Tag Archives: Eamon Gilmore

denisBaloon

The current edition of The Phoenix magazine reports that the launch of a €40million rights issue, which will lead to banks writing off €141million in loans to Independent News and Media, may see Denis O’Brien’s shareholding in INM rise from 30% to 60%.

It’s believed Mr O’Brien spent €600m building up his 30% shareholding in the company, which owns, amongst other media outlets, the Irish Independent, the Sunday Independent, The Herald, Sunday World, The Star, and 13 regional weekly titles.

Mr O’Brien’s Communicorp Groups owns Newstalk, Today FM, 98FM, Spin 1038, Spin South West and Highland Radio.

Meanwhile, Tánaiste and Labour leader Eamon Gilmore is scheduled to pose for photographers with Denis O’Brien tomorrow, at the opening of an international human rights conference, called Dublin Platform, organised by Front Line Defenders, which is chaired by Mr O’Brien.

Previously: A €140m Write-Off From Bank Of Ireland And AIB 

So, You Know That Denis O’Brien Story…

Denis O’Brien: Dividends, Debt And Paying Back Anglo 

 (Photocall Ireland)

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Support for the Labour Party has fallen to its lowest level in more than a quarter of a century, according to the latest Irish Times/Ipsos MRBI opinion poll. The backing of voters for the junior Coalition party has fallen to 6 per cent, a three-point decrease since the last Irish Times opinion poll in June. It represents the lowest percentage of support for Labour since November 1987.

Satisfaction levels for Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore continue the downward trend of the past two years. Some 15 per cent of respondents said they are satisfied with the Labour Party leader, while 65 per cent expressed dissatisfaction. This puts Mr Gilmore well behind the other main party leaders.

 

Labour support slumps to lowest level in more than a quarter of a century (Harry McGee, Irish Times)

00139336Tanaiste Eamon Gilmore appeared on RTE R1’s Today with Sean O’Rourke to defend the Labour party’s record in coalition and his own as leader.

Just a little defensive.

Sean O’Rourke: “The pattern is this, Tanaiste, if you go back to say, 1992, Labour campaigned on the basis of keeping Fianna Fail out. What do you do afterwards for reasons that are perfectly understandable, arguably, you put Fianna Fail back in. You weren’t in the labour party at the time, but again there was an expectation raised and the opposite was done. An expectation was raised at the last election about things like Child Benefit about things like Water Taxes, about things like that going up, or not going up and Third Level Fees not going up and so forth, and the opposite was done. And you’re paying the same price now, and you, personally are paying the same price as Dick Spring paid in the early 1990s?”

Eamon Gilmore: “Well, first of all I think that Government at the present time is in entirely different circumstances. There are people who now have the right to vote who weren’t even born then.”

O’Rourke:
“Of course. but promises are promises, I mean people aren’t stupid, be ’92 or 2011 or 2013.”

Gilmore:
“Let’s look at what we committed to do, let’s look at where we started out from when this Government was formed. This country was in the biggest… (economic down-turn)”

O’Rourke: “Yes, you made that point..”

Gilmore: “Yes, but it’s not just a case of me making a point…”

O’Rourke: “Actually, is it not the case when you went in and got the brief, it turned out to be far worse than you actually had thought was the case beforehand? I mean the IMF was in town, the Troika was here. I mean, what more did you need to know?”

Gilmore: “Yes, we did, and we went into government knowing that it was a very difficult period of time, that the country was in a crisis, that we had to bring the country out of that crisis. Because unless you bring the country out of crisis..”

O’Rourke: “And all your represented promises went awry?”

Gilmore: “Actually no, all our promises didn’t go, that’s one of those great generalisations. You know very well Sean, that the Labour Party, if you take it, right across the commitments that we made, whether it was.. – let’s take for example the commitment to put emphasis on employment, that was one of the promises that we made – we’re delivering on that. Let’s take the commitment that we would have reform on our Public Services and introduce constitutional convention, some of the Social Leglislation and so on – we have delivered on that.
Let’s take the promise that we would reform our Education system, Ruairi Quinn is delivering on that. Let’s take the promise that we would restore the National Minimum Wage – we have delivered on that. Let’s take the promise that we would protect the interest of working people, we have rstored the joint labour committees, we have ensured that there haven’t been any increases on taxes on people. Let’s look at the promise in relation to the way in which Public Service pay would be dealt with and you can take The Haddington Road Agreement – to ensure that people earning less than 65,000 Euros a year weren’t going to have their pay cut.
So, you know, when we talk about promises, let’s do it on-balance. Let me finish on this, I acknowledge… I acknowledge very clearly that yes there were promises of commitment that we made that have not been delivered, and we weren’t able to… (because we’re in a coalition).”

O’Rourke: “The Labour Party Conference is coming up in the Autumn, will you apologise there, for that failure?”

Gilmore: “I will report to my party conference and I will account to my party conference as Leader of the Party.”

Listen here

(Laura Hutton/Photocall Ireland)

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However, Mr [Eamon] Gilmore (above) said no one in the Dáil was satisfied with SUSI’s first year, but said changes have been introduced that will significantly improve the process.

Speaking during Leaders’ Questions, Mr Gilmore said 99.23% of grants are completed and fully paid.

 

Hmm.

More than 99% of student grants paid – Tánaiste (RTE)

00139028He had one job….

No sooner had Irish deputy prime minister Eamon Gilmore [above] released a statement saying that negotiations had been “concluded” were MEPs rushing to twitter and their press offices to denounce what they saw as an attempt to steamroller them into a deal.

Austrian socialist MEP Hannes Swoboda referred to “blackmail” by the EU presidency, representing member states, and said there had not been enough progress on one of the MEPs’ key demands – flexibility to allow unspent money to be used elsewhere rather than flowing back to member states.

Guy Verhofstadt, a Belgian liberal MEP, said “there is still no agreement” and criticized the scope of the proposed budget revision clause, saying parliament does not want to be locked into a “straitjacket.”

Negotiations were carried out with the Irish presidency and the parliament’s main budget MEPs, including the lead negotiator Alain Lamassoure, a French centre-right deputy.

 

 

Deal on EU budget in doubt (EU Observer)

Gilmore accused of ‘objectionable manipulation’ over EU budget (RTE)

(Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland)

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A new campaign video has been released featuring celebrities and activists highlighting the plight of Bradley Manning.

With the commencement of Manning’s trial for leaking confidential information, let us remind ourselves of our own Eamon Gilmore.

And his briefing with CIA officials at the US Embassy, Ballsbridge.

“I think the Lisbon Treaty is dead. The Irish people have now decided in a referendum that they do not wish to have it ratified therefore Ireland cannot ratify the Lisbon Treaty and therefore the Lisbon Treaty falls.”

Eamon Gilmore, June 13, 2008

 

“There is no basis for believing that a second referendum would produce a different result which is any different from the first one.”

Eamon Gilmore following a meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, July 21, 2008

 

“Gilmore, who has led calls against a second referendum has told the embassy separately that he fully expects, and would support holding a second referendum in 2009. He explained his public posture of opposition to a second reference as ‘politically necessary’ for the time being.”

Ambassador Thomas Foley, in a cable sent on July 23, 2008

 

 

Bradley Manning and us: a soldier for truth on trial (Guardian)

Previously: Wikileaks Day 2: Here Lies Eamon Gilmore

Gilmore ‘took opposing views in public and in private’ Irish Independent, June 1, 2011)

iam.bradleymanning.org

90297422Labour grandees Eamon Gilmore, Michael D Higgins and Mary Robinson at the first day of an international conference on climate and hunger organised by the Government and the Mary Robinson Foundation for ‘climate justice..

The conference will  “explore the links between fat pensions, ludicrous conferences, climate change, hunger and poor nutrition and their impact on the world’s most vulnerable communities”.

(Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland)

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Mr Hogan insisted the controversial charges would be imposed as planned from January next year — but could be delayed if Finance Minister Michael Noonan managed to get a new agreement with the IMF/EU/ECB on the matter.

Irish Examiner, Friday

“We have always said that water charges will be based on a metering system and my understanding is that there will not be sufficient metering done by January to allow a charging regime to come in,”

Eamon Gilmore, Irish Times today.

Mark writes:

A busy weekend for Labour’s spin merchants. How to make Eamon look decisive and in control? Very sad.

 

 

Gilmore says water charges will not be introduced next January (Irish Times)

(Mark Stedman/Photocall Ireland)