Centre-right parties to retain power in Ireland

Published December 2, 2024 Updated December 2, 2024 05:37am
Dublin: Independent election candidate Gerard Hutch also known as Gerry ‘The Monk’ reacts inside a count centre following Ireland’s general election, on Sunday.—Reuters
Dublin: Independent election candidate Gerard Hutch also known as Gerry ‘The Monk’ reacts inside a count centre following Ireland’s general election, on Sunday.—Reuters

DUBLIN: The incumbent centre-right parties Fianna Fail and Fine Gael looked set to retain power in Ireland as vote counting in the European Union member’s general election resumed on Sunday.

With half the seats of the new 174-seat lower chamber of parliament decided since Friday’s vote, the two parties were ahead of the main opposition party, the left-wing nationalist Sinn Fein.

Fianna Fail, led by the experienced Micheal Martin, 64, won the largest vote share with 22 percent.

Fine Gael, whose leader Simon Harris, 38, is the outgoing prime minister (taoiseach), was in second place with 21pc, while Sinn Fein was in third (19pc). To form a majority, a party or coalition requires at least 88 seats. At the halfway stage Fianna Fail had secured 23 seats, Fine Gael 22, and Sinn Fein 21.

Both centre-right parties have repeatedly ruled out entering a coalition with Sinn Fein. The centre-left opposition parties Labour and the Social Democrats are seen by Fine Gael and Fianna Fail as the most likely junior coalition parties, according to media reports.

Horse-trading

The Green Party was the third member of the previous coalition but its support collapsed nationwide, with all but one seat likely to be lost. At the last general election in 2020, the pro-Irish unity Sinn Fein — the former political wing of the paramilitary Irish Republican Army — was the most popular party but could not find willing coalition partners.

That led to weeks of horse-trading, ending up with Fine Gael, which has been in power since 2011, agreeing a deal with Fianna Fail. During the last parliamentary term, the role of prime minister rotated between the Fianna Fail and Fine Gael leaders.

The final seat numbers, which will not be confirmed until early next week, will determine whether Harris returns as taoiseach or Martin takes the role under a similar rotation arrangement.

The new parliament is due to sit for the first time on December 18, but with coalition talks likely to drag on a new government might not be formed until the new year.

Martin told reporters in Cork that there was “very little point” in discussing government formation until seats were finalised. “I think there’s capacity to get on,” he said, when asked if there is trust between Fianna Fail and Fine Gael.

Paschal Donohoe, a top Fine Gael minister in the outgoing cabinet, said there was “a chance” a government might still be formed this year.

“But we do have a lot of work to do,” Donohoe told reporters in Dublin after his own re-election to parliament. “Overall the centre has held up in Irish politics,” he said.

The three-week campaign, launched after Harris called a snap election on November 8, was dominated by rancour over housing supply and cost-of-living crises, health, public spending and the economy.

“It’s all been an anti-climax as far as I’m concerned,” Michael O’Kane, a 76-year-old semi-retired engineer, said in Dublin. “It’s more of the same. The two parties who dominated the government last time are back again... but with the (fresh coalition partners) it might be a little bit less stable,” he said.

Published in Dawn, December 2nd, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

The ban question
Updated 02 Dec, 2024

The ban question

RENEWED talk about banning one of the country’s largest political parties shows nothing but the impoverishment of...
5G charade
02 Dec, 2024

5G charade

THE government’s lofty plans for the 5G spectrum auction are an insult to the collective intelligence of the...
Syria offensive
02 Dec, 2024

Syria offensive

AFTER several years of relative calm, the Syrian civil war has begun to heat up again, with Idlib-based rebel...
Flying ban reversal
Updated 01 Dec, 2024

Flying ban reversal

Only the naive can expect the reinstatement of European operations to help restore PIA’s profitability.
Kurram conflict
01 Dec, 2024

Kurram conflict

DESPITE a ceasefire being in place, violence has continued in Kurram tribal district. The latest round of bloodshed...
World AIDS Day
01 Dec, 2024

World AIDS Day

IT is a travesty that, decades after HIV/AIDS first perplexed medics, awareness about the disease remains low in...