Latest news with #Jennifer Whitmore

Irish Times
6 days ago
- Business
- Irish Times
Government ‘feckless' with public money, Social Democrats claim in budget row
The Government has been 'reckless and feckless' with public money and is following a 'cynical giveaway budget ' last year by now 'moralising' on fiscal responsibility, a Social Democrats TD has claimed. Tánaiste Simon Harris however accused Jennifer Whitmore of 'hypocrisy' and asked which one-off payment from Budget 2025 the Social Democrats would have cut from double child benefit payments, carer's allowance or fuel allowance. But Ms Whitmore said her party had called for 'targeted' supports last year and would not have spent €100 million on energy credits for holiday homes as she accused the Government of being 'epic wasters'. During testy exchanges on the last day of the Dáil before the summer recess, the budget and the cost of living dominated Leaders' Questions for the third day this week. READ MORE Sinn Féin finance spokesman Pearse Doherty insisted there had to be a cost-of-living package as he pointed to a 63,000 increase in the past four months in the number of people in arrears on their electricity bills. The energy regulator issued figures showing more than 300,000 people are behind on their electricity and a further 175,000 are in arrears on their gas bill. Irish consumers are paying 'far and above' what other European Union countries are paying for energy. Families 'simply can't absorb this type of shock to their finances' and the Government plan is to 'cancel the energy credits they so desperately need and relied on', Mr Doherty said, accusing the Government of having 'all the wrong priorities'. The Tánaiste insisted the Government is helping households 'in the here and now', retaining the 9 per cent VAT rate on gas and electricity, expanding the fuel allowance to thousands more people, reducing childcare costs, providing free school meals, books and footwear allowances and increasing public-sector pay. [ Irish Times poll: Support for Government parties holds steady as Sinn Féin slumps Opens in new window ] He also claimed there had been an 'air of unreality' to Sinn Féin's contributions. Mr Harris said Mr Doherty spent a lot of time saying to the Government ''You don't understand. You're out of touch'' but he said he knows 'who owns SuperValu ' and it was not an American multinational. He was referring to comments Mr Doherty made during a cost-of-living debate when he said the supermarket chain was owned by a US company United Foods. Mr Harris said: 'You'd have to go back a very long time to find a summer recess in which we have seen a moment of greater economic uncertainty.' He claimed Sinn Féin did not want to talk about trade or tariffs or the '48,000 people who work in pharma in this country' and global uncertainty. 'You've never seen something you don't want to spend more money on. But we have to be honest with the Irish people. We can't just keep saying 'spend, spend, spend'.' Mr Doherty said the cost-of-living crisis had widened significantly and 'prices across the board are pushing households to the brink'. He added 'it's not lost' on families 'being hammered by rip-off prices' that the energy companies are recording bumper profits, with the ESB recording profits of more than €1 billion in 2023 and 2024, while SSE Airtricity made 'hundreds of millions' in the past two years. Ms Whitmore told the Tánaiste that 'having splashed the cash in an attempt to buy votes last year, your message suddenly changed. Now that an election is no longer on the cards, one-off payments are a bad idea.' But Mr Harris said the one-off measures served a purpose 'at a time of extraordinarily high inflation'.


BreakingNews.ie
6 days ago
- Business
- BreakingNews.ie
Government branded ‘epic wasters' amid cost of living concerns
The Government has been branded 'epic wasters' and accused of throwing public money around like 'snuff at a wake', as the opposition hit out over escalating energy bills and the cost of living. Social Democrats TD Jennifer Whitmore told the Dail on Thursday that there is a growing sense of concern about the future, describing it as 'economic clouds' on the horizon. Advertisement She accused the Government of attempting to buy votes last year in its one-off budget payouts just weeks before the general election. 'The reality, Tánaiste (Simon Harris), is that you've been throwing public money around like snuff at a wake,' she said. She said that Government spending has increased by 50 per cent in recent years. 'In 2020 it cost 70 billion to run the country. We've gone from spending 70 billion to nearly 110 billion this year, 40 billion more in the budget, Tánaiste,' she added. Advertisement 'But what do we have to show for it? We have a housing crisis that's spiralling out of control. We have record homelessness. We have disability services that are threadbare. We have soaring levels of child poverty. 'We have a cost of living crisis that is escalating, and we have energy and water infrastructure that is crumbling. 'But coupled with that, there is a lot of frustration with the Government's moralising about this budget. Having splashed the cash in an attempt to buy votes last year, your message has suddenly changed now that an election is no longer on the cards.' She continued: 'Tanaiste, the reality is this Government, you're epic wasters, you've wasted time, you have wasted opportunity, and you have wasted generational opportunity to invest in a better future, and you've wasted our money. Advertisement 'That is why people feel so let down. They feel disillusioned. 'They listen to you pat yourself on the back for your prudent financial management while they struggle with the very basics, they struggle to keep roof over their head, to keep their electricity on and food on their table.' Sinn Féin TD Pearse Doherty said that figures published by the Commission for the Regulation of Utilities (CRU) show that there are hundreds of thousands of households of people behind in arrears on their electric and gas bills. He criticised the Government's refusal to commit to another round of energy credits in the October budget. Advertisement Mr Doherty said: 'The number of households in arrears on their electricity and gas bills have jumped by 70,000 households in the last year. 'That means that there are now over 300,000 households behind on their electricity bills, and over 175,000 households behind on their gas bills. Just let that sink in for a moment Tanaiste. 'Because today, as the Dáil breaks up for the summer, hundreds of thousands of working families can't meet their bills for heating and lighting their home. That is disgraceful. Simon Harris told the Dáil on Thursday that there is a 'real problem' regarding energy prices in Ireland (Grainne Ni Aodha/PA) 'Is it any wonder, when we've seen their bills shoot up by hundreds of euros over the last number of years, and families simply can't absorb this type of shock to their finances, and now your plan is to cancel the energy credits that they so desperately need and relied on. Advertisement 'You dig in and you continue to refuse to agree for a cost of living package in October's budget. And of course, there's those on fixed incomes who are at greater risk of poverty and they need greater support. 'But this ever worsening cost of living crisis is widening and has widened significantly more and more families, more and more working people, are struggling to get by, and even families with two incomes coming into the house find it harder than ever to keep up with the bills.' Mr Harris told the Dáil that there is a 'real problem' regarding energy prices in Ireland. He said he acknowledges the pressure which increased energy costs are putting on families, households and businesses. The Fine Gael leader said the Government is 'seeking' ways to lower the prices and speed up the pace of renewable development. 'That's why we've established a new National Energy Affordability Taskforce (NEAT) to look at the structural reforms which we can undertake in this country to reduce the cost of energy and to reduce the cost of electricity. 'It's expected to come back with an interim plan to look at issues around energy efficiency, upgrade the social protection supports we have in place, the CRU customer protection measures, and indeed, further efforts that we can provide to incentivise tariff switching and the savings that we can make for households and for consumers in relation to that. 'We are taking measures in the here and now to assist people with the cost of living.'