Time for a Change of Government | Judicial Review lodged in defence of Moore St | New Mural in Support of Palestinians.
Time for a Change of Government.
The southern
general election was called last Friday. In just over two weeks’ time 174
Teachtaí Dála (TDs) will be elected to the Dáil – an increase of 14 over
the number elected in the 2020 general election.
On
Sunday I was in Dublin for the Save Moore Street rally but afterwards I was in
Caledon Road and St. Mary’s Road in East Wall with a Sinn Féin canvas team
urging voters to give their number 1 vote to Mary Lou McDonald and their number
2 vote to Janice Boylan. The response was very good.
The
early opinion polls – and I’m not a fan of opinion polls – have the three main
parties - Sinn Féin, Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil - all within two or three points
of each other. Some folks get carried away with opinion polls. That’s foolish
as we have seen recently in the USA. Nothing beats real engagement with the
electorate.
Predictably,
the usual naysayers and bregrudgers are engaging in negative campaigning
against Sinn Féin. It wouldn’t be an election if that weren’t the case but
republican activists are upbeat - we like a good fight - the policies are
excellent and the candidates are getting a positive response.
Even
before Simon Harris had announced the election Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil were
seeking to outdo each other in election promises. Decisions on housing and
health, on pensions and VAT and other matters are all issues of concern that
they could have delivered on while in government. They didn’t. Why believe they
will do it after 29 November?
Fine
Gael has been in government for the last 14 years. Fianna Fáil supported Fine
Gael in Government between 2016 and 2020 and then joined it in a coalition
after the February 2020 general election. It did so despite Fianna Fáil leader
Micheál Martin famously saying: “People want change, that’s the message
we’re receiving, they want Fine Gael out of office … Fine Gael need to come out
of government, they’ve been there too long, they haven’t delivered on key
issues such as housing, health and the impact of cost of living on many people.
The people want a new government, that means a completely new government.” Unfortunately,
the people didn’t get their new government. Instead they got Fine Gael back
propped up by Fianna Fáil. People in the south deserve a change of Government.
It’s up to Sinn Féin to convince them to give us a chance.
This
time there is a real prospect of ending the dominance of the two civil war
parties who have run the Irish state in their own interests for over 100 years.
Sinn Féin is running 71 candidates which creates a real opportunity for a Sinn
Féin led government.
That
is the only way of creating a new style of government that is for working
people and for communities and which will deliver for citizens. As Mary Lou put
it: “If Sinn Féin wins, you win, your family will win, your future will win.”
This
is true on all the social and economic inequalities pressing down on people.
The housing crisis and the cost of living and health crisis facing many people
will only be rectified by Sinn Féin in government.
It
is also true on the national question. Northener’s know the approach of the
other parties has been minimalist. They have failed to plan for the future.
There has been no Citizens Assembly to discuss the constitutional changes which
are needed. No real commitment to fulfil all aspects of the Good Friday
Agreement. Sinn Féin on the other hand has a plan for unity and a clear
manifesto commitment to bring this into government if the people vote for
us.
It’s
simple. If you want Irish unity vote Sinn Féin.
The
next few weeks will be interesting. It’s all to play for between now and
November 29th. Watch this space.
Judicial Review lodged in defence of Moore Street
The
battle to save the 1916 Moore Street Battlefield site has entered a new and
critical phase with the decision by the Moore Street Preservation Trust to seek
leave for a judicial review of the decision by An Bord Pleanála to allow the
developer’s plan to proceed. Almost two decades after the campaign to protect
this important historic part of the Easter 1916 revolutionary story the
campaign has reached a decisive moment.
James
Connolly Heron, the grandson of James Connolly announced at a rally in Moore St
on Sunday that the Trust had lodged papers last Friday for a judicial review of
the planner’s decision. He said: "The Hammerson plan would
demolish much of the 1916 battlefield site, including buildings occupied by the
Volunteers at the end of Easter Week. The area would be turned into a building
site for up to 15 years to construct unwanted and unnecessary retail and office
developments.”
James
Connolly Heron added: “Moore Street campaigners, with widespread public
support at home and abroad, have up to now saved this historic site from
destruction. That support will be needed more than ever now in the latest phase
of our campaign.”
Several
hundred people attended the rally which was addressed by campaigners, including
Mary Lou McDonald, Donna Clooney, Proinsias Ó Rathaille, Stephen Troy,
Diarmuid Breatnach and Micheál MacDonncha.
The
Sinn Féin leader criticised successive Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil governments
who have allowed the area to be “shamefully left to go to rack and ruin. Not
only have they abandoned the area to go to rot but they have also obstructed
and delayed acting to ensure the revitalisation of the Moore Street area as a
historical quarter. They actively support a plan to hand over Moore Street,
including the revolutionary terrace, to private developers who seek to pave
over our history for the sake of greed and profit.!!”
The
Dublin Central TD told the rally that a Sinn Féin led government will not allow
the destruction of this most important site to go ahead. She described the plan
by the Trust as “the plan that a Sinn Fein led government will back from day
one … The Moore Street area echoes with the past and calls out to the future.
The legacy of this historic area belongs to us all and for generations to come.
We shouldn’t have to campaign to save it, we shouldn’t have to fight to fight
to save it, but by working together we will save Moore St.”
Mary
Lou is right. The judicial review papers have been lodged. Support the effort
to save Moore Street from demolition.
New
Mural in support of Palestinians
At
the weekend a new mural was unveiled in Andersonstown in west Belfast
highlighting the shared experience of struggle and solidarity between the
peoples of Ireland and Palestine. Well done to Marty Lyons and Michael Doherty
and the organisers.
The
mural comes on the back of a report last week from the United
Nation’s Human Rights Office that revealed that 70% of those killed in
Gaza between November last year and April this year were women and children. In
the intervening months we are witness day after day to the deliberate and
systematic genocide of the civilian population of the Gaza Strip. The people of
southern Lebanon are now enduring the same Israeli tactics.
An
Oxfam report concluded that more women and children have been killed in Gaza by
Israel than in any equivalent period since the start of this century. Current
estimates reveal that more than 43,300 people – of which one third are
children – have been killed since October 23. Many more bodies are believed to
remain under the rubble of destroyed buildings.
Oxfam
also published data showing that the Israeli military has attacked civilian
infrastructure on average every three hours.
· Homes
are attacked every four hours
· Tents
and temporary shelters every 17 hours
· Schools
and hospitals every four days
· Aid
distribution points and warehouses every 15 days.
The
Israeli government has clearly no intention at this time of stopping its
assault on the Gaza Strip or on Lebanon. Shamefully most western governments
are colluding in this.
Our
task must be to continue to campaign for an end to the war and in support of
the Palestinian people. It also means demanding the imposition of sanctions on
Israel, as well as the release of all hostages – Palestinian and Israeli – and
the provision of desperately needed aid.
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