The Centre Right And The Pandemic

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From top: Tanaiste Leo Varadkar at  the K-Leisure facility in Naas Co Kildare last September; Eamonn Moran

While many are worried about the far right during the pandemic another force is having a far bigger influence on public policy that may be just as dangerous.

Since 1958 when TK Whitaker wrote “The first Programme for Economic Expansion” Ireland made a critical decision to end the protectionist policies of Eamonn de Valera and at least attempt to look out into the world.

It was a hugely important decision for our country and using the vehicle of the Industrial Development Authority (IDA), Ireland has turned from being an agrarian poor man of Europe to being moderately well-off country.

Powerful opinion leaders like economists, business owners, centre right politicians, business journalists and high ranking civil servants and others, largely known as the ‘Pro business community’ who believe in in the power of free markets, and globalism can always point back to this and the strides that have been made as a stark reminder of our relatively recent poverty.

It gives many of them an almost religious adherence to the policies that have in a very general sense made Ireland more prosperous. They are a small (probably about 2-3% of the population) but extremely powerful group and they are used to getting their way regardless of actual public opinion.

For many of them adherence to those policies has become a reflex action. They are dogmatic about the benefits of free trade. They are dogmatic about the benefits of the free movement of people. They stand up for the economic rights of individuals to make money and accumulate capital over collective concerns about the environment and inequality. It’s a dogma that is hard to assuage, even in a pandemic.

Our Tánaiste Leo Varadkar has openly admitted how hard it has been for him to enact laws curbing Freedom of movement he wouldn’t dream of doing in normal circumstances. It seems there are some policies that he is still wrestling with.

Most of us are less dogmatic. We understand we are in a pandemic and so any rules and practices that were considered acceptable, to some, in normal times may have to be put on hiatus.

Since the start of the pandemic there has been massive media coverage around the dangers of the far right using anger and hopelessness to flourish in these awful pandemic lockdown conditions. These are very real and growing concerns.

What I have not seen very much of is a willingness to question the dogma of the centre right pro-business community and to call them out for their adherence to certain policies that they cannot seem let go of, even in pandemic lockdown conditions. Even when they do relent it seems like it is only through gnashing gritted teeth.

Some people have been calling for a stop to flights or Mandatory Hotel Quarantining (MHQ) since we knew that there was a virus in Italy and that travel from there to Ireland could lead to a spread.

Yet the Italian rugby fans were not just permitted but welcomed by the business community to Ireland in early March 2020 despite the match with Ireland not even being played. The government were happy to allow all flights to continue. In summer we had reduced the virus to tiny numbers, but we then imported the Spanish strain by letting holiday makes travel unhindered.

Over 100,000 arrivals a month were coming into Dublin airport during last Summer. In July Roisin Shortall, of the Social Democrats had seen enough and was highly critical of the Department of Justice for failing to do even simple travel checks demanding stricter enforcement and supervised quarantine.

Economist Colm McCarthy, who is less dogmatic than some of his contemporaries agreed that it was obviously sensible to attempt to curtail the importation of the virus. There was virtually no movement on policy from government.

Again, before Christmas we knew that there was a dangerous strain in the UK, B.1.1.7. that was much more transmissible than previous variants, 50% more. However, no serious efforts were made to stop that variant getting into the country.

Thousands of people returned home from the UK for Christmas. What then ensued was the most concentrated Covid 19 outbreak seen anywhere in Europe in which there were over 1000 Covid deaths in January and again in February.

The vast majority of the public had made their minds up months before those December flights but a Red C poll and an Ireland Thinks Poll in January showed 86% and 90% of people said that we needed to implement MHQ immediately.

At last this made the government promise to do something. They had been dragged kicking and screaming but, they had promised to introduce MHQ. The way they have flustered and prevaricated on the issue tells you everything you need to know. Despite 86-90% of the public demanding MHQ they really, really do not want to do it.

As we all know neo-liberal dogma isn’t just pervasive in Ireland. In fact, the reason that the death rates in the UK and USA are so high is largely attributable to neoliberal dogma and an unconscious bias toward neoliberal policy (under the banner of freedom) that permeates in those countries. It also permeates in the higher echelons in the EU.

I tried to make the point to some centre right people I follow on twitter. I said to them that I knew that under normal circumstances that you would fear the idea of freedom of movement being curtailed but could they not see that this time the call is not being made by the far left who want to take away their freedom permanently in favour of protectionist policies. It’s a call being made by the public under extraordinary conditions to prevent the spread of a virus during a pandemic.

I thought the reply I received was very enlightening.

It was a Milton Friedman quote:

“Nothing is as permanent as a temporary government program”

The Far right aren’t the only group that are prepared to sacrifice all our safety to uphold inflexible dogma.

By the way. There is a new variant which seeded in Brazil called the P.1. The B.1.1.7 was 50% more transmissible than the common SARS COV2 and we all saw in January just how bad that extra 50% made things. After the initial study of P.1. they are finding that it is 152% more transmissible than SARS COV2.

It was reported just last week that 7 P.1. cases were now in Ireland.

Eamonn Moran stood for the Social Democrats in the 2020 local elections in Bray East. He writes here in a personal capacity. Follow him on twitter: @eamonnmoran

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15 thoughts on “The Centre Right And The Pandemic

  1. Micko

    Lots of talk there about closing of borders too late and big business being the problem and “them” letting in Italian rugby folks in March 2030.

    I think you forget Eamonn, that for you, me and everyone around us, not getting the virus was never part of the plan we all signed up for.

    We were ALL getting it.

    The plan was to ‘flatten the curve’ and slow it down.

    So that when we all eventually became infected, there would be a hospital bed there for us all.

    Looking back like ‘Captain fuppin hindsight’ saying that “we should have closed borders in the summer” etc is disingenuous at best.

    1. Andrew

      So why are quarantine measures being imposed now? What did ‘WE’ all sign up for? You make it sound Micko like there was an actual strategy. There’s little evidence of this.
      There’s been inaction waiting for the nod from the EU, reactive rather than proactive.

      1. Micko

        De plan was…

        https://www.thejournal.ie/what-does-flattening-the-curve-mean-5047757-Mar2020/

        “So we slow down how the virus spreads through the population and we reduce the size of that peak so that although overall the same number of people might become infected, it will be over a longer period of time and the health service won’t be overwhelmed.” Dr Kim Roberts, leader of the virology research group in Trinity College Dublin.

        Which has now become – NO ONE EVER GET COVID – EVER!

  2. White Dove

    We never signed up for anything, just like we never partied pre 2008.

    I had the pleasure of coming through Dublin airport in February (out of country since pre-lockdown).

    i got a lengthy public shaming lecture, was asked in detail about why I was abroad and why I hadn’t come home sooner, and was told that gardai would be fining me 500 on the way out of the airport for sure (there wasn’t a sniff of one on my way home).

    Meanwhile non-nationals including those from South America were waved through with a smile.

  3. Joe

    Excellent balanced article by Eamonn.
    The government reaction has been driven by profit before people right through the pandemic with the result of yo yoing lockdowns. FFFGGP have blood on their hands.
    Last month due to FFFGGP inaction there were 106,000 arrivals into Dublin airport. It speaks for itself.
    The vaccination program, the only thing that will end the pandemic is a shambles.
    Time FFFGGP were removed from government.

  4. Madam x

    Last March 2020, Italians who were being trained arrived in Dublin. On the same day a few were hospitalised. In July I met Americans on holiday in the west. No quarantine. It was advised which was a joke. We had it sorted and could have kept it out then had this stupid government any brains. Now we are all suffering . Next election boot them out but don’t replace with the even further far right.

  5. Kingfisher

    Joe’s right; Fianna Fail and Fine Gael are running for their lives before the profit motive. They’re absolutely terrified Ireland will be impoverished by lockdowns and quarantine. And desperate pub owners, hoteliers and retailers are nipping at their heels crying for reopening as they’re facing bankruptcy.
    There’s nothing they can do apart from lockdowns because of the dearth of vaccines. And they haven’t got the muscle to force the pharma multinationals to make vaccines here.
    And the fact that they allow people to drive for “essential” matters means that drivers are ignoring the 5km limit, risking the virus spreading far. You’re effectively invisible 90% of the time in a car. (If the Government had said “You can walk or cycle but not drive”, it would have been more sensible.)

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