Dan Boyle: Poll Dancing

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Top: Local Election candidate Dan Boyle (second left) canvassing in Douglas, Cork this week with Green Party colleagues.

Tomorrow is a day I’ve been working towards for the past six months. It is my fifteenth election.

While I’m experiencing the usual feelings of uncertainity, married with a somewhat obsessive need to do more, this is an election campaign that seems different.

Reactions on the doors have been more friendly. Angry responses have been fewer, and more about disillusionment with politics in general.

I’ve known what it is like to win. I’ve known what it’s like to lose, when I hoped I could win. For the most part I have contested elections as part of a wider and longer process.

I have tried to show that the values and ideas I hold, values and ideas I hold with others, could have a better application; a better way of doing things; achieving better results.

I have chosen to do so from a less traditional, less prominent place.

Politics has been a huge part of my life, but it has not been my life itself. It has dominated, affected me too personally too often, but there are more important aspects of my life involving my family, in particular, that I hold more dearly.

As precarious as politics can be, there are easier ways to navigate its often choppy waters. Who we choose to associate with, how we choose to act and what we choose to say, are the main detriments of political ‘success’.

Conventional wisdom is that you should choose to associate with those who have, or are near power. Once associated you should keep your head down. Do nothing that will rock the boat. Say or do nothing that hinders career prospects.

Not my choices, because of which my political journey has been more rollercoaster-like than it otherwise might have been.

I don’t regret any of it, even if there many things I wish I had approached differently.

What sustains me with these interests? What encourages to keep going?

Watching my colleague Saoirse McHugh perform so brilliantly in an European Elections television debate onTuesday night, has helped crystalise those questions for me.

I also have a daughter named Saoirse. They are both around the same age, half that of my own. I am reassured that the path I have followed will be travelled by others, certainly more assuredly.

I have seen myself as a pragmatist in politics. I have been involved in compromise in attempts to achieve incremental change. These are important political tools but they are, and should remain, secondary tools.

Passion should be the prime motivator in politics. Saoirse McHugh is showing that in spades. Her performance has bolstered my confidence and has hardened my resolve.

At a time when the very idea of a future for our planet is being compromised, never has this passion been so needed.

An increase in public concern surrounding our climate emergency may see more Green representatives being elected.

Hopefully so. However, even if raised expectations cannot be met, the Greens as a political party will have benefited enormously from this election campaign.

The performance of Saoirse McHugh is helping the party renew its soul. Collectively we will face future challenges more convinced we are pursuing the right approach. Our confidence re-established that we can succeed.

I’m more than happy to stand behind a new generation of torchbearers. Their energy giving more of us renewed energy. Their passion helping us to remember the commitment that sometimes we have misplaced.

I am honoured to continue to be a part of this process. I would be privileged to serve in whatever way the public decides.

Dan Boyle is a former Green Party TD and Senator and is standing in the Local Elections for the party in Cork tomorrow. His column appears here every Thursday. Follow Dan on Twitter: @sendboyle

Top pic via Dan

Wednesday: ‘Go On Dancing With The Stars If You Want The Attention’

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18 thoughts on “Dan Boyle: Poll Dancing

  1. eoin

    Good luck tomorrow Dan. If your columns on BS are anything to go by, you have workable plans on what you’ll do and you have experience. Looks like you’ll benefit from what you call the disillusionment with politics, not to mention the Green surge. Win or lose, well done for putting in such effort and this is from someone who wouldn’t be your #1 fan.

    1. SOQ

      +1.

      But, Greens have an image problem – of being too nice. I have yet to meet one who wasn’t well mannered and principled and quite frankly, well – dull.

      What Saoirse displayed was something else, her ability to put Casey in his place resonated with most people- whether they be Greens or not.

      I hope she wins, I really do.

    2. eoin

      Congratulations Councillor Dan Boyle, 1,457 votes out of 10,588, 14% share, #2 in LEA, elected on fifth count.

  2. Spaghetti Hoop

    I hope you’ve been polite and responsive to questions from the electorate during your campaign because you certainly were not here.

  3. Simon'sTell

    Are you still pushing the fraud of Man-Made Catastrophic Climate Change?

    Pretending that taxes will avert a fictional disaster that has been “impeding” for the last 50 years?

    Pretending that dogma is science?

    Ignoring the fact the atmospheric carbon dioxide is essential for life on earth?

    1. SOQ

      Great to see we DUP supporters commenting on Broadsheet- what a diverse group we are.

  4. Mé Féin

    If you win, the Greens should go into coalition with Fianna Fail. You could probably implement a lot of your policies and deliver on your campaign promises.

  5. bisted

    …Hi Dan, just a quick polling day good luck message…I had contemplated parachuting in and registering to vote but that wouldn’t be fair…turns out I have a cousin living in your constituency so I rang her to canvas on your behalf…it was a bad phone line and a clash of accents but I’m sure she said she would give you her No. 2…

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