Sinn Féin Can Win This Election | Sanctions Urgently Needed Against Israel | Solidarity and Condolences to the Family of Pat Donaghy.
SINN
FÉIN CAN WIN THIS ELECTION.
During
the General Election campaign I have been in several constituencies.
In Dublin, in Drogheda, Dundalk, and Donegal and some other places in
between. People are clearly fed up with the cost of living, the crisis in
public services, especially in health and housing, childcare and disability
services.
But
increasingly after a century of the Tweedledee and Tweedledum politics by the
two civil war parties, many people are annoyed at the sameness of their
politics, their dismal failure to tackle the big issues impacting on people’s
daily lives and the conceited self-serving way they approach election contests.
With a sense of entitlement. This is hardly surprising given that they have
been in power, one way or the other, for a century. However, many people are
catching up on the reality that a vote for Micheál is a vote for Simon and a
vote for Simon is a vote for Micheál. That is despite the sham Punch and
Judy arguments between them.
Housing
provision in the South is a mess. Rents and childcare costs are through the
roof. Education is in a crisis, as is the health system. The Children’s
Hospital, which Simon Harris vainly tried to wash his hands of during a
televised debate two weeks ago, is now the most expensive hospital ever built -
anywhere in the world. It has cost two billion euro of taxpayer’s money. So
far.
The
environment, rural Ireland and agriculture are under enormous pressure and the
Fianna Fáil/Fine Gael government – and in particular Simon Harris as Health
Minister – has failed to deliver on his commitment to provide for children with
scoliosis. And then to add to this debacle it was revealed at the weekend that
there is a five billion black hole in Fine Gael’s manifesto financial
commitments.
None
of this will come as a surprise to anyone who has watched these two parties.
Between them after partition they created a conservative and mean spirited
dispensation which was particularly cruel to women, children and the poor. Over
many decades both were responsible for mass emigration when at least a
million people left Ireland for Britain, the USA, Canada and Australia.
Under
their watch there was the horror of the "Reformatory and Industrial
Schools" operated by Catholic
Church orders, which were funded and supervised by the Department
of Education. It was the stuff of nightmares. The Ryan report laid bare a
system that treated children like prison inmates and slaves. They were
routinely abused and subject to beatings and rape.
The
Magdalene Laundries were another long-standing scandal ignored by Fine
Gael and Fianna Fáil. Women and girls pregnant outside of marriage or
suspected of 'immoral' behaviour were incaserated in institutions run by
nuns. They were unpaid labour. They were deprived of their liberty and
suffered both physical and emotional abuse.
And
then there were the Mother and Baby Homes. The final report into
these institutions by a Commission established in 2015 was published in
January 2021. It revealed that around 9,000 children, one in seven of those
born in the 18 institutions covered by the Commission's terms of reference, had
died in them between 1922 and 1998. This was double the infant mortality rate
in the general population.
Remember
also that the Fianna Fáil party drove the southern economy over the cliff in
2008/9 and Fine Gael and Labour then imposed harsh austerity measures that
inflicted huge hurt on the most vulnerable in society.
In
2020 Martin denied that Fianna Fáil would enter a coalition with Fine Gael. He
said: “: “… the people want change … they want Fine Gael out of office …
they’ve been there too long …” He described any u-turn on a coalition
with Fine Gael as “Jekyll and Hyde behaviour.” Martin then did a
u-turn. He misled the voters.
But
even this experience of the last two decades only scratches the surface.
In
addition, members of both parties have been linked over many years to planning
corruption that saw elected politicians receive money in return for favours.
Republicans
also know that neither party is serious on the issue of Irish Unity. Fine Gael
and Fianna Fáil pay lip service to it but refuse to take the practical steps
needed to plan for an end of the union. For decades they ignored partition and
its impact on the economy of the island and on the families living along with
border corridor. They disregarded the decades of discrimination and inequality
in the North and backed British government policy, even when that policy was
reliant on collusion and torture. They have spent 100 years bolstering
partition.
The
Good Friday Agreement has a process to end all this if that is what the people
want. Over twenty-five years after the Agreement neither Fianna Fail or Fine
Gael have made any real effort to plan for this. In its manifesto Sinn Féin has
set out the steps that a Sinn Féin led Government will take if it wins a
mandate in this election. Sinn Féin has A Plan for Unity. A plan which
will usher in constitutional, legislative and political change.
Sinn
Fein also has 71 candidates in the field. One hundred and seventy four TDs will
be elected so Sinn Féin will not be able to form a majority government even if
all its candidates are elected. But neither will Fine Gael or Fianna Fail. No
party will form a government on its own.
However,
if Mary Lou receives a mandate to lead a government she will then be able reach
out to other progressives to form a government without Fianna Fáil or Fine
Gael. That is do able.
So,
there is a historic opportunity in this general election to opt for fundamental
change – to push aside the failed and self-serving politics of Fine Gael and
Fianna Fáil.
It’s
all in the hands of the voters. They have the opportunity to elect a strong
progressive and sustainable government. led by Sinn Fein. Without Fianna Fail
and Fine Gael. It is all to play for. Sinn Fein can win this election. 100
years of FFFG is too long. So is 100 years of partition. Next Friday will tell
the tale.
Sanctions
urgently needed against Israel
Last
Wednesday was World Children’s Day. It was first established in 1954 as
Universal Children's Day and is celebrated on 20 November each year to promote
international togetherness, awareness among children worldwide, and improving
children's welfare. It is also the date in 1959 when the UN General Assembly
adopted the Declaration
of the Rights of the Child. It is also the date in 1989 when the UN General
Assembly adopted the Convention
on the Rights of the Child.
The
following day the world’s top war-crimes court issued arrest warrants for
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Minister for Defence
Yoav Gallant. They stand accused of crimes
against humanity in connection Israel’s genocidal war on the people of
the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
The
warrants acknowledge that it is believed that both Israeli political leaders
are using “starvation as a method of warfare.” They are doing this by
deliberately blocking humanitarian aid entering Gaza and they have
intentionally targeted civilians. The current underestimate is that over 44,000
people have been killed in Gaza. Over half of these are women and children. As
the world marks Children’s Day the Israeli military, using weapons provided by
the USA, Britain, Germany and others are killing Palestinian Children in their
thousands.
The
Irish government has been negligent in taking meaningful action against Israel.
The next government must step up to the plate. It must introduce sanctions
against Israel, pass into law the Occupied Territories Bill and join a
coalition of states determined to stand up to Israel and its allies.
Solidarity
and Condolences to the family of Pat Donaghy
As
I finish this column I got the sad news that Pat Donaghy has died. Originally
from Tremoge near Carrickmore in County Tyrone Pat emigrated to the United
States in the 1950s. Like many others he went looking for work because work was
sparse for northern nationalists in unionism’s apartheid northern state. He was
in his late teens. His older sister Nora sponsored him. Pat was the sixth of
fifteen children. Phyllis, Peggy and Bella along with Nora had already
emigrated. Other siblings born after Pat and the older sisters also
emigrated.
I
got to know Pat through his work for Ireland, his loyalty to the Irish cause
and his native county of Tyrone, and his commitment to the Friends of Sinn
Féin. Pat by dint of hard work did well in the USA. He founded Structure
Tone with Lewis R Marino in 1971. It is now one of the biggest construction
companies in the USA.
Pat
Donaghy threw his considerable influence and good will into the peace process
and behind Sinn Féin’s peace strategy. He became one of The Friends of Sinn
Fein’s main supporters when that important group was established in 1995 and
was part of the small group of like-minded patriots who inaugurated the annual
Friends of Sinn Féin Dinner in New York in 1995.
I
always found Pat to be a warm friendly and unassuming patriot. Despite his huge
success in the construction industry he was grounded in the traditions and
generous core values of his parents and his native place. I am honoured to have
been his friend and to have enjoyed his company.
I
want to extend my solidarity and condolences to the entire Donaghy family in
the USA and Tyrone, especially his wife Mary, his children Brian, Jimmy, John,
Ray, Maureen and Eileen. Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam díli
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