Tonight.
RTÉ One’s Six One News.
3stella writes:
Cyclist on the narrow pedestrian path over the East Link while Irish motorist Guardian Conor Faughan gives a interview against the retention of tolls… RTE six one..
This afternoon
Thomastown, Co Kilkenny
Eamonn writes:
Tanaiste and Minister for Social Welfare Joan Burton takes an aborted canoe trip with junior minister for Rural Affairs Ann Phelan to view damage caused to the home of Chem Caulfield on the [Kilkenny] Quays. Unfortunately during the trip, the canoe capsised and the two ministers ended up in the flood water which was a couple of feet deep. The canoe was being towed by Mr. Caulfield.
(Eamonn Farrell/Rollingnews)
From left: Mick Wallace, Clare Daly and Richard Boyd Barrett
Fine Gael TDs have been outshone by their high-wattage left wing counterparts.
Eamon Delaney, of right wing think tank The Hibernia Forum, writes:
Sometimes it seems that the only TDs who are actually taking the place seriously are the Independents and more especially the radical left TDs. This is why the TV cameras seem to be so often focused on those back rows, where they are stirring it up.
And the same left wing TDs seem to know that the real action is outside the Dail where they also make a bigger impact than their mainstream, colleagues. They certainly get media coverage disproportionate to their actual size.
This really struck me when I was on the Vincent Browne show recently on TV3. Clare Daly TD was on the show and her arrest and release that day for trespassing at Shannon airport dominated the discussion. But we also watched a long clip of her fellow socialist Paul Murphy, in the Dail, raising a separate issue, about public procurement.
Afterwards, I went home and watched RTE’s Oireachtas report (to unwind!) and the show was dominated by Paul Murphy (again), Ruth Coppinger and Richard Boyd Barrett.
And now that Paul Murphy has been sent for trial for false imprisonment (a punitive and rash move by the State, in my opinion) this will garner Murphy and his friends even more valuable publicity.
Just compare this deservedly high profile of the radical left with the lack of coverage, again deserved, for the rather nondescript, constituency-obsessed lobby-fodder of the larger parties and particularly of Fine Gael, who have failed to transform, or even shine in the Dail chamber.
Indeed, as you move leftwards, you usually get a more high profile, more articulate and effective TD – and that’s not something I like admitting. FG with its big intake in 2011 has been disappointingly quiet and without passion and ideas. One can exempt some of the more effective Cabinet members from this, incidentally, but even the backbench Five a Side, which advocated prudent public spending, gang were put to bed. Can they rediscover their voice?
Fianna Fail, with its reduced size, offers better fare, and the Labour party representatives are better again. But often the most effective energy and focus seems to be with the high-wattage left. Mick Wallace alone has shone a light on penalty points and questionable NAMA deals.
Of course, it helps (the media) that the radical left have strongly defined messaging, and often strongly defined, and colourfully dressed, personalities. This aids the media and sets up an appealing contrast for framing the discourse.
And there is a lesson here for the bigger parties. It means that however small the hard left might be, they now end up defining and polarising the political landscape. Our bigger parties are still too centrist and not differentiated enough. They think they can muddle through and not have to make the case for the non-left position. But they are wrong.
And part of this complacency is our unreformed and often lacklustre Dail which, despite these limits – or because of them – offers high profile opportunities for ambitious left wing deputies and independents to define the agenda. With an enlarged Sinn Fein and left wing presence next time out, this will be even more the case. It really is time that our non-left TDs got off the fence.
Fight!
In a lacklustre Dail, the radical left can get all the attention (HiberniaForum)
Ah here.
Mick Flavin writes:
This was requested by Nelly and based on her own idea. This will be needed for context: A sincere thanks to all those who made requests for drawings and donated to the Capuchin Day Centre [for the homeless]. I really enjoyed doing them and around €200 was donated.Thanks to all.
Diva And The Dinosaur – Bunratee (You Want It)
A single released on Christmas Day by Róisín Walters (Diva) and Vincent McWilliams (Dinosaur).
Alex Towers writes:
Ireland’s answer to Psy (if Psy were a question).
From top: Sean Barrett, Joan Burton, Enda Kenny, Michael Martin at the lighting of the Oireachtas Christmas tree; Dan Boyle
2015. The year in review.
By Dan Boyle.
January – The Greek people go to their ballot boxes for the first of two general elections this year, interspersed with a referendum, to decide which of their political representatives would have the right to impose public expenditure cuts in the name of anti austerity.
February – Members of the commentariat are stunned into confusion when The Taoiseach recounts a story about meeting a member of the general public, that happens to be true.
March – In Washington at the White House, during this year’s forelock tugging ceremony, The Taoiseach presents President Obama with a bowl of medicinal shamrock.
April – At a press conference Michéal Martin displays a newly grown beard where he announces “We haven’t gone away you know!,”.
May – In an unexpected development, after a surprising election in the UK, a government is formed by UKIP in coalition with The Greens. Both parties have to make compromises. UKIP drops its objection to wind turbines, just as long as they are all white.
June – The Minister for the Environment, aware of the need to free the right kind of land for the right kind of development, issues a directive to all local authorities to make all cemeteries multi storey.
July – Fianna Fáil make a collective approach to the Kardashian family for assistance to meet its female candidate quota.
August – Accusations of political policing reach new heights when Paul Murphy TD is refused a licence to legally operate a bull horn. Gardaí claimed he had exceeded his previously allocated allowance for decibels.
September – The Taoiseach orders 24/7 army patrols at heritage sites at Newgrange and Cashel on foot of a decision by Bank of Ireland to locate ATM cash machines there.
October – Eamon Gilmore publishes a book detailing his role in ending wars in Vietnam, the Sudan and the War of Dun Laoghaire succession.
November – The Taoiseach delivers an erudite speech at the United Nations Conference on Climate Change in Paris. Delegates are taken with his theme “Climate Change is terrible. Someone should do something about it.”
December – Sinn Féin reveal an unpublished section of the Good Friday Agreement, where the British and Irish governments accepted that former IRA operatives should be allowed to engage in continued low level criminality as a cold turkey exercise, to wean them from their previous addiction to violence.
In 2016 we get to stress what real Irishness is all about. If we’re lucky we might even get to hold a referendum.
Dan Boyle is former Green Party TD. Follow Dan on Twitter: @sendboyle
Margaret Thatcher was afraid of anal sex in the 1980s https://t.co/T4gqbSXdKK pic.twitter.com/scxkzw8i5Z
— The Independent (@Independent) December 30, 2015
Gulp.
Margaret Thatcher was afraid of anal sex in the 1980s (TheIndependent.co.uk)
Thanks John Gallen