Derek Mooney: Stick A Fork In FG

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From top: Fine Gael leader Leo Varadkar (left) and his front bench launch the Fine Gael general Election 2020 manifesto at the party’s HQ in Dublin last week; Derek Mooney

With eleven days of this general election campaign to go, the one clear message emerging from the national polls is that it is time to stick a fork in Fine Gael. It is not just done, it is done to a crisp. The only thing rare about Fine Gael in two weeks’ time will be the number of constituencies where it holds more than one seat.

“Hold on there, Mooney” I hear you shout, “…on what are you basing this prediction of doom? You’re the one who’s repeatedly told us that national newspaper polls are not good indicators of how seats will go.”

Yes, I reply. That is true – and extremely well put, I might add. I am also deeply moved that you have been paying such attention to my ramblings here… but, this prediction is not just based on the headline figures on party support, it is based on a series of important findings within those polls.

These findings come from separate polls, but they sit remarkably well together and underpin the trend that has been repeated in the four polls published over the past two weeks.

They are, listing them chronologically:

  • The Sunday Times/B&A poll published on January recorded the government as having a satisfaction rating of just 30%, its lowest level since Varadkar replaced Kenny. It was 39% last July and was in the mid-40s for most of 2018.
  • Even more significant, and also more devastating for Varadkar, Coveney and Co., was the finding in last week’s Irish Times Ipsos/MRBI poll, that 75% of voters want to see a change of government. That 75% divided almost evenly on the extent of that change, from changing the leading party to something more radical, but agreed that Fine Gael is not it. Indeed just 20% agreed with the statement: The Government has made progress in important areas and deserves to be allowed get on the with the job of securing a better future.

Fast forward to yesterday’s two polls.

  • First, the Red C/Sunday Business Post. Its headline figures for the main parties are broadly in line with the other three polls, but it also looked at how voters viewed the main parties in terms of the key policy issues. On housing/rental market it found that 24% of voters trusted Fianna Fáil most, followed by 20% for Sinn Féin and a meagre 12% for Fine Gael.

The figures on health were only marginally better for the outgoing party of government. There Fianna Fáil scored 24% (again) with Sinn Féin faring worse on 16% and Fine Gael again in third place with just 14%.

The only positive in this is the 2% bragging rights it gives Simon Harris over Eoghan Murphy, though I am not sure any of that will matter much when ministers come to wonder which of them will have the Portillo moment on the night of the count.

  • The fourth finding is along the same lines as the RedC one. The Ireland Thinks/Irish Mail on Sunday poll took the interesting approach of looking at party voting intentions by housing status. That found only 7% of the people they polled, and are living in private rented accommodation, would vote Fine Gael. This compares with 16% of renters who would back the Greens, 19% for Fianna Fáil and a solid 30%, for Sinn Féin.

The breakdown for those in council rented was a mammoth 43% for Sinn Féin, 15% for independents, 14% for Labour, 11% for Fianna Fáil, 9% for the greens and a paltry 2% for Fine Gael. At 25% Fianna Fáil leads in terms of those with mortgages, compared with 19% each for Sinn Féin and Fine Gael.

These last two sets of data, from RedC and Ireland Thinks, along with the evenly split breakdown of the 75% wanting change via the Irish Times, may also help explain why Sinn Féin recovered so much ground in the past few weeks.

This, after all, was the organisation that lost almost half its councillors just eight months back and suffered some hefty losses to the SDLP at the Westminster elections, particularly in Derry.

As the Irish Times report, there is a sizeable chunk of voters who want more significant and radical change than appears to be coming right now from Fianna Fáil and they are ready and willing to listen to Sinn Féin especially when it is being explained by that nice Mr Doherty or that nice Mr Ó Broin.

Fianna Fáil says it is offering change, and it is – but, it has yet to get that message across to a wider audience, especially the many younger voters who are struggling to cope with the cost of living in today’s Ireland.

These are voters with aspirations.

They did everything they were asked to do. They went gone to college, they studied hard, they saw the global crash lower their expectations, yet they went out, got decent jobs with good wages.

Now they want to plan to settle down but find, despite those decent wages, soaring rents and lack of affordable housing leave them struggling to get on the first rung of the ladder, a ladder their parents had climbed when much younger than they are now.

At its heart, Fianna Fáil is about aspiration, both personal and national.

People want to hear its political leaders talk about how they will get the system to address their needs, not adjust their needs to fit the system.

There are moments, when I am listening to statements from some Fianna Fáil spokespeople, that I think I am back in a government department trying to decipher civil servant-ese. Fianna Fáil’s job is not to explain government’s problems to us, it is to put in place the programmes to enable it address them in government.

* * * *

 I usually write a rough draft of these pieces late on a Sunday night and revise them on Monday morning, while listening to Morning Ireland. Not today, though.

As you read this, I will be heading with many hundreds of others to the small parish church at Mullaghbrack, Armagh for the funeral of one of the greatest Irishmen of the past sixty years: Séamus Mallon.

While I met the man many times over the past two decades, I did not know him well enough to attempt to pay a personal tribute here.

What I can say is that Seamus’s courage in the face of both loyalist violence and provo vilification, as recently as May 2018 was a beacon to many, including a good friend of mine who offered this heartfelt tribute. He puts it better than I ever could: Goodbye and thank you Séamus. You saved lives and changed mine.

Ar dheis Dé go raibh a h’anam dílis.

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

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15 thoughts on “Derek Mooney: Stick A Fork In FG

  1. Charger Salmons

    It’s a funny old world.
    Leo peacocks the European stage as Ireland’s saviour over Brexit, aided and abetted by a supine Irish media, and gets rewarded with a shafting.
    Boris gets vilified by the Irish media including Derek Mooney and is elected with a stonking 80 seat majority and five more years in power.
    I mean, you have to have a titter.
    Which I am.
    Heh, heh, heh.

    1. Brother Barnabas

      THE wirral is the peninsula

      wirral is the borough

      you’re welcome

      (being a benevolent chap, I’m happy to continue this regular schooling. imagine though it’s becoming a little humiliating for you. shout stop if it’s all too much)

        1. scottser

          you must like the taste of your own backside charger – bb hands it to you on a plate often enough :)

  2. Truth in the News

    The rise of SF is related to the return of their conservative voter element who
    last summer punished them for their support in repealing the 8th, this same
    group will now increase their number of seats to deprive FF of any type of
    majority and effect put whats left of Varadkar’s party into a coalition with FF
    with SF in opposition, while their day won’t come on the 8th, it will before the
    next Dail has run its term and into the future inside 15 years they will be principal
    party both North and South in Government , and all the scribbling and mouthing
    the Dublin have done about them has only done the opposite in making them more
    determined to succeeded

  3. Otis Blue

    Derek, given the likelihood that FF will form the next Government is there any chance you’d put forward your fantasy cabinet and their ministerial portfolios?

  4. Ciaran Moore

    “suffered some hefty losses to the SDLP at the Westminster elections, particularly in Derry.”

    What are these hefty losses? SF lost 1 seat (in Derry) and gained 1 seat (in North Belfast).

    Perhaps FF and its cheerleaders should aspire to honesty before they try telling us how they are the change we need, despite their support for the status quo over the last 4 years.

  5. scottser

    The ff slogan is annoying me. ‘an ireland for all’ is not an aspiration, it’s page one of your job description.

  6. shortforbob

    Fine Gael haven’t done a great job but people must have short memories to be willing to let Fine Fail and especially Michael Martin back in power. They’ve told the lie about global recession and not accepted any fault for the recession so many times that maybe people actually believe it. And the brass neck to claim they represent “change”!

  7. White Dove

    A perceptive piece, Derek, thank you. I agree with your comments on younger voters struggling to cope with the cost of living.

Comments are closed.

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