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Irish elections: Ruling Fianna Fail vote increases, Sinn Fein
win five seats
By Mike Ingram
20 May 2002
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With votes counted in 37 of the 42 constituencies, Bertie Aherns
Fianna Fail had taken 74 of the 166 seats in the Dail (Irish Parliament).
The party had achieved 41.5 percent of first preference votes,
an increase of 2.2 percent on the last elections held in 1997.
Ireland has a complex proportional representationsingle
transferable vote system. Voters in multi-seat constituencies
(electing three, four or five deputies each) are asked to rank
their candidate preferences on a ballot paper. Counting these
papers can be slow and it may be some time before a final tally
is known. In 1997, the vote took place on June 7 but the final
result was not known until the 14th.
Nevertheless, it seems likely that Fianna Fail has fallen short
of the 84 seats needed to become the first party since 1977 to
rule without the need of a coalition. The most likely outcome
of the election is the continuance of the Fianna Fail and Progressive
Democrats coalition.
Beyond this, however, the political landscape has been substantially
altered by the results of this election.
Fine Gael, the main opposition party in Ireland, has been all
but wiped out with a 5.4 percent drop in first preference votes
and the loss of more than 20 of the seats it had held since 1997.
Fine Gael leader Michael Noonan resigned his leadership, even
before the final results were in.
Fine Gael was virtually indistinguishable from its rival in
terms of policies. It presented itself as a centre-left alternative
to Fianna Fail, and formed an electoral alliance with Labour.
Both Fianna Fail and Fine Gael have accused each other of engaging
in voodoo or Enron economics; each saying the other
would drive up government borrowing.
Ahern and Fianna Fail had been credited with good management
of Irelands booming economy and no doubt this was reflected
in the voting. Largely due to US investment in what is viewed
as an English speaking gateway to Europe with a relatively cheap,
skilled labour force, the Irish economy has grown at an average
rate of 9 percent since the mid-1990s. Though there was some concern
as to whether Ahern could manage the economy in a slowdown, with
the double-digit growth of 11.5 percent in 2000 almost halved
to 5.9 percent last year, his share of the vote increased as Fine
Gael failed to advance any real alternative.
But the growth in the Irish economy has largely benefited the
more privileged layers. In April this year the Combat Poverty
Agency (PCA)a government bureausaid the rich had benefited
most from economic growth. The CPA report said that during Aherns
five-year administration, the richest 10 percent received 25 percent
of government budget giveaways, while the poorest 20 percent got
just five percent. And it said the government only minimally reduced
the 10 percent proportion of the population in severe povertythose
with incomes below 50 percent of the national average.
Ireland is amongst the most unequal countries in the
European Union, the CPA report said, calling for tax increases
to alleviate the inequities.
While providing massive tax-breaks to big business, the government
has been criticised over the state of the health service and education,
and the country has been hit by strikes of nurses and teachers
in recent months.
The polarisation of Irish society between rich and poor did
find distorted expression in the election. There was increased
support for independent candidates and those parties purporting
to be opponents of big business, while all the main bourgeois
parties outside of Fianna Fail saw a drop in their vote.
Alongside the wiping out of Fine Gail, Labour saw a loss of
2.1 percent in its vote since 1997 and even Fianna Fails
governmental partners, the PD, lost 0.7 percent. In contrast,
the Green Party won six seats in the Dail, with a one percent
increase in its first preference votes and a host of independent
candidates standing on single issue policies gained 14 seats with
a 1.2 percent increase in first preference votes. The Socialist
Party also maintained its seat in Dublin West, when Joe Higgins
was re-elected with 21.5 percent of first preference votes (the
second highest in the constituency).
Most significant was the increased support for Sinn Fein. Despite
a concerted campaign to highlight the link between the party and
the Irish Republican Army, Sinn Fein was able to go from one to
five seats in the Dail with a four percent increase in first preference
votes. General support for the Good Friday Agreement and the new
political institutions in the north is no doubt a factor in the
increased support for Sinn Fein, but also of importance is the
emphasis that Sinn Fein has placed on being an anti-establishment,
all-Ireland party with a progressive social agenda.
We are a party that offers a real alternative to the
stale and corrupt politics that have marked life here for so long,
Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams said. We are asking people
to join with us in building an Ireland of equals.
Sinn Feins most significant victory came in North Kerry
in the south-west, where Martin Ferris, a convicted IRA gun-runner
and alleged member of the IRA Army Council, topped the poll, ousting
Dick Spring, the former deputy prime minister and Labour leader.
With Sinn Fein holding five seats, against the PDs four,
there will be talk of the possibility of Sinn Fein being included
in a new ruling coalition. For his part, Ahern has ruled out any
involvement with Sinn Fein in a coalition until the IRA is disbanded.
Whatever their immediate fate in terms of a position in government,
there is no doubt that Sinn Feins standing in the south
has increased. Success in the Irish elections will be encouraging
for the partys next big test, the elections to the Northern
Ireland Assembly.
Sinn Feins increased standing, north and south of the
border reflects a growing disaffection from the political establishment.
This is felt not only among the 63 percent who turned out to vote
in the Irish elections, but among those who didnt, and particularly
among the young.
As the new government increases its attacks upon working people
in its drive to maintain the privileges of the top ten percent
of Irish society, parties such as Sinn Fein will come to play
a crucial role. Despite their rhetoric, Sinn Fein do not represent
an alternative for Irish workers, north or south of the border.
Their entry into government in the north was an acceptance of
the new political institutions set up to best secure the exploitation
of the working class in the interests of big business. Their entrance
into a coalition government in the south would confirm their newfound
standing as a trusted representative of business interests.
See Also:
Ireland: government attack
on abortion rights defeated in referendum
[13 March 2002]
The ratification
of the Northern Ireland Agreement
What will it mean for the working class?
[30 May 1998]
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