
Seanad candidate had ‘expectation' of a full recount of vote over fine margin
Kildare county councillor Angela Feeney told the High Court in Dublin that there were issues around transparency of counting votes, and that the venue in Leinster House was 'cramped and crowded'.
Advertisement
Earlier this year, Ms Feeney was granted permission by the court to present a petition challenging the conduct of the counting of votes for the 11-member panel.
Ms Feeney, who is a member of the Labour Party, claims she was refused a full recount by the returning officer.
She said she lost out on a seat by one-ninth of a ballot.
Ms Feeney claimed that the margin of difference was as close as it has ever been since the 1980s.
Advertisement
Her petition to have a full recount is being opposed by a number of defendants in the case, including the returning office and the Minister for Housing.
Ms Feeney lost to Fine Gael's Maria Byrne following a margin of difference of one-ninth of a ballot. Ms Byrne was the last candidate on the panel to be elected.
In the Seanad elections, as the electorate is much smaller than other elections, each ballot paper is given a value of 1,000 votes.
There was a total valid poll of 95,667 on the agricultural panel. At the conclusion of the 23rd count, in which Ms Feeney had been eliminated, she had 17,513 votes.
Advertisement
Ms Byrne had, at the end of that count, a total of 17,629 votes. It represented a difference of one ninth of a ballot paper.
Senior counsel Conor Power, for Ms Feeney, said that the petitioner wants to have the results overturned and recounted.
Mr Power said that Ms Byrne was marginally ahead of Ms Feeney, and that it was the tightest of margins at a stage of elimination where the final seat was up for grabs.
He claimed it was the closest margin that they have come across since 1987 on a final determinative count, where one exclusion deemed everyone else elected.
Advertisement
He said that following the conclusion of the 23rd count, Ms Feeney asked the returning officer for a full recount of votes cast on the agriculture panel.
Having considered the request, the returning officer said that only a full recount of the 23rd count would be carried out.
The court heard that Seanad election candidates are legally entitled to call for a recount, but not a full recount.
Candidates can, however, ask the returning officer for a full recount, to which the returning officer has discretion.
Advertisement
Following the returning officer's refusal to carry out a full recount, Ms Feeney objected in writing.
Mr Power said there are two issues raised by Ms Feeney, the issue of a failure to allow for a full recount and the second being the issue of transparency of how the 23rd recount was carried out.
Mr Power also said he is making a request for the court to order a full recount before its determination of the case, saying it may assist the court, particularly if a mistake or irregularity is established.
Mr Power said that small margins in a system where ballot papers are counted by people must be considered by the returning officer in exercising their discretion of power.
He said that the purpose of the Electoral Act is to ensure an outcome that the public has confidence in the system and that recounts are part of that process.
'We say that all of the rules for counting and recounting is to produce a result that everyone can stand over,' he said.
'But because there are narrow margins and there is a possibility of human errors, notwithstanding planning by the returning office and staff. The evidence shows that recounts do result in different voting outcomes and changes to the number of votes.
'We say the margin of difference is something of particular note for the returning officer to consider as that bears directly on the outcome of the election.'
Giving evidence, Ms Feeney said she has attended election counts for a number of decades, both as a candidate and as part of local Labour Party teams.
She said she has attended count centres for Seanad, Dáil and local elections.
She said she would have been well used to the process of counting ballot papers.
Ms Feeney said she was 'very surprised' that when the counting process started, it was taking place at such a distance that there was no proper line of sight of the ballot papers.
She said that some staff members had their backs to candidates and that she did not have a proper line of sight to see the ballot papers being counted.
She said there was no opportunity to see the tally of votes as they were being counted around seven feet away.
Ms Feeney told the court that there was an 'expectation' that because of the fine margin, a recount would have been called.
She said this also raised issues of transparency, that the venue was very cramped and crowded and was not an appropriate venue which did not allow for transparency.
She also claimed the layout of the room also caused issues, in that those watching the count were restricted from seeing the ballot papers.
The case continues.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Woke Squad member grilled by CNN about why she only became interested in Epstein files after Trump was re-elected
Democrat 'Squad' member Pramila Jayapal was grilled by CNN's Pamela Brown about her curiously sudden interest in the Epstein files, despite remaining silent on the scandal for years before Donald Trump re-took office. 'If you see such a need to investigate this, why didn't you raise it during the Biden administration?' the persistent anchor asked. 'We couldn't find that you made any public comments about [Jeffrey] Epstein in previous administrations.' Jayapal, a member of the House Judiciary Committee, offered a bumbling answer in response. She claimed to have consistently sought to hold all presidential administrations accountable without mentioning Jeffrey Epstein. Brown, also CNN's chief investigative correspondent, wasn't buying it. She asked again why Jayapal 'didn't... call for more transparency earlier, during the Biden administration?' 'I'm just trying to better understand why you're so intent on calling for this. Jayapal again did not respond with a direct answer. Instead, visibly annoyed, the rep said: 'Well, I think I gave it the same focus that I'm giving it now,' as Democrats continue to weaponize the Epstein case against Donald Trump. 'We haven't - you know, I think I've released one tweet on this, and you wanted to talk about it,' Jayapal stammered. 'So I'm happy to talk about it here, but it certainly hasn't been the focus. 'I'm just responding to what I think is a massive switch from the Trump administration around this issue. 'But yes, I think that this information should have been released under the Biden administration,' the Washington Democrat admitted. 'It should be released under the Trump administration.' Earlier on, Brown had asked Jayapal if she supported the idea of having Maxwell come and publicly testify before Congress as calls of a cover-up - now coming from both sides of the aisle - continue to reverberate. 'Absolutely, Pamela,' replied Jayapal, who would likely be one of the members questioning Maxwell if she were to talk. 'We think that the files should be released. We should have testimonies from Maxwell. This is something that Trump supporters, for years, called for.' Jayapal then turned to the topic of the administration's abrupt about-face, which had spawned descension amongst conservative for its insistence that there was no Epstein client list and that the financier did in fact kill himself in August 2019. The determination deviated starkly from Trump's repeated promises for transparency during his 2024 campaign - an inconsistency Jayapal and fellow 'Squad' members such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have sought to seize on. 'And now all of a sudden, the Trump DOJ, Trump himself is refusing to provide the kind of transparency that he was calling for before he knew what was in the files,' she said, before suggesting Trump may have links to Epstein. 'And so that leads to the question of what are they trying to hide? 'And I think there should be transparency, regardless of who is implicated,' she maintained. That's when Brown, the anchor of the Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer, pointed out that this was the first she's heard from the rep on the matter. Jayapal has been in office since 2017. On July 7, the DOJ announced that the long-awaited 'client list' linking figures to Epstein did not exist, after AG Pam Bondi just months bragged on Fox News that the list of alleged, potential accomplices was 'sitting on [her] desk right now to review.' That same month, in February, the White House released a compilation of Epstein documents that turned out to contain no new information.


BreakingNews.ie
an hour ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Over half of those left at controversial Athlone asylum facility could begin to leave next week
Over half of the people seeking asylum occupying a controversial emergency accommodation centre in Athlone will tell the government by next week whether they have accepted alternative accommodation offered to them. At the High Court on Monday, senior counsel Aoife Carroll, for the government, told Ms Justice Emily Farrell that of the remaining 125 people at the accommodation centre, 70 people had received offers of alternative accommodation and that the court should know their answers next week. Advertisement Last month, Ms Carroll told the court that 137 people were in emergency accommodation at the facility, but that figures were dropping as alternative accommodation was being sought. The High Court action was taken by Independent Ireland councillor for Athlone-Moate District Paul Hogan, who successfully applied to the court in December for a judicial review, arguing that the expedited development was unlawful. The State has conceded to the court that the statutory instrument used to expedite the construction of the facility was "invalid" and is working on repairing legislation. A Statutory Instrument is a secondary legislation made by a Minister, modifying or supplementing existing laws. Cllr Hogan is taking the case against the office of the Minister for Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth. Advertisement Cllr Hogan claimed the Minister failed to adequately "screen" the project for potential environmental impacts and that the Minister lacked the expertise to carry out such assessments in such an expedited manner. Protests have been held in Athlone over the plan to further develop army-tent accommodation for a possible 1,000 asylum seekers. Last month, Ms Justice Farrell said she would defer judgment, quashing the use of the Statutory Instrument used to develop the emergency accommodation at Lissywollen in Athlone, Co Westmeath. Ms Justice Farrell had said she wanted to wait for updates and to see draft legislation from the Oireachtas. The government submitted it intended to remedy the legal issue over the bypassing of environmental assessments for the accommodation. Advertisement Today, Ms Carroll said the department was continuing to work to reduce the number of people at the facility, but that there was "significant pressure" on the system. Regarding the repairing legislation, Ms Carroll said "we have not made the progress hoped". Ms Carroll said that "significant work" had been done on a general scheme and that it was hoped this would go for drafting in preparation for legislation. Ms Carroll again asked for the court not to make final orders in the matter and to maintain the status quo pending the legislation, which is hoped to be put to the Dáil in November. Advertisement Ms Justice Farrell adjourned the matter to next week but warned she could not keep deferring final orders when the government had "ample opportunity" to put legislation before the Dáil. David O'Brien BL, for Cllr Hogan, said the government indicating "loose dates" had been "a regrettable motif" in the case. Any November date for the legislation to come before the Dáil, which was indicated to the court in May, had been initially "unrealistic... now, it is at the point of untenable" and his client was left "without a modicum of explanation", he said. Cllr Hogan claims the ministerial process employed was "unlawful, irrational and a breach of fair procedures".


BreakingNews.ie
2 hours ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Ireland ‘prepared to take further action' over Gaza, says Harris
Ireland is 'prepared to take further action' to bring about a ceasefire in the Middle East, the Tánaiste has said. Simon Harris is one of 26 signatories to a joint statement on Monday which calls for an end to the war in Gaza. Advertisement Mr Harris, who is also Minister for Foreign Affairs, said the 'suffering of civilians in Gaza has reached new depths'. He said Israel must immediately lift restrictions on the flow of aid and urgently enable the UN to do 'life-saving work safely and effectively' in the region, adding that Hamas must also release all hostages immediately. The letter is signed by the foreign ministers of the UK, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland. Tents sheltering displaced Palestinians amid war-damaged infrastructure in Gaza City. Photo: Jehad Alshrafi/AP. It is also signed by the EU Commissioner for Equality, Preparedness and Crisis Management. Advertisement It states that Israel must comply with obligations under international humanitarian law. 'The Israeli government's aid delivery model is dangerous, fuels instability and deprives Gazans of human dignity. 'We condemn the drip feeding of aid and the inhumane killing of civilians, including children, seeking to meet their most basic needs of water and food. 'It is horrifying that over 800 Palestinians have been killed while seeking aid. The Israeli Government's denial of essential humanitarian assistance to the civilian population is unacceptable.' Advertisement The ministers added: 'The hostages cruelly held captive by Hamas since October 7 2023 continue to suffer terribly. 'We condemn their continued detention and call for their immediate and unconditional release. 'A negotiated ceasefire offers the best hope of bringing them home and ending the agony of their families.' It says that proposals to remove the Palestinian population into a 'humanitarian city' are completely unacceptable. Advertisement 'Permanent forced displacement is a violation of international humanitarian law.' The ministers also oppose steps for 'demographic change in the Occupied Palestinian Territories', including proposals for accelerated settlements in the West Bank. The authors conclude: 'We are prepared to take further action to support an immediate ceasefire and a political pathway to security and peace for Israelis, Palestinians and the entire region.'