The elbowroom will be closed on the 8th March – Strike4Repeal (The elbowroom)
Previously: Black Flu