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Aontú Ireland rejects comparison to Farage's Reform UK

Aontú Ireland rejects comparison to Farage's Reform UK

Irish Times25-05-2025

Aontú
leader
Peadar Tóibín
focused his keynote speech at the party's ardfheis predominantly on Government waste.
He went on the offensive against the Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael leaders, telling delegates '
Government incompetence
is incinerating your money and slowing key projects to a halt'.
Listing scandal after spending scandal, including the Leinster House €336,000 'Gucci' bike shelter and the €2.4 billion delayed national children's hospital, he took repeated swipes at the Coalition.
On immigration, he said Government policy 'has been chaotic and has damaged the cohesion of this country'. Six years ago 'Aontú was alone is stating that we as a country must have an open, respectful conversation about immigration'.
READ MORE
'If you don't allow people to discuss immigration you push the discussion underground where it will be harvested and manipulated by bad actors for their own purposes. This is exactly what happened.'
It was music to cheering party delegates' ears.
This focus on waste of public funds, 'incompetent political leadership' and immigration has clear echoes of
Reform UK
,
Nigel Farage
's party which campaigns on a platform of 'common sense'. Aontú's stance, like Reform's, is about 'not being afraid to stand against the prevailing winds', although Mr Tóibín and party delegates reject the comparison.
Maria Byrne, from Kilcullen, Co Kildare joined the party because of 'disillusionment with Fianna Fáil' who were not listening 'to the concerns of ordinary people'.
Dismissing any likeness between Aontú and Nigel Farage's populist party in the UK, she says she is 'left-leaning on political issues', adding: 'Some people think that Aontú is a right-wing party because it is pro-life. I'm pro-life in that it is a human rights issue.'
Theresa Lynch from Cork North-West traditionally voted Fianna Fáil and joined Aontú 'because I'm pro-life'. She believes Fianna Fáil 'are not listening to any of our concerns', whether about immigration, education or the HSE's vaccination programme.
Adam O'Neill (18) from Carnew, Co Wicklow, says Reform is economically a right-wing organisation while 'Aontú is left-wing', and 'we aren't as populist or as driven by the trends of the time'.
Delegates at the ardfheis on Saturday backed a motion calling for an 'outright ban' on anyone who 'purposely destroyed their travel documents' entering the State. However, party members at the event in Gormanston, Co Meath, rejected a motion stating that no non-Irish citizen should be allowed to 'enter the State if they have a criminal conviction'.
During the first debate at the ardfheis, on the topic of international protection, Meath councillor Emer Tóibín, the leader's sister, said there was 'no long-term plan' for the 'unsustainable' immigration system.
Delegates also supported a motion stating that only the national flag should be displayed on public buildings as public spaces should not be aligned 'with any particular ideology or political stance'.
Aontú more than doubled its vote share (to 3.9 per cent) in the general election, returning two TDs – Mr Tóibín and Mayo-based Paul Lawless.
Critics claim that, like Reform, the party engages in the 'culture wars' on issues like gender recognition but Mr Tóibín says 'we're just standing with the people'.
'Aontú is on the rise' because 'we have a backbone, we are confident to stand against the prevailing winds of the political establishment' and 'puncture the political bubble that exists in Leinster House', says the former Sinn Féin TD.
On immigration, 'compassion and common sense is where the vast majority of Irish people exist' but the Government is 'in a bubble' and 'not listening to the people', Mr Tóibín adds.

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Letters to the Editor, June 2nd: On PhD students, Israel and Pine Martens
Letters to the Editor, June 2nd: On PhD students, Israel and Pine Martens

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Letters to the Editor, June 2nd: On PhD students, Israel and Pine Martens

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In a Word...Ancestry
In a Word...Ancestry

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  • Irish Times

In a Word...Ancestry

Sometimes I wonder if we Irish have finally lost it. Pope Leo, or Bob the Pope as some prefer to call him, was elected on May 8th and still there is not a hint of an Irish link. How can it be possible that a man who was born, grew up and was educated in Chicago has no Irish connection? If links with Ireland could be found in the ancestry of Muhammad Ali and Barack Obama , how is it not possible where Robert Prevost is concerned? Has no one checked his Norman ancestry, for instance? Some of his people came from Normandy in the north-west of France . Surely some of that Norman band who invaded Ireland with Strongbow in 1169 had to have a connection. READ MORE You know, like the Fitzgeralds – all the Fitzes – the Burkes , D'Altons, D'Arcys, Prendergasts, Powers, Butlers, Joyces, Barretts, Dillons, etc. All those sons and daughters of our invaders who went on to become more Irish than ourselves. Let's face it, whatever about Ali and Obama, if they could find Irish ancestry in the background of Richard Nixon they surely should be able to find it in the DNA of Robert Prevost. What? You never knew Nixon had Irish ancestry? No one talks about that anymore. Nixon celebrated his Irish ancestry too. That, of course, was before the unfortunate business which led to his resignation as US president in 1974. In disgrace. He visited Ireland in 1970 and had eggs thrown at him in Dublin. Trust the Dubs, disrespecting him before it was either popular or profitable. [ What next for top Irish Vatican clerics under Pope Leo XIV? Opens in new window ] [ In a Word... Language Opens in new window ] They weren't like that at the Quaker burial ground in Hodgestown, near Timahoe, Co Kildare, where he went to pay his respects to the ancestors of his mother, Hannah Milhous. While there, he spoke of the Quaker passion for peace and how his greatest purpose as US president was 'to bring peace not only to America, but to all the world'. Some things never change. And peace was the first thing Pope Leo XIV spoke of on making his debut on May 8th. And still not a hint of Irish blood in him. Not good enough! Ancestry , from Old French ancesserie, Latin antecessor , for `predecessor.' inaword@

Go nuclear?
Go nuclear?

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Go nuclear?

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