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Galway independent TD Catherine Connolly makes it official and declares Áras run

Galway independent TD Catherine Connolly makes it official and declares Áras run

The Journal12 hours ago
LAST UPDATE
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19 mins ago
GALWAY INDEPENDENT TD Catherine Connolly has officially launched her campaign for the presidency today, confirming her bid on Raidió Na Gaeltachta this morning.
Connolly is the second official candidate in the race for the Áras after Fine Gael
confirmed yesterday that former European Commissioner and MEP Mairead McGuinness would run under the party's banner
.
She is set to make an appearance at a press conference at Leinster House later today.
Connolly confirmed her candidacy on the Adhmhaidin programme this morning, adding that it was a very difficult decision to make and questioned her capabilities at first.
She said, however, that she has received many emails from supporters asking her to stand over the last year and a half.
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Connolly also has the backing of the Social Democrats, People Before Profit TDs and a number of independent TDs.
She told the programme that both parties have confirmed that they are willing to give her their support, but exact details around how the groups will assist in the campaign have yet to be ironed out.
A candidate needs the backing of 20 Oireachtas members (TDs or senators) in order to get on the ballot paper.
Politicians from a raft of Dáil parties and groupings
were out having their say on the presidential race at Leinster House yesterday.
Connolly's former party, Labour, is yet to decide whether it will back her or go another way.
'We will have a very frank and detailed conversation with Catherine and then a decision will be made,' Labour's Marie Sherlock said yesterday ahead of a planned meeting with the TD.
This is a breaking story with more information to follow.
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Ireland's position is that it should be addressed in the course of general discussions on tariffs between the EU and USA - and not set aside for later attention. US president Donald Trump has threatened separate sanctions on pharma, which could be very great in light of his stated intention to put a 30pc tariff on European goods in genral. The online meeting was an opportunity for the Tánaiste to hear first-hand the views of the pharmaceutical sector, his officials said. The Zoom call comes at a critical juncture in EU-US trade talks. Mr Harris said it was "a chance to gain key insights." He added: "Ireland is clear that the integrated supply chain in pharma products between the EU and the US supports - rather than threatens - our collective transatlantic economic security. 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Mr Harris said it was "a chance to gain key insights." He added: "Ireland is clear that the integrated supply chain in pharma products between the EU and the US supports - rather than threatens - our collective transatlantic economic security. 'Ireland's position is that the treatment of pharma should be within negotiations with the EU on an agreement in principle and we have made this point on both sides of the Atlantic over the recent weeks and months,' Mr Harris said, adding that there is no doubt that pharma "is a crucial sector for our economy'. He repeated his argument that US pharmaceutical companies are here for many reasons rather than tax treatment alone. "They have access to a highly talented, skilled labour market, they have access too to an EU market of over 450 million people,' he said. "The value that the industry places on this access and their bases in Ireland was clear to me from the call." He added: "Ultimately when it comes to pharma, this is about achieving the best outcomes for patients and citizens on both sides of the Atlantic. 'It is because of that that the main focus at this stage must be on avoiding an escalatory higher tariff outcome that will be deeply detrimental to both the EU and the US." It is fair to say that the EU "has shown considerable constraint when it comes to counter tariffs" so far, Mr Harris said. "This underscores our desire to reach a negotiated settlement that results in mutually beneficial transatlantic trade and investment as soon as possible before August 1,' he said. Meanwhile, the uncertainty around US tariffs is 'very worrying', Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said, adding that it was also 'problematic' for the budgetary process. Over the weekend, US president Donald Trump threatened 30pc tariffs on EU imports from August 1. 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