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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Aibu to be very upset at the way this poor care worker was treated by the Irish Taoiseach? Video in link.

85 replies

Imperiallanger · 22/11/2024 23:27

As our main political leader I find his manner very condescending & passive aggressive. Very upset watching this.. Video linked here. Care workers in Ireland have been let down very badly by our politicians

www.rte.ie/news/post/104564612/

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Imperiallanger · 25/11/2024 07:58

https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/politics/arid-41523383.html?fbclid=IwY2xjawGxDFhleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHTgBZtGaKETUDVhSQEaFByNqq_4mx_2AxTMwAsusRE9taMTlav-X9AfQXg_aem_GX1GpwEQyNYoKnMcxueQBQ

Sounds like morale is very low in Fine Gael 😂 I hope people remember Charlotte Fallon, the pushing of the hate speech bill, the National Children's Hospital, the bike shed, the cost of living crisis, the scoliosis children, the cervical cancer scandal & petrol hikes when we go to the polls on Friday.
The only way we can get change we deserve is to give NO preference to any Fine Gael candidate on our precious ballot papers. What would our founding fathers & the suffregates think & do?

Fine Gael has '48 hours to turn things around' after weekend blows

Party sources said that the Taoiseach's swift apology to Ms Fallon was to be commended, but accepted that the optics and timing of the incident were a problem

https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/politics/arid-41523383.html?fbclid=IwY2xjawGxDFhleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHTgBZtGaKETUDVhSQEaFByNqq_4mx_2AxTMwAsusRE9taMTlav-X9AfQXg_aem_GX1GpwEQyNYoKnMcxueQBQ

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Anothermathstest · 25/11/2024 08:47

The only way we can get change we deserve is to give NO preference to any Fine Gael candidate on our precious ballot papers.

Why is Fine Gael getting the blame for everything OP? They’re in government with Fianna Fáil and the Greens.

Imperiallanger · 25/11/2024 08:55

Anothermathstest · 25/11/2024 08:47

The only way we can get change we deserve is to give NO preference to any Fine Gael candidate on our precious ballot papers.

Why is Fine Gael getting the blame for everything OP? They’re in government with Fianna Fáil and the Greens.

They were very vocal about getting the hate speech bill passed
The bike shed scandal happend during Simon Harris's watch
Simon Harris said children with scoliosis would only wait 4 months for life changing surgery, some are now waiting over 4 years!
The cervical cancer scandal.
The childrens hospital scandal.
The way the poor women was treated in Kanturk will be the final straw for many voters & a reminder of how carers were forgotten
Look at the cost of living at the moment
The housing crisis

Fianna Fáil aren't much better but I will take them over Fine Gael. And according to news reports this morning FF are set to capitalise on FGs misfortune & take more seats than them.

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Anothermathstest · 25/11/2024 09:23

Most of that doesn’t really explain why you’ve singled out Fine Gael to me, sorry.

wheretonow123 · 25/11/2024 09:45

In my opinion Climate Change and the Environment is the most important of (many) issues facing the country. It also should have been much much higher in the US election.

There is a report released on a review of the political parties policies for the election.

Labour came out as the party with the best climate action policies followed by Social Democrats and the Green Party.

The big parties were very similar and in the middle which is disappointing

Aountú and Independent Ireland were bottom of the class.

https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/experts-give-smaller-parties-bigger-points-for-climate-policies-in-election-analysis/a1121016293.html

Labour has emerged as the party with the best climate action policies in an assessment of election manifestos commissioned by environmental group, Friends of the Earth.
The party was awarded an A grade, while Social Democrats took second place with an A- and the Green Party came third with a B followed by People Before Profit with a C.
The three biggest parties, Fine Gael, Fiannal Fail and Sinn Fein, were joint fifth, all with a failing E grade while Aontú and Independent Ireland came last with a G.
Friends of the Earth tasked the analysis to three experts: Dr Cara Augustenborg, Assistant Professor in Environmental Policy at UCD; Prof Hannah Daly, Professor in Sustainable Energy at University College Cork; and Prof Mary Murphy, Professor of Sociology at Maynooth University.
They marked the parties under five headings, assessing their willingness to take leadership on climate issues and how they would address the decarbonisation of homes, energy, transport and agriculture.
They placed emphasis on both what was in the manifestos and what they judged was left out.

“The parties who received the highest scores in this assessment, especially Labour and Social Democrats, placed climate action as a key policy priority (and) detailed a comprehensive set of policies to deliver faster and fairer decarbonisation,” the experts said.
“It is alarming that the manifestos of the three parties vying to provide the next Taoiseach all failed this independent climate assessment”

  • Friends of the Earth chief executive Oisín Coghlan
“A key difference between the political parties who received failing grades compared to political parties with higher grades was that failing parties were far more focused on accelerating development of wind and solar infrastructure than curtailing the burning of fossil fuels. “In other words, they answered only half of the climate question by not committing to phase out fossil fuels and stop building new fossil fuel infrastructure. They said parties with high grades show a greater willingness to “grasp the nettle” on turning people away from fossil fuels and propose transformative actions in thorny topics like aviation, roads and food policy. Friends of the Earth chief executive Oisín Coghlan said the conclusions of the exercise were very worrying.

“It is alarming that the manifestos of the three parties vying to provide the next Taoiseach all failed this independent climate assessment,” he said.
“They all voted for the climate law and the binding limits on pollution adopted by the last Dáil.
“But their manifestos don’t contain polices to reduce emissions fast enough to meet those 2030 commitments.”

Imperiallanger · 25/11/2024 09:54

wheretonow123 · 25/11/2024 09:45

In my opinion Climate Change and the Environment is the most important of (many) issues facing the country. It also should have been much much higher in the US election.

There is a report released on a review of the political parties policies for the election.

Labour came out as the party with the best climate action policies followed by Social Democrats and the Green Party.

The big parties were very similar and in the middle which is disappointing

Aountú and Independent Ireland were bottom of the class.

https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/experts-give-smaller-parties-bigger-points-for-climate-policies-in-election-analysis/a1121016293.html

Labour has emerged as the party with the best climate action policies in an assessment of election manifestos commissioned by environmental group, Friends of the Earth.
The party was awarded an A grade, while Social Democrats took second place with an A- and the Green Party came third with a B followed by People Before Profit with a C.
The three biggest parties, Fine Gael, Fiannal Fail and Sinn Fein, were joint fifth, all with a failing E grade while Aontú and Independent Ireland came last with a G.
Friends of the Earth tasked the analysis to three experts: Dr Cara Augustenborg, Assistant Professor in Environmental Policy at UCD; Prof Hannah Daly, Professor in Sustainable Energy at University College Cork; and Prof Mary Murphy, Professor of Sociology at Maynooth University.
They marked the parties under five headings, assessing their willingness to take leadership on climate issues and how they would address the decarbonisation of homes, energy, transport and agriculture.
They placed emphasis on both what was in the manifestos and what they judged was left out.

“The parties who received the highest scores in this assessment, especially Labour and Social Democrats, placed climate action as a key policy priority (and) detailed a comprehensive set of policies to deliver faster and fairer decarbonisation,” the experts said.
“It is alarming that the manifestos of the three parties vying to provide the next Taoiseach all failed this independent climate assessment”

  • Friends of the Earth chief executive Oisín Coghlan
“A key difference between the political parties who received failing grades compared to political parties with higher grades was that failing parties were far more focused on accelerating development of wind and solar infrastructure than curtailing the burning of fossil fuels. “In other words, they answered only half of the climate question by not committing to phase out fossil fuels and stop building new fossil fuel infrastructure. They said parties with high grades show a greater willingness to “grasp the nettle” on turning people away from fossil fuels and propose transformative actions in thorny topics like aviation, roads and food policy. Friends of the Earth chief executive Oisín Coghlan said the conclusions of the exercise were very worrying.

“It is alarming that the manifestos of the three parties vying to provide the next Taoiseach all failed this independent climate assessment,” he said.
“They all voted for the climate law and the binding limits on pollution adopted by the last Dáil.
“But their manifestos don’t contain polices to reduce emissions fast enough to meet those 2030 commitments.”

Will FF & FG go in with Labour though? Possibly who knows. All we know is we'll definitely have some form of coalition

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Anothermathstest · 25/11/2024 10:52

That’s very interesting @wheretonow123, thank you.

Imperiallanger · 25/11/2024 10:59

Anothermathstest · 25/11/2024 10:52

That’s very interesting @wheretonow123, thank you.

https://www.irishexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/arid-40952696.html

So is this.. Labour are very pro trans & still are. My labour candidate was very dismissive when I told him I want female only spaces, prisons & sports teams.

Alison O'Connor: We can be trans-inclusive without undermining women’s rights

"We must respect people's identity. A trans woman is a woman. A trans man is a man," says Labour Party leader and chair of the gender committee Ivana Bacik

https://www.irishexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/arid-40952696.html

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