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new political party?

  • 26-04-2012 3:38pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,488 ✭✭✭


    just curious, most people seem to have problems with certain or all political parties. if a new party rose from the ashes what would make you vote for them? or in other words what would you want from your ideal party?

    hopefully we can avoid the "they're all the same" lines that usually pop up


«1

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    just curious, most people seem to have problems with certain or all political parties. if a new party rose from the ashes what would make you vote for them? or in other words what would you want from your ideal party?

    hopefully we can avoid the "they're all the same" lines that usually pop up

    I'd vote for a Libertarian party if they were a proper entity with Libertarian principles and with a good structure.

    I think there's room for a new party too. The vote for the independents and socialists is just a protest vote. I don't think that many people are actually socialists. Also, Workers and Unemployed Action Group. That's not an ideology of anyone again it's just a protest vote. A solid Libertarian structure could probably pick up around 6 seats in its first year if done correctly


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,488 ✭✭✭celtictiger32


    BOHtox wrote: »
    I'd vote for a Libertarian party if they were a proper entity with Libertarian principles and with a good structure.

    I think there's room for a new party too. The vote for the independents and socialists is just a protest vote. I don't think that many people are actually socialists. Also, Workers and Unemployed Action Group. That's not an ideology of anyone again it's just a protest vote. A solid Libertarian structure could probably pick up around 6 seats in its first year if done correctly

    what kind of libertarian principles? i know its impossible to create a party that would support everyones views but im curious to see what comes up without pigeon holeing them to left or right etc.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,022 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,488 ✭✭✭celtictiger32


    Permabear wrote: »
    This post had been deleted.

    when you say the space vacated by the pds did you mean those with similar policies or.. ??


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,022 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


    This post has been deleted.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,644 ✭✭✭cml387


    Permabear wrote: »
    This post had been deleted.

    Add Anti immigration and it might get a lot of support,scarily.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    what kind of libertarian principles? i know its impossible to create a party that would support everyones views but im curious to see what comes up without pigeon holeing them to left or right etc.

    Right of Fine Gael economically, left on Fine Gael socially.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,731 ✭✭✭firemansam4


    I would like to see a party with some of the imagination and forward thinking of the green party - In my view one of the biggest challenges going to be facing this country over the next few decades is going to be our over reliant dependence on fossil fuels, none of the main stream parties have really given any serious thought on this matter.
    The problem with the Green party is that they lost all credibility when they propped up FF in government, they brought in carbon taxes which made sense from a green perspective but it hurt the poorest people in the country who have no means to really change there fuel usage, IMO this tax did the green party no favors what so ever.
    Add to that some of the policies they seemed more concerned about when in government like stag hunting etc, not saying i'm for stag hunting - quite the contrary, but there is far more pressing issues that should have been on there agenda than this.

    Another thing I would really like to see changed as a whole to the way politics is done in this country is to separate local politics from national politics. How does it make sense that there are politicians canvasing for a general election, who are making promises and trying to attract votes from voters on local issues?
    ie... vote for me and I will keep that garda station open or I will make sure that the pot holes are fixed on such and such road etc. How can this be in the national interest?
    General elections should be all about national parties and issues and local issues should be kept separate.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 272 ✭✭boynesider


    There can be as many parties as you like, Ireland always has and always will elect a broadly centrist government. What matters to the majority of ordinary people when it comes to the polls is the individuals, not some ideological bent or radical shift in direction for the country.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,729 ✭✭✭Pride Fighter


    Permabear wrote: »
    This post had been deleted.

    That is because taxes have been constantly coming down. In 1976 the tax rate on the upper bracket was 77%, it is now 41%. In fact such erosion of the tax-base, by neo-liberals such as the PD's aided and abetted the crisis.

    I'd like to see a party advocate more taxes, about 50%, in order to close the deficit, invest in infrastructure and public services. The neoliberal right has been wrecking nations since Reagan, we need to fight back against them.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    That is because taxes have been constantly coming down. In 1976 the tax rate on the upper bracket was 77%, it is now 41%. In fact such erosion of the tax-base, by neo-liberals such as the PD's aided and abetted the crisis.

    I'd like to see a party advocate more taxes, about 50%, in order to close the deficit, invest in infrastructure and public services. The neoliberal right has been wrecking nations since Reagan, we need to fight back against them.

    50% more taxes? Jesus wept.
    The middle classes for instance already pay 41% on top rate of income tax, the USC, PRSI, a new household tax and a water charge. Added to that Capital gains tax, VAT, DIRT, Stamp Duty, Capital Acquisitions tax, excise duty, VRT, motor tax, an air travel tax.
    Am I missing some? probably so...
    What more taxes do you want? Who will be spending money if they are being taxed so much? we need to cut and reduce tax not increase spending and increase tax!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,729 ✭✭✭Pride Fighter


    BOHtox wrote: »
    50% more taxes? Jesus wept.
    The middle classes for instance already pay 41% on top rate of income tax, the USC, PRSI, a new household tax and a water charge. Added to that Capital gains tax, VAT, DIRT, Stamp Duty, Capital Acquisitions tax, excise duty, VRT, motor tax, an air travel tax.
    Am I missing some? probably so...
    What more taxes do you want? Who will be spending money if they are being taxes so much? we need to cut and reduce tax not increase spending and increase tax!

    I never said we should increase spending. Just advocated taxing to close the deficit gap, the investment would be small, and not on top of general government spending to be loaned out to SME's to create jobs. That would have the effect of cutting the Social Welfare bill by putting people back to work.

    I'd prefer more taxes, between 93 and 97 the upper rate of tax was 48% and many more jobs were created then than now. Unless you'd prefer less taxes and more than the current one in seven people out of work?

    Therefore, there is a correlation, with more taxes meaning more jobs are created than less taxes which in turn creates fewer jobs.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    I never said we should increase spending.
    Yes you did say that.
    I'd like to see a party advocate more taxes, about 50%, in order to close the deficit, invest in infrastructure and public services.
    Just advocated taxing to close the deficit gap, the investment would be small, and not on top of general government spending to be loaned out to SME's to create jobs. That would have the effect of cutting the Social Welfare bill by putting people back to work.

    Banks loan to SME's; not the government! The social welfare bill would be reduced by cutting regulation on the supply side. There is way too much regulation. Businesses would love to hire one or two extra workers but simply can't because there is so much difficulty with regulation etc. THe risk of this is doing it wrong and facing a fine or going to court.

    My local football team, just a small Leinster Senior cup team or something, used to do microwavable pizzas. They hired an extra bar man. They had 3 barmen to deal with the demand. The microwave or the oven or whatever in which it was cooked, was too far away from a sink so they could no longer make them. Barman now unemployed. Now there was a sink in the kitchen but Health and Safety couldn't allow it. Nanny state regulation is crippling small business in this country!
    I'd prefer more taxes, between 93 and 97 the upper rate of tax was 48% and many more jobs were created then than now. Unless you'd prefer less taxes and more than the current one in seven people out of work?

    Therefore, there is a correlation, with more taxes meaning more jobs are created than less taxes which in turn creates fewer jobs.

    Again, nanny state regulation has since come in. Income tax coming down is just a coincidence. There's more immigrants in this country now, can we blame them for the lack of job creation? no!

    Less taxes = more disposable income = more spending = businesses making more money as demand for goods is higher = more staff to deal with extra demand!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,583 ✭✭✭Suryavarman


    I never said we should increase spending. Just advocated taxing to close the deficit gap, the investment would be small, and not on top of general government spending to be loaned out to SME's to create jobs. That would have the effect of cutting the Social Welfare bill by putting people back to work.

    I'd prefer more taxes, between 93 and 97 the upper rate of tax was 48% and many more jobs were created then than now. Unless you'd prefer less taxes and more than the current one in seven people out of work?

    Therefore, there is a correlation, with more taxes meaning more jobs are created than less taxes which in turn creates fewer jobs.

    And in the 80's we had sky high taxes and we had a lost decade. Trying to find a correlation using only two data points is beyond ridiculous.

    It's beyond me how you could think that high taxes create jobs. Higher taxes mean that people will stop working past a certain point. High taxes mean the private sector has less money than the public sector, meaning a more inefficient and slower growing economy. High taxes will also cause more people to find ways around paying taxes meaning less revenue. Just look at Britain where they recently cut the 50% rate of tax back to 45% because it wasn't raising any revenue.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,030 ✭✭✭✭Chuck Stone


    I'd be interested as to what part of state intervention in the economy would be prioritised for the chop by a libertarian party.

    Stop funding 3rd level education?

    Stop granting corporate status?

    Do away with limited liability?

    What about patent and copyright protection?

    Would a libertarian party remove entry barriers to the protected professions?

    I mean, from a libertarian perspective the state's only role should be to enforce contracts and protect property.

    Isn't it?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,729 ✭✭✭Pride Fighter


    BOHtox wrote: »
    Yes you did say that.





    That is my quote and quite clearly I did not.
    That is because taxes have been constantly coming down. In 1976 the tax rate on the upper bracket was 77%, it is now 41%. In fact such erosion of the tax-base, by neo-liberals such as the PD's aided and abetted the crisis.

    I'd like to see a party advocate more taxes, about 50%, in order to close the deficit, invest in infrastructure and public services. The neoliberal right has been wrecking nations since Reagan, we need to fight back against them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,729 ✭✭✭Pride Fighter


    Trying to find a correlation using only two data points is beyond ridiculous.

    I agree. So lets look over the past 60 years.
    It's beyond me how you could think that high taxes create jobs. Higher taxes mean that people will stop working past a certain point. High taxes mean the private sector has less money than the public sector, meaning a more inefficient and slower growing economy.

    Here is evidence to show higher taxes means higher economic growth and lower unemployment rates.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-World_War_II_economic_expansion#Global_economic_climate

    That link should show a table. Average global economic growth between 1945-1979 was 4.8%. Taxes were a lot higher then, the US even had a 90% rate of tax for its highest bracket between the early 50's and mid 70's. From 1979 to 2009 average global growth was 3.2% when they had less taxes.

    Unemployment was lower in the US, UK, France and Germany when they had higher taxes. Who would have thought it?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    That is my quote and quite clearly I did not.

    "invest" - that is increasing spending.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,488 ✭✭✭celtictiger32


    BOHtox wrote: »
    My local football team, just a small Leinster Senior cup team or something, used to do microwavable pizzas. They hired an extra bar man. They had 3 barmen to deal with the demand. The microwave or the oven or whatever in which it was cooked, was too far away from a sink so they could no longer make them. Barman now unemployed. Now there was a sink in the kitchen but Health and Safety couldn't allow it. Nanny state regulation is crippling small business in this country!

    agree totally, nanny state regulations and political correctness is ruining society as a whole


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 107 ✭✭comeback_kid



    agree totally, nanny state regulations and political correctness is ruining society as a whole

    next thing we know , it wil start ruining this site ;)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,583 ✭✭✭Suryavarman


    I agree. So lets look over the past 60 years.



    Here is evidence to show higher taxes means higher economic growth and lower unemployment rates.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-World_War_II_economic_expansion#Global_economic_climate

    That link should show a table. Average global economic growth between 1945-1979 was 4.8%. Taxes were a lot higher then, the US even had a 90% rate of tax for its highest bracket between the early 50's and mid 70's. From 1979 to 2009 average global growth was 3.2% when they had less taxes.

    Unemployment was lower in the US, UK, France and Germany when they had higher taxes. Who would have thought it?

    Working off the figures here government revenue as a percentage of GDP averaged 17.72% between 1950-2010, 18.12% between 1950-1959 and 17.53% between 1960-1969. In the fifties US real GDP per capita increased by 1.85% per year. In the sixties US real GDP per capita increased by 3.32% per year. Although, working off the figures here the average unemployment rate in the fifties was 4.5% vs 4.8% for the sixties.

    As for Germany and France, they were so far behind the US in GDP per capita at the end of the war it is no surprise that they could manage low unemployment or high economic growth.

    You've also failed to give me a reason why higher taxes would cause low unemployment or a better economy. If you can't do that then all the correlations you point out are meaningless.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 101 ✭✭dtf


    IMO this is the problem with talk of a new political party. From a quick glance at the first page of this thread, I have seen one poster wanting a new party to fill the void left by the PDs, another calling for a party that will reflect Green issues and another for a party that will raise taxes in order to bridge the deficit.
    Most would like to see a new political party, but it seems that the views of what that party should actually stand for are very wide.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 38 lkdsl


    @dtf - you hit the nail on the head!

    I, too, would like my own personal political party. But it wouldn't be based on ideology of left or right. I would like:
    1. Economically right of centre. Where the private sector works well, it works very well and should be encouraged to get on with it.
    2. Excellent regulation in sectors where market-based economics leads (or could lead) to excess e.g. banking, food safety, standard setting, etc.
    3. A progressive taxation system that generates sufficient revenue without clobbering initiative and endeavour.
    4. User pays principle applied to most resources (water, waste, energy) with externalities included in the pricing (carbon, waste, tobacco, alcohol, etc.)
    5. Redistributive and welfare that actually works. As it is, some who don't need help receive it while some who desperately need it do not. That is shameful on both counts.
    6. State involvement only in those areas which would otherwise not work effectively - national grid, gas distribution, railway lines and roads, education, health (probably), regulation
    7. Liberal in everything else - if it is not specifically involved, it's none of the state's business (our bedrooms, back gardens, etc.).

    Anyone with me? :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,031 ✭✭✭Lockstep


    lkdsl wrote: »
    @dtf - you hit the nail on the head!

    I, too, would like my own personal political party. But it wouldn't be based on ideology of left or right. I would like:
    1. Economically right of centre. Where the private sector works well, it works very well and should be encouraged to get on with it.
    2. Excellent regulation in sectors where market-based economics leads (or could lead) to excess e.g. banking, food safety, standard setting, etc.
    3. A progressive taxation system that generates sufficient revenue without clobbering initiative and endeavour.
    4. User pays principle applied to most resources (water, waste, energy) with externalities included in the pricing (carbon, waste, tobacco, alcohol, etc.)
    5. Redistributive and welfare that actually works. As it is, some who don't need help receive it while some who desperately need it do not. That is shameful on both counts.
    6. State involvement only in those areas which would otherwise not work effectively - national grid, gas distribution, railway lines and roads, education, health (probably), regulation
    7. Liberal in everything else - if it is not specifically involved, it's none of the state's business (our bedrooms, back gardens, etc.).

    Anyone with me? :D

    The problem here is that these are truisms: you'd be hard pressed to find someone who doesn't want State involvement only where the market fails/ excellent regulation/progressive taxation that doesn't stifle innovation/welfare that isn't wasteful and so on.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,518 ✭✭✭OS119


    dtf wrote: »
    ...Most would like to see a new political party...

    there was a new party - Amrahn Nua i think they called themselves, came on here looking for engagement, had a website with general principles, and then vanished without trace.

    ok, so they looked to me to be a bit of a mish-mash, and they got a bit shirty with people who mentioned that some of their stuff was a bit illogical/badly thought-out - but it was all mainstream stuff, nothing about war with France or the compusory eating of Asparagus.

    new party, mainstream ideas, and lots of public engagement yet they disappeared off the face of the earth - i'm not sure this 'the people want more choice' line is really true...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 38 lkdsl


    Lockstep wrote: »
    The problem here is that these are truisms: you'd be hard pressed to find someone who doesn't want State involvement only where the market fails/ excellent regulation/progressive taxation that doesn't stifle innovation/welfare that isn't wasteful and so on.

    Ok. So that's two people for starters. LOL

    What shall we call our new party?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 299 ✭✭KarmaBaby


    The only void in Irish politics now as it stands is a Fascist Party and Stalinist Party. Actually, both exist but have no real support base to build on. I don't think a Maoist party would ever develop here but you never know. They're still quite popular in the middle east.

    The idea that a "Libertarian" party would cover some part of Ireland's political landscape which Fianna Fail/Labour/Sinn Fein wouldn't already is complete and utter fantasy since such a party would essentially be yet another pro market-capitalism party pretending to be socially "left" while at the same time being corporately funded. i.e. Another populist party that forever dances around the ever moving political centre, inevitably shifting to the right and creating another political vacuum on the left which the SF the ULA is currently filling.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,031 ✭✭✭Lockstep


    lkdsl wrote: »
    Ok. So that's two people for starters. LOL

    What shall we call our new party?

    These are ideas rather than policies.

    Both Fine Gael and Sinn Fein would see their policies as achieving everything you advocate but go about it very differently.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,583 ✭✭✭Suryavarman


    KarmaBaby wrote: »
    The only void in Irish politics now as it stands is a Fascist Party and Stalinist Party. Actually, both exist but have no real support base to build on. I don't think a Maoist party would ever develop here but you never know. They're still quite popular in the middle east.

    Ireland has a fascist party?

    What's the difference between a Maoist party and a Stalinist one?
    The idea that a "Libertarian" party would cover some part of Ireland's political landscape which Fianna Fail/Labour/Sinn Fein wouldn't already is complete and utter fantasy since such a party would essentially be yet another pro market-capitalism party pretending to be socially "left" while at the same time being corporately funded. i.e. Another populist party that forever dances around the ever moving political centre, inevitably shifting to the right and creating another political vacuum on the left which the SF the ULA is currently filling.

    How does a party pretend to be socially left?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 138 ✭✭Endless Nameless


    dtf:

    I don't see why there couldn't be new parties formed to represent those three wants. It would be better for democracy to have a more diverse spectrum of policy-driven parties, and having different ideologies voiced on the national stage.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 299 ✭✭KarmaBaby


    Ireland has a fascist party?

    It's not a registered party but it is a far right nationalist organisation that is likely to run in some local elections next year. I believe a couple of their members have already before with thankfully no success.

    While they're not openly fascist, their forum which is easily viewable to anyone, contains a litany anti-Semitic, extremely racist and Nazi commentary as well as references to Main Kampf to back up racist opinions and support for Ankers Brivik.
    What's the difference between a Maoist party and a Stalinist one?

    Stalinism, is in reality not even a form a communism or marxism at all. It's about mass propaganda to establish the popularity of a single dictator.

    Maoists would be closer to Marxist-Leninism but focussed on the peasantry as opposed to the urban proletariat as the main revolutionary force. There is also a greater emphasis on a mass movement of the majority of the population against the state. Maoism also involves using massive military powers to defend the state.
    How does a party pretend to be socially left?

    Almost all parties that are socially right of centre pretend to be much further to the left than they really are, especially during elections. These parties only move forward in terms of introducing new policies that create create greater equality in society when they must succumb to massive public pressure. For example: Fianna Fail and Fine Gael's previously adopted positions on gay rights compared to today.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,583 ✭✭✭Suryavarman


    KarmaBaby wrote: »
    It's not a registered party but it is a far right nationalist organisation that is likely to run in some local elections next year. I believe a couple of their members have already before with thankfully no success.

    While they're not openly fascist, their forum which is easily viewable to anyone, contains a litany anti-Semitic, extremely racist and Nazi commentary as well as references to Main Kampf to back up racist opinions and support for Ankers Brivik.

    I see, well I'll join with you in being thankful that they haven't been elected yet. Hopefully they won't be in the future either.
    Stalinism, is in reality not even a form a communism or marxism at all. It's about mass propaganda to establish the popularity of a single dictator.

    Maoists would be closer to Marxist-Leninism but focussed on the peasantry as opposed to the urban proletariat as the main revolutionary force. There is also a greater emphasis on a mass movement of the majority of the population against the state. Maoism also involves using massive military powers to defend the state.

    In a democracy then, wouldn't both these philosophies really just be different election strategies? With one party emphasising the popularity of the party leader and the other targeting the rural vote. Or am I being over simplistic (or even completely getting it wrong!) here?
    Almost all parties that are socially right of centre pretend to be much further to the left than they really are, especially during elections. These parties only move forward in terms of introducing new policies that create create greater equality in society when they must succumb to massive public pressure. For example: Fianna Fail and Fine Gael's previously adopted positions on gay rights compared to today.

    Fair enough then. But what makes you think a libertarian party would be like that? And by socially left do you mean a party that proposes equal rights for everyone or a party that is generally socially liberal?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,488 ✭✭✭celtictiger32


    KarmaBaby wrote: »
    It's not a registered party but it is a far right nationalist organisation that is likely to run in some local elections next year. I believe a couple of their members have already before with thankfully no success.
    .

    is that that drm crowd that were in the news recently. i believe they were trying to form links with the bnp recently up the north and having sit downs with loyalists...... they'll go down well in ireland:rolleyes:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 299 ✭✭KarmaBaby


    In a democracy then, wouldn't both these philosophies really just be different election strategies? With one party emphasising the popularity of the party leader and the other targeting the rural vote. Or am I being over simplistic (or even completely getting it wrong!) here?

    Not really. It's all about how they use, delegate and in Stalin's case, hold on to their power. It's also about how the party operates internally. A stalinist party would tend to be extremely dogmatic and have a top heavy hierarchical structure.
    Fair enough then. But what makes you think a libertarian party would be like that? And by socially left do you mean a party that proposes equal rights for everyone or a party that is generally socially liberal?

    Hmmm... I guess you're right, it wouldn't necessarily have to be, but since such a party would inevitably end up with ever increasingly right leaning economic policies, those policies would inevitably create an unequal and very class-segregated society; not much different than what we have except perhaps proper separation of church and state, abortion and better gay rights.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 299 ✭✭KarmaBaby


    is that that drm crowd that were in the news recently. i believe they were trying to form links with the bnp recently up the north and having sit downs with loyalists...... they'll go down well in ireland:rolleyes:

    They've re-branded. I didn't want to name them. I'd prefer to bring as little attention to them as possible.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,488 ✭✭✭celtictiger32


    KarmaBaby wrote: »
    They've re-branded. I didn't want to name them. I'd prefer to bring as little attention to them as possible.

    if its the crowd i mentioned earlier they had a guy on a radio talk show the other night using the same group name thick as a brick he was....... pm me the new name if you can


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,591 ✭✭✭RATM


    boynesider wrote: »
    There can be as many parties as you like, Ireland always has and always will elect a broadly centrist government. What matters to the majority of ordinary people when it comes to the polls is the individuals, not some ideological bent or radical shift in direction for the country.

    This. Ireland never had a left-right divide and the average citizen on the street couldn't really explain fully what one is. Instead we had a civil war divide between FG-FF.

    So now we vote on whoever fixed the road, not on idealogy.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,570 ✭✭✭RandomName2


    We had two new parties at the last general election, another new party which contested the seaned alone, another new party which contested the european elections alone, another which contested the local elections alone.

    New Vision, Fis Nua, Libertas, Senior Solidarity and... Democracy Ireland?

    All did absolutely disastrously and have since pretty much disappeared.

    It's not easy entering into Irish politics.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 49 Sica


    Left/Right ideological divides are largely irrelevant now. Most countries have seen traditional left/right divides melt away as everyone clambers in to the centre.

    The real problem with Irish politics isn't a lack of ideology but a failure to think nationally. People tend to vote on local issues, not national ones and accordingly political parties in Ireland have no incentive to think and make policy on national lines. Instead political parties are collectives of local, personal political organisations linked to individual TDs.

    If we want to change this we need to amend our constitutional set up by making local government stronger, taking road fixing and such away from the remit of TDs, and making constituencies larger, so TDs aren't rewarded for keeping a narrow focus on a relatively small local area and are instead encouraged to think nationally.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 192 ✭✭paddy0090


    I think the gap left by the PDs will be filled (a party for smaller govt.) but seeing as right now every party is(or would be) cutting the size of the state they all are small govt. parties. Despite the protests about the austerity there's still plenty of people happy to see it happen, irrespective of the consequences. Vote for Chopper!

    The interesting thing will be to see how the increased secularisation of the Irish public and the state affects existing parties and the landscape. I don't think the a la carte catholicism of the past two decades can last much longer. I think the country is a more socially liberal place than the law reflects and this trend will continue, giving rise to a new socially conservative party.

    I don't really have an Idealogy but sympathise with Libertarians, and I'm deeply suspicious of any govt. intervention to help the market, since this help usually takes the form of digging out the status quo.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,827 ✭✭✭christmas2012


    a political party that gets rid of quangos such as FAS which rob what could be a paid job from the unemployed masses


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,280 ✭✭✭✭Eric Cartman


    I would like to see a new political party that would
    • Enforce strict immigration requirements
    • clean up our heavily abused social welfare system and cut social welfare spending considerably
    • decriminalize all drugs and save money on policing
    • strictly uphold freedom of speech and internet neutrality
    • remove regulations that hurt corporate opportunities or competitiveness and create a true free market.
    • privatize and outsource as many services as possible
    • remove and investment in semi state bodies and sell off the share NAMA has in our banks
    • complete separation of church and state, especially in education
    • remove the tax free status for religions
    • make abortion to 12 weeks completely legal
    • wind down pointless government lobby groups like SIMI, PSA, RSA etc...
    • tougher sentencing for violent crime
    • reduce the tax on fuel and abolish VRT
    • a forced equal society in which no incentive programs, grants or quotas may be enforced to give any advantage to anybody from a minority group or gender
    • a heavy belief in personal freedom and the right to do whatever you want along as it doesn't affect others


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    paddy0090 wrote: »
    I think the gap left by the PDs will be filled (a party for smaller govt.) but seeing as right now every party is(or would be) cutting the size of the state they all are small govt. parties. Despite the protests about the austerity there's still plenty of people happy to see it happen, irrespective of the consequences. Vote for Chopper!

    The interesting thing will be to see how the increased secularisation of the Irish public and the state affects existing parties and the landscape. I don't think the a la carte catholicism of the past two decades can last much longer. I think the country is a more socially liberal place than the law reflects and this trend will continue, giving rise to a new socially conservative party.

    I don't really have an Idealogy but sympathise with Libertarians, and I'm deeply suspicious of any govt. intervention to help the market, since this help usually takes the form of digging out the status quo.
    a political party that gets rid of quangos such as FAS which rob what could be a paid job from the unemployed masses

    Fine Gael wanted to cut the size of the Oireachtas by 1/3 and get rid of 136 (I think) quangos including the HSE and FAS amongst others.

    But no, people wanted a "balanced" government meaning the productivity now is miniscule compared to what it would have been.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 333 ✭✭Channel Zero


    I would like to see a new political party that would
    • Enforce strict immigration requirements
    • clean up our heavily abused social welfare system and cut social welfare spending considerably
    • decriminalize all drugs and save money on policing
    • strictly uphold freedom of speech and internet neutrality
    • remove regulations that hurt corporate opportunities or competitiveness and create a true free market.
    • privatize and outsource as many services as possible
    • remove and investment in semi state bodies and sell off the share NAMA has in our banks
    • complete separation of church and state, especially in education
    • remove the tax free status for religions
    • make abortion to 12 weeks completely legal
    • wind down pointless government lobby groups like SIMI, PSA, RSA etc...
    • tougher sentencing for violent crime
    • reduce the tax on fuel and abolish VRT
    • a forced equal society in which no incentive programs, grants or quotas may be enforced to give any advantage to anybody from a minority group or gender
    • a heavy belief in personal freedom and the right to do whatever you want along as it doesn't affect others

    Your last point is an absolute joke.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 333 ✭✭Channel Zero


    Here is one of your contributions on after hours Eric:
    "Libertarian capitalism entitles me to make as much money as i want, and not have to give any of it over to lazy greedy poor people who cant be arsed working , It means I dont have government interfering in descisions like only employing white men for management positions , It means I can own a gun and shoot dead anyone who attempts to break into my house without fear of prison. It means no government telling me what to do in whatever way and means I could keep nazi flags on my house (not because im racist , because its funny ) and have the media report to me exactly who did a crime and not have to come up with creative ways to tell you it was a foreigner. It also means getting rid of the dead weight in Ireland , foreigners coming in seeking dole , maybee I could wander through henry street and every conversation I overhear would be in english again , like it used to be.

    Thats how it should be , and thats why socialism is bad , any even minor injection of socialism turns into totalitarian control, just look at that lad arrested in the UK for saying things on facebook , that is the control required for even partial socialism gone too far"

    Hmm. A bit dodgy mate.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    Your last point is an absolute joke.

    I personally wouldn't call liberty a "joke"!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 333 ✭✭Channel Zero


    BOHtox wrote: »
    I personally wouldn't call liberty a "joke"!

    It's a joke when it's subverted as a rhetorical device for peurile libertarianism. .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    It's a joke when it's subverted as a rhetorical device for peurile libertarianism. .

    He doesn't do that. He lists a number of policies and that is the final one


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 333 ✭✭Channel Zero


    BOHtox wrote: »
    He doesn't do that. He lists a number of policies and that is the final one

    He actually did do that. It's just that you don't feel happy about admitting it as it's probably ideologically disturbing to you.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    He actually did do that. It's just that you don't feel happy about admitting it as it's probably ideologically disturbing to you.


    You're the one calling it "a joke". I'd call myself a Libertarian


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