Category Archives: Misc

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Dublin City Council Chief Executive Owen Keegan

You may recall how new lobbying laws came into effect last September.

The new legislation puts an onus on lobbyists to register on lobbying.ie. It aims to allow members of the public see who’s lobbying whom.

Further to this, journalist Lois McGrath, of Dublin Inquirer, compared and contrasted the diary of Dublin City Council CEO Owen Keegan – obtained under the Freedom of Information Act – with the companies and organisations that registered themselves as having lobbied Mr Keegan.

The information from the two sources didn’t match.

Ms McGrath reported:

“Most of the meetings he had with companies and organisations were not logged on the lobbying register. (But just because people from organisations met with Keegan, or scheduled meetings with Keegan, doesn’t necessarily mean that they lobbied him.)”

“Some of the meetings that caught our eye were with Panda, JCDecaux, Deloitte, the DCU Governing Authority, Arup, Big Belly Smart Bins, Ann O’Dea of Inspirefest, the Holocaust Education Trust Ireland, SSE Airtricity and Diageo.”

“Representatives of three of those organisations responded to our queries before we published this article: the company behind Big Belly bins, Deloitte and Diageo. And all three said they had not lobbied the chief executive.”

Who’s been lobbying Dublin City Council’s Chief Executive? (Dublin Inquirer)

Leah Farrell/Rollingnews

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G’wan the boyos.

This afternoon

Members of Fianna Fail’s parliamentary parties including new TDs meet to discuss potential coalition options.

From top: Sean Haughey; Jackie Cahill, Eamon Scanlon; Willie O’Dea, Billy Kelleher and Michael Moynihan.

Ecstatic Dáil bar manager (out of picture).

Leah Farrell/Rollingnews

Meanwhile…
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This afternoon.

Leinster House, Dublin

From top: Fine Gael TDs Mary Mitchell O’Connor, Kate O’Connell and Regina Doherty arriving for the party’s parliamentary group meeting; Taoiseach Enda Kenny with newly-elected Fine Gael TDs.

Poor Simon.

Leah Farrell/Rollingnews

zzig11
https://youtube.com/watch?v=p9zxNer6kbE

‘zup?

Zig and Zag’s new show kicked off on Tuesday on tykes’ channel RTÉ Jr. CBBC are also  broadcasting the new series, voiced and written by Mick O’Hara and Ciaran Morrison.

Now residing in the town of Burbia, new Zig and Zag shenanigans include ice-cream cloning, becoming art darlings and general messing like it’s 1990.

No Zuppy as of yet, though.

Yet.

Streaming on RTÉPlayer.

90382846dan

Top (from left Labour’s Brendan Howlin, Joan Burton and Ged Nash last year: Dan Boyle

His predictions were almost spot on.

Time then for some schadenfreudin’.

Dan Boyle writes:

I wouldn’t be the gambling type. At least not with money. It could be argued that on more than a few occasions I have let my fate up to the Gods.

I have, however, welched on one bet. Made in the dying embers of what is now the government before last, it was the Labour Party’s Brendan Howlin.

We were in the Members Bar of Leinster House. I was expressing the hope that The Greens might return two TDs in the form of Trevor Sargent and Eamon Ryan. Not a hope says the bould Brendan dancing with glee already then on our yet to be dead corpse.

There was something in the sheer nastiness of his approach that goaded me into accepting a challenge I shouldn’t have. I subsequently never honoured the bet, fearing the sadistic glee in which it would have been received.

The Germans have a word for it. I can’t lie and say I haven’t felt a least some of that enjoyment from the Labour Party’s current predicament. It is though an enjoyment mixed with a small degree of sympathy.

The decent members of a proud party were sold myths about ‘saving the country’ by those who wanted to hold office just one more time. I have choked on the irony of listening to many Labour spokespersons talk about, despite knowing their party was being damaged, that the national interest came first.

When Greens were making the same arguments in 2011 it was Labour representatives who were doing the most baying.

There has also been an element of Stockholm syndrome in merging with, then becoming unidentifiable with, their coalition partners.

The Fine Gael failure has been just as marked. There are many reasons why Fine Gael has never come out of government successfully, none of which the party will ever admit to itself.

A story John Gormley once told me, which I’ve written about before, bears retelling. Before he was in elected politics FG canvassers called to his house.

Asking them what they thought the difference between FG and FF were they advanced what they believed was the killer argument.

“I think you’ll find in Fine Gael there is a better class of person”.

The sad thing is that many of their members do believe this. This sense of priggishness, that only they have the moral fibre and character to act on behalf of the nation, is the characteristic trait most seen and least liked by the general public.

There is little likelihood the party will suddenly develop any sense of modesty yet.

It’s reward may be to remain in office but with power removed, this now placed more firmly into the hands of its errant sibling, Fianna Fáil.

Dan Boyle is a former Green Party TD. Follow Dan on Twitter: @sendboyle

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEzEzmWalmA

Don’t make him hungry.

You wouldn’t like him when he’s hungry.

Reckoner  writes:

Alan Dunne and Eamonn Tutty are currently raising funds to make this unique Irish language film happen, and they would appreciate any support from Broadsheet readers who might be interested [link below].. .

An Ceann Deireanach (Indigogo)

post-election

The final ‘HexMyTD’ map of General Election 2016.

Now including Longford/Westmeath.

The map uses a cartogram with one hexagon per TD.

All the results are displayed on one map and densely populated regions don’t get squeezed OUT.

By Clonakilty-born, Southampton-based oceanographer Gerard McCarthy. More of his GE16 hexagons at link below.

Hexagons as TDs: A cartogram view of #GE16 (Gerard McCarthy)

Previously: Hex Your TD

drop

If you’re done with that Rowling….

Diarmuid writes:

We are running a book drop in our primary school [ St Louis] in Rathminese. We are looking to update our library to have some more modern texts available for our young readers.

Some of your users might have an old set of ‘Harry Potter’ or ‘Skulduggery Pleasant’ to drop in that could clear some space on their bookshelves, and we’d be very grateful to receive them!

St Louis Primary School, Williams Park, Rathmines, Dublin 6

clayton

Seth writes:

I Need to get to Clayton Hotel Leopardstown {Dublin 18] early next Tuesday morning – earlier than Dublin Bus would get me there. Don’t have a car and it’d be a struggle to afford taxi from City centre. With the Luas on strike – I though the Aircoach could do the trick (it runs 24 hrs).

Contacted Aircoach seeing if I could board in city centre and travel to terminus (coincidentally at the Clayton hotel). Aircoach advised that they are not licensed to pick up passengers after leaving the airport (even tho they are dropping people off at the same stop) – therefore I’d have to get the Aircoach from town to the airport and then back from the airport to Leopardstown.

Any alternate suggestions (I’ve considered and dismissed walking the 10km and I don’t own a bike).

Anyone?

Pic: Clayton Hotels