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FF and FG, what's the difference?

  • 04-06-2019 1:57pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭


    Interesting if not surprising clip from Prime Time on the RTE web today;
    39% of Fine Gaelers saw no real policy difference (between FF and FG). "A pattern that we would not expect to find in any other European country" (1999)
    https://www.rte.ie/news/primetime/2019/0604/1053365-watch-whats-the-difference-between-ff-and-fg/

    The verdict seems to be you are with one or the other based on tradition, who your parents voted for. The only differences are in how they perceive themselves.

    It works well for them I think. The voter feels like they are punishing one by voting for the other but sadly we get generally the same caliber of representation and it's unlikely to change.


«13

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,676 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Well, the data there seems to be 20 years old. And we don't know what percentage of FF supporters saw no difference.

    But, yeah, it has often been noted that the two dominant political parties in Ireland have been basically centrist, and thus Ireland has had a succession of centrist governments pretty much from the foundation of the state. It's also observed that political preferences tend to be inherited, but obviously this isn't completely true, since if it were we would never have changes of government. There is a cohort of voters whose support for FF or FG varies from time to time, and it is likely that they are making voting decisions on technocratic grounds - the vote for the party whose leadership seems to them the more capable or competent, rather than choosing between them on policy or ideological grounds.

    This could be changing; at the last election the combined FF/FG vote fell (marginally) below 50% for I think the first time ever. And the bulk of the non-centrist vote goes to parties or indepdendents that are, or at least see themselves as, left of centre. The effect of this is masked by the splintering of the left-of-centre vote. If a dominant left party could emerge to hoover up the bulk of the left-of-centre vote we might see a realigment along more normal European left-right patterns.

    It would be interesting to see a breakdown of party support by age group. It may be that the era of substantially inherited political preferences is - slowly- drawing to a close.


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


    FF are centerists who adopt social positions that they think are easy and popular to take , economically its very much look after our friends in the background and give money away to allat the front while shoring it up with stealth taxes.

    FG are also centerists , however moving ever left socially to appeal to a younger fanbase which FF just never capitalised on. FG’s greatest strength is making rural landowners, the left and middle class professionals believe theyre ‘right wing’ anymore , lets them introduce social liberalisation without anyone calling them socialists . Fiscally they have done nothing vaugely right wing the last two election cycles and keep dangling a tax cut out to keep the core on side, while actually only delivering on social policy. Their ‘fiscal conservatism’ seems to come in the form of inaction (ala not building a load of social housing) rather than action that benefits the middle class/ rich.

    I think modern FG more resembles blairite labour than the tories they are constantly accused of replicating, but those accusations are important to keep the core / rural support.

    Modern FF are a party who’s core have to be dragged kicking and screaming into reluctantly embracing the modern world but the younger upcoming candidates and members truly do believe their ‘ireland for all’ message and embrace populism as long as they don’t stray too far from centre (like a dog on a short chain who goes to whatever side of the garden is warmer)


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,263 ✭✭✭mattser


    Interesting if not surprising clip from Prime Time on the RTE web today;



    The verdict seems to be you are with one or the other based on tradition, who your parents voted for. The only differences are in how they perceive themselves.

    It works well for them I think. The voter feels like they are punishing one by voting for the other but sadly we get generally the same caliber of representation and it's unlikely to change.

    So what's your alternative that's not sad ?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    FF are centerists who adopt social positions that they think are easy and popular to take , economically its very much look after our friends in the background and give money away to allat the front while shoring it up with stealth taxes.

    FG are also centerists , however moving ever left socially to appeal to a younger fanbase which FF just never capitalised on. FG’s greatest strength is making rural landowners, the left and middle class professionals believe theyre ‘right wing’ anymore , lets them introduce social liberalisation without anyone calling them socialists . Fiscally they have done nothing vaugely right wing the last two election cycles and keep dangling a tax cut out to keep the core on side, while actually only delivering on social policy. Their ‘fiscal conservatism’ seems to come in the form of inaction (ala not building a load of social housing) rather than action that benefits the middle class/ rich.

    I think modern FG more resembles blairite labour than the tories they are constantly accused of replicating, but those accusations are important to keep the core / rural support.

    Modern FF are a party who’s core have to be dragged kicking and screaming into reluctantly embracing the modern world but the younger upcoming candidates and members truly do believe their ‘ireland for all’ message and embrace populism as long as they don’t stray too far from centre (like a dog on a short chain who goes to whatever side of the garden is warmer)

    I would suggest policies that exacerbate the housing/homeless crises would be a good example.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    mattser wrote: »
    So what's your alternative that's not sad ?

    I'm of the opinion that neither do a great job and will lead us to another crash should we weather the current crises, exacerbated by both parties. That's sad to me, how about you?

    I'll bite at the 'what would you do?' style non-counter. An administrative body to oversee the day to day running of the state where elected officials only have a hand in voting on key issues would be preferable. We have too much power in the hands of people who are either incompetent, crony or both.
    Other than that I'd like to see a non-FF/FG government just to see how a government would fare without the cronies waiting in the wings with time honoured ways of doing our business badly.

    Where do you stand, FF/FG similar?


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  • Posts: 5,311 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    They're near identical in terms of ideology. FG were classically associated as a rural party, FF the urban counterpart. This still holds true for many voters steadfast to generational loyalty.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    They're near identical in terms of idealogy. FG were classically associated as a rural party, FF the urban counterpart. This still holds true for many voters steadfast to generational loyalty.

    I always cite this chap I met while abroad. A group of us were discussing the crash, (this would have been about 2009/2010 or thereabouts).

    "It was the banks that did it. I'm a Fianna Fail man like my father and his father before him. Fianna Faill will sort it out."

    We need be rid of this point of family pride voter. As I say it's not, or shouldn't be football teams, supporting your team regardless of who the players are or how they perform.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,269 Mod ✭✭✭✭Chips Lovell


    Given the number of people I hear claiming that there's no difference between all political parties in the Dail, I don't think it's that surprising that a good chunk of people would see no difference between the two.

    I don't think they're a million miles apart, but I would see some differences.

    FG are more of the paternalistic, Christian Democrat school, with a touch of authoritarianism.

    FF are a bit more slippery to pin down, primarily because they've often attempted to be all things to all people (which is why I think they've been historically the more successful of the two). Their "whatever you're having yourself" brand of politics managed to appeal to urban workers, rural farmers and big business.

    FG wouldn't exactly be trailblazers on social issues, but probably still ahead of FF in terms of moving with the times. They'd also consider themselves more fiscally responsible but, when push comes to shove, I think they're not above handing out the goodies when staring down the barrel of an election.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,367 ✭✭✭micosoft


    I would suggest policies that exacerbate the housing/homeless crises would be a good example.

    What would they be? Is there a magic switch to create more housing? You seem to think policy changes happen in real time when the policy lag factor is at least five years and housing is about as long term as you can get.

    In order to solve the housing problem today we would have had to start projects to service land and deliver public transport in 2010-13 as well as get people into trades to build the housing. If you had proposed that policy then when the same people complaining about the housing shortage were saying the country would never recover they would have been laughed at and voted out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,367 ✭✭✭micosoft


    I'll bite at the 'what would you do?' style non-counter. An administrative body to oversee the day to day running of the state where elected officials only have a hand in voting on key issues would be preferable. We have too much power in the hands of people who are either incompetent, crony or both.
    Other than that I'd like to see a non-FF/FG government just to see how a government would fare without the cronies waiting in the wings with time honoured ways of doing our business badly.

    Where do you stand, FF/FG similar?

    Basically the councils who already have a lot of power vs councillors?

    non-FF/FG? Ok - we could put PbP in charge? Or we could wait for the emergence of a fascist party? You can always make things worse you know? Centrism and muddling along is not as bad as you imply.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,523 ✭✭✭Sonny noggs


    I would suggest policies that exacerbate the housing/homeless crises would be a good example.

    Where is my free house?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,676 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    A lean towards centrism isn't all bad. Ireland's civil war ended with the emergence of a multi-party democracy, which is not how these things usually end. We got through the thirties without lapsing into fascism or authoritarianism which, for a small poor European state, makes us fairly unusual. And (these facts may be connected) the two centrist parties that we have are both fairly broad churches, capable of accommodating a range of different perspectives and ideological leanings, on the condition that each of them has to respect the others.


  • Registered Users Posts: 95 ✭✭Ilovemycharlie


    FF are pro business.
    FG are a bunch of *****


  • Posts: 17,728 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    FF gemerally make the mess and FG get to clean it up.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,355 ✭✭✭✭Larbre34


    FF are pro business.
    FG are a bunch of *****

    Funny, you could have stated the opposite and no one would bat an eyelid.

    As for the earlier comment that FF is the urban party and FG the rural, my feeling was always the opposite too, from my south Dublin perspective, but then FG historically sewed up the Dun Laoghaires while FF were nailed on in the Donnycarneys.

    My own opinion of where they diverged was that FG were for big business, industrialists, professionals and big agri interests, while FF were retailers, local business and aspirational civil servants and office workers. FF were also more catholic (indistinguishable during de Valera / McQuaid) while FG had more appeal to the prods and jews perhaps.

    I know those were generalisations but these days their commonalities make me see a merger inevitable in the next 2 decades, while current differences are mainly social as now FG are gone to Labour levels of liberalism while FF retain a veneer of catholic conservatism.


  • Registered Users Posts: 625 ✭✭✭Cal4567


    I always cite this chap I met while abroad. A group of us were discussing the crash, (this would have been about 2009/2010 or thereabouts).

    "It was the banks that did it. I'm a Fianna Fail man like my father and his father before him. Fianna Faill will sort it out."

    We need be rid of this point of family pride voter. As I say it's not, or shouldn't be football teams, supporting your team regardless of who the players are or how they perform.

    We are slowly getting away from this style of hereditary voting. We could do with getting away from it a lot quicker. 10 years the FF and FG gene pool will decrease enough for both parties to merge, holding a solid 35%, perhaps still even more?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,676 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Cal4567 wrote: »
    We are slowly getting away from this style of hereditary voting. We could do with getting away from it a lot quicker. 10 years the FF and FG gene pool will decrease enough for both parties to merge, holding a solid 35%, perhaps still even more?
    They won't necessarily merge; we could move to a European style party system that could accommodate two (or even more) economically centrist parties, one appealing (say) to rural voters and the other to urban, or one offering a socially liberal agenda and the other less so.

    But I do suspect that they'll be less and less able to rely on a hereditary vote, and will have to find other ways to appeal to voters and attract their votes.

    And, yeah, they could certainly hold 35% of the vote, or more. We are a fairly conservative (in the sense of cautious) nation. Neither the radical right nor the radical left have ever made huge political headway in Ireland; given a half-way acceptable centrist alternative we seem to quite like that.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,593 ✭✭✭Wheeliebin30


    I would suggest policies that exacerbate the housing/homeless crises would be a good example.

    The most social houses were built last year than any in the last 11 years.

    Hardly a sign of policies with the aim of increasing the myth that is homelessness.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    micosoft wrote: »
    ...

    In order to solve the housing problem today we would have had to start projects to service land and deliver public transport in 2010-13 as well as get people into trades to build the housing. If you had proposed that policy then when the same people complaining about the housing shortage were saying the country would never recover they would have been laughed at and voted out.

    I remember being told the same thing several years ago and here we are...still.
    micosoft wrote: »
    Basically the councils who already have a lot of power vs councillors?

    non-FF/FG? Ok - we could put PbP in charge? Or we could wait for the emergence of a fascist party? You can always make things worse you know? Centrism and muddling along is not as bad as you imply.

    I disagree. Record breaking crises year on year. Crises means bad, record breaking means worsening.
    Peregrinus wrote: »
    A lean towards centrism isn't all bad. Ireland's civil war ended with the emergence of a multi-party democracy, which is not how these things usually end. We got through the thirties without lapsing into fascism or authoritarianism which, for a small poor European state, makes us fairly unusual. And (these facts may be connected) the two centrist parties that we have are both fairly broad churches, capable of accommodating a range of different perspectives and ideological leanings, on the condition that each of them has to respect the others.

    Centrism could be fine but FG specifically claim they believe the market will solve things, yet they dabble and play with it. Name a business outside housing were you can sell a product at a price people can't afford and the tax payer picks up the slack? FF would likely build but they are complicit with FG's policies. Currently we have two middle parties meeting in the middle. Two different partners would work better I would imagine.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    The most social houses were built last year than any in the last 11 years.

    Hardly a sign of policies with the aim of increasing the myth that is homelessness.

    If I build one tomorrow that's more social housing than I've ever built. One would be a record breaking amount in fact. If you don't believe there's a problem great stuff, Fine Gael, Fianna Fail and a lot of others disagree.
    Look housing is well covered and certainly we know where each other stand.
    Larbre34 wrote: »
    Funny, you could have stated the opposite and no one would bat an eyelid.

    As for the earlier comment that FF is the urban party and FG the rural, my feeling was always the opposite too, from my south Dublin perspective, but then FG historically sewed up the Dun Laoghaires while FF were nailed on in the Donnycarneys.

    My own opinion of where they diverged was that FG were for big business, industrialists, professionals and big agri interests, while FF were retailers, local business and aspirational civil servants and office workers. FF were also more catholic (indistinguishable during de Valera / McQuaid) while FG had more appeal to the prods and jews perhaps.

    I know those were generalisations but these days their commonalities make me see a merger inevitable in the next 2 decades, while current differences are mainly social as now FG are gone to Labour levels of liberalism while FF retain a veneer of catholic conservatism.

    me too. I always saw FF as the farmers party.
    I would love a merger. We'd get an opposition.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,371 ✭✭✭Phoebas


    Name a business outside housing were you can sell a product at a price people can't afford and the tax payer picks up the slack?
    Healthcare.
    Education.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    Phoebas wrote: »
    Healthcare.
    Education.

    Renting out the spare room as a University are we, doing surgery in the granny flat?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,304 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    Name a business outside housing were you can sell a product at a price people can't afford and the tax payer picks up the slack?
    Phoebas wrote: »
    Healthcare.
    Education.
    Renting out the spare room as a University are we, doing surgery in the granny flat?

    Phoebas is absolutely correct on this.

    In relation to education, at second-level, every fee-paying school gets subsidised teachers paid by the taxpayer. However, the situation is even clearer at third level.

    Have a look at Table 6.1 on page 52 of this Report:

    https://hea.ie/assets/uploads/2017/06/HEA-RFAM-Final-Interim-Report-062017.pdf

    For laboratory-based courses, the true cost of a year's education is €11,082 in a university. Are you saying that the average person can afford this, and that the taxpayer is not picking up the 8k a year slack?

    In relation to health, are you suggesting that hospitals are being subsidised by the VHI and other health insurers, when they charge the insurer for a public bed? I had thought that you believed that it was the other way round.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    blanch152 wrote: »
    Phoebas is absolutely correct on this.

    In relation to education, at second-level, every fee-paying school gets subsidised teachers paid by the taxpayer. However, the situation is even clearer at third level.

    Have a look at Table 6.1 on page 52 of this Report:

    https://hea.ie/assets/uploads/2017/06/HEA-RFAM-Final-Interim-Report-062017.pdf

    For laboratory-based courses, the true cost of a year's education is €11,082 in a university. Are you saying that the average person can afford this, and that the taxpayer is not picking up the 8k a year slack?

    In relation to health, are you suggesting that hospitals are being subsidised by the VHI and other health insurers, when they charge the insurer for a public bed? I had thought that you believed that it was the other way round.

    Health and education, re: housing would be comparable to affordable housing and social housing to varying degrees IMO.
    My point was due to a lack of affordable and social we have a situation where 'customers' have little option outside of purchasing/renting privately and the 'customer' must then go cap in hand to the tax payer to meet so called 'free' market set pricing. Pricing that need never be lowered because the tax payer picks up the slack. Agree or disagree with the analogies, we have a situation where the price isn't necessarily based on what the consumer can or is willing to pay. If you need a car and all that's available are BMW prices, you get a bike.
    Any road, FG/FF the same? I can't see much changing with a faux opposition. I'd reckon another election will bear similar results except maybe with FF on top.


  • Registered Users Posts: 557 ✭✭✭Walter Bishop


    At this stage it just seems to be down to whose grandfather/great-grandfather shot who during the Civil War.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    At this stage it just seems to be down to whose grandfather/great-grandfather shot who during the Civil War.

    Aye, saddening to see another brood of the same coming up.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,304 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    Health and education, re: housing would be comparable to affordable housing and social housing to varying degrees IMO.
    My point was due to a lack of affordable and social we have a situation where 'customers' have little option outside of purchasing/renting privately and the 'customer' must then go cap in hand to the tax payer to meet so called 'free' market set pricing. Pricing that need never be lowered because the tax payer picks up the slack. Agree or disagree with the analogies, we have a situation where the price isn't necessarily based on what the consumer can or is willing to pay. If you need a car and all that's available are BMW prices, you get a bike.
    Any road, FG/FF the same? I can't see much changing with a faux opposition. I'd reckon another election will bear similar results except maybe with FF on top.


    I am getting more confused. Are you accepting that Phoebas was correct now? If so, will you amend your response?

    Third-level education perfectly meets your criteria. If you qualify for third-level education (through the CAO) and can't afford the 3k fee, you must go cap in hand to the taxpayer for a SUSI grant. If you don't qualify for a SUSI grant, you must go and work part-time while going to college. It doesn't matter whether you want to pay €500 or €50,000, the price is fixed.

    The whole point of public services and public service economics, is that the price isn't necessarily based on what the consumer can or is willing to pay.

    When it comes to housing, the taxpayer will always have to pick up the slack. There is a reality here. If we are to have a future that is compatible with our climate change objectives, the idea of a three-bedroom house for all with a garden with room for a trampoline must be ended. Building apartments, shared living arrangements, in high-rise accommodation must become the new norm. That is why the current government have raised the regulations on new building heights. The failure of the previous local authorities to get on with this is the big problem. Hopefully, we will see change over the next few months, now that the electorate have thrown out many of the do-nothing councillors.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    blanch152 wrote: »
    I am getting more confused. Are you accepting that Phoebas was correct now? If so, will you amend your response?
    ...

    Is this all interests you?
    Health and education are provided in degrees, by the tax payer. They are a different animal. You build and open your own private hospital and charge your own prices and see how you get on.
    There is no other business outside of housing, (selling/renting) where a private concern or individual can go into business and put their wares on the market with confidence that if the customer can't afford the product, the tax payer will pick up the shortfall and this is encouraged by government IMO. Getting back to the point that FG indeed have right wing policies.

    You've no interest in discussing FF/FG?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,345 ✭✭✭✭jimmycrackcorm


    At this stage it just seems to be down to whose grandfather/great-grandfather shot who during the Civil War.

    Largely it's hard on parochialism. So people getting local FF councillors to fix their road vote FF TDs ( also rationale for Healy Rae's).
    FG - fiscally conservative.
    FF - fiscally irresponsible. (Wasn't it McCreevey who said, if I have it, I'll spend it.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,304 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    Is this all interests you?
    Health and education are provided in degrees, by the tax payer. They are a different animal. You build and open your own private hospital and charge your own prices and see how you get on.
    There is no other business outside of housing, (selling/renting) where a private concern or individual can go into business and put their wares on the market with confidence that if the customer can't afford the product, the tax payer will pick up the shortfall and this is encouraged by government IMO. Getting back to the point that FG indeed have right wing policies.

    You've no interest in discussing FF/FG?


    Firstly, private hospitals are hoovering up patients from the public system through the NTPF. Secondly, government expenditure doesn't just include cash expenditure, it also includes tax expenditure where revenue is foregone through tax relief. There is significant tax relief available for both private health insurers and private hospital expenses, where money otherwise due to the taxpayer is diverted to subsidise the private operator.

    There are many other similar examples across public expenditure. The argument that housing is unique is weak in the face of such examples.

    As for FF/FG, I am following the debate with interest. Quite a few posters have pointed to significant differences between the two parties so I don't feel the need to add to (e.g. social policy, rural/urban divide, conservative catholic etc.). What does strike me is that these differences as suggested by others haven't really been rebutted but furthermore, they strike me as being more significant differences than the differences between parties such as the Socialist Party, People Before Profit, Independents for Change and the Social Democrats. To give another example, these differences also seem more significant than the ones between Sinn Fein and Aontu.

    To conclude, if the thesis of the OP is that there should be an amalgamation between the two parties because they are similar, then I would respectfully suggest that the evidence presented on the thread isn't sufficient to back that up ahead of other prospective mergers.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,304 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    At this stage it just seems to be down to whose grandfather/great-grandfather shot who during the Civil War.


    That was true up to a generation ago. Whatever vestiges of that tradition remained in this century, they were certainly blown away by the collapse of the FF vote following their disastrous decision to guarantee all the banks.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    blanch152 wrote: »
    ...

    As for FF/FG, I am following the debate with interest. Quite a few posters have pointed to significant differences between the two parties so I don't feel the need to add to (e.g. social policy, rural/urban divide, conservative catholic etc.). What does strike me is that these differences as suggested by others haven't really been rebutted but furthermore, they strike me as being more significant differences than the differences between parties such as the Socialist Party, People Before Profit, Independents for Change and the Social Democrats. To give another example, these differences also seem more significant than the ones between Sinn Fein and Aontu.

    To conclude, if the thesis of the OP is that there should be an amalgamation between the two parties because they are similar, then I would respectfully suggest that the evidence presented on the thread isn't sufficient to back that up ahead of other prospective mergers.

    You've a point about similarities between PBP and the Indies for change.
    FF/FG being accepted as being very similar is a problem if we are looking for a healthy democracy. We don't have PBP in government and Indies for change in opposition for example. Lots of similar parties are, well similar. It neither adds not takes away from the similarities between FF/FG.
    The OP is pointing out an RTE program about the similarities between FF/FG and agreeing. My commentary would be we might find ourselves with a healthier government and possibly system of government, (change the way we do business if you will) if the opposition were actually some form of opposite.
    blanch152 wrote: »
    That was true up to a generation ago. Whatever vestiges of that tradition remained in this century, they were certainly blown away by the collapse of the FF vote following their disastrous decision to guarantee all the banks.

    It did indeed, but winning 20 seats despite their failings can't be attributed to random floating voters I'd imagine.


  • Registered Users Posts: 692 ✭✭✭atticu


    My commentary would be we might find ourselves with a healthier government and possibly system of government, (change the way we do business if you will) if the opposition were actually some form of opposite.

    What makes you think that?

    If you had a strong government and a weak opposition, then the party in power could potentially do what they want as the opposition would be very weak.

    We have seen this in many other countries around the world.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,304 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    atticu wrote: »
    What makes you think that?

    If you had a strong government and a weak opposition, then the party in power could potentially do what they want as the opposition would be very weak.

    We have seen this in many other countries around the world.

    Agreed.

    An opposition made up purely of eight or nine small radical parties who cannot agree with one another and cannot produce sensible policies that gain more than 10% of the vote is not a strong opposition.

    There will never be more than 20% real left-wing vote in Ireland, and it will always be fractured.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,093 ✭✭✭Nobelium


    FF screw you while pretending to be your friend
    FG just screw you


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  • Registered Users Posts: 9 istooptoconcur


    I read the Pheonix occasionally and from this one would get the impression that FG are centrist by design while FF are centrist only so long as it serves their traditional, often hereditary business associates (i.e. out and out popularism). the ends are largely the same save for technical stuff that goes over the heads of most (and is generally not reported anyway). I think it wrong to label FG 'rural' and FF 'urban' as one poster did, I always thought the opposite tendency applied (though I get a bit foggy beyond the pale). would anyone confirm or deny this for me, please? thank you


  • Registered Users Posts: 286 ✭✭abcabc123123


    blanch152 wrote: »
    That was true up to a generation ago. Whatever vestiges of that tradition remained in this century, they were certainly blown away by the collapse of the FF vote following their disastrous decision to guarantee all the banks.
    This might be true in an urban context but not in a rural one in my opinion. FF and FG voters still follow historical lines. They may not support their party explicitly because of a civil war allegiance, but you can trace a lot of family politics back to it.

    The two parties are very deeply embedded in rural Ireland still and people don't necessarily follow them because of any particular political ideology.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,676 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    I think, of those still voting for FF and FG, a signficant chunk are still influenced by family tradition/heritage.

    But that's not the whole story. The combined vote of these two parties is declining, and is now below 50%. Twenty years ago it was 67%; forty years ago, 80%. That tells us that there's a whole lot of people with a family tradition of voting FF/FG who are voting for neither of those parties.

    The other point, of course, is that this isn't an either/or thing. There could be a lot of voters whose family tradition dictates their choice as between FF and FG, but whose political beliefs/principles mean that, even without any family tradition, they would likely vote for one of those parties anyway. It may be belief more than tradition which keeps them from voting SF or Labour or whoever.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    atticu wrote: »
    What makes you think that?

    If you had a strong government and a weak opposition, then the party in power could potentially do what they want as the opposition would be very weak.

    We have seen this in many other countries around the world.

    An opposition that supports the government for favours is pointless, no?
    This is not a meeting of social policy. It would be great if government and opposition worked in such a manner. The role of the opposition is to call out bad policy, not call out bad policy and then support it.

    When FF can still muster 20 seats after the meltdown and IMF etc., we're in trouble IMO. FG taking them on for 'stability' after castigating them for votes in the run up to the election is disgraceful.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,862 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    FF and FG are similar but also different in some ways.

    Ireland is a cautious country and does not like change. Its why the likes of the PBP and Sinn Fein will always be on the side lines.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,764 ✭✭✭oceanman


    markodaly wrote: »
    FF and FG are similar but also different in some ways.

    Ireland is a cautious country and does not like change. Its why the likes of the PBP and Sinn Fein will always be on the side lines.

    that's not a bad thing …...you need someone on the side lines constantly stirring things up. otherwise whoever is in power thinks they can do what they like to the people. example..enda kenny


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,304 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    oceanman wrote: »
    that's not a bad thing …...you need someone on the side lines constantly stirring things up. otherwise whoever is in power thinks they can do what they like to the people. example..enda kenny

    What did Enda Kenny ever do for the country?

    Jobs.

    What did Enda Kenny ever do for the country other than solve the unemployment problem?

    Stabilise the public finances.

    What did Enda Kenny ever do for the country other than solve the unemployment problem and stabilise the public finances?

    Get the banks working again.

    What did Enda Kenny ever do for the country other than solve the unemployment problem, stabilise the public finances and get the banks working again?

    Oh, I could go on, but it the criticism of the 2011 government is Pythonesque at this stage.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    blanch152 wrote: »
    What did Enda Kenny ever do for the country?

    Jobs.

    What did Enda Kenny ever do for the country other than solve the unemployment problem?

    Stabilise the public finances.

    What did Enda Kenny ever do for the country other than solve the unemployment problem and stabilise the public finances?

    Get the banks working again.

    What did Enda Kenny ever do for the country other than solve the unemployment problem, stabilise the public finances and get the banks working again?

    Oh, I could go on, but it the criticism of the 2011 government is Pythonesque at this stage.

    His bare faced lies aside, we are constantly told the current myriad crises may have been dealt with several years ago but we've no option but to carry out current policies.
    The major disservice he did to the Irish people was continuing to do the way we do business, continue with cronyism and create the IW quango. All things he promised to address. Working and needing state aid to pay rent to vulture funds and securing ever worsening crises is his legacy not to mention the man with two pints, exploding wallets and the army at ATM's. Today we've the party responsible for everything he 'saved us' from in cahoots with FG. Great man all the same. He'll go down in history as the biggest waster, by waster I mean wasted opportunity, he had it, promised change, got in on change and wasted the opportunity.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,304 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    His bare faced lies aside, we are constantly told the current myriad crises may have been dealt with several years ago but we've no option but to carry out current policies.
    The major disservice he did to the Irish people was continuing to do the way we do business, continue with cronyism and create the IW quango. All things he promised to address. Working and needing state aid to pay rent to vulture funds and securing ever worsening crises is his legacy not to mention the man with two pints, exploding wallets and the army at ATM's. Today we've the party responsible for everything he 'saved us' from in cahoots with FG. Great man all the same. He'll go down in history as the biggest waster, by waster I mean wasted opportunity, he had it, promised change, got in on change and wasted the opportunity.


    It might just be me, but since we were getting weekly warnings in 2010 from experts like David McWilliams that the country would be bust by the end of the week, stabilising the public finances outweighs any amount of stories about men with pints.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    blanch152 wrote: »
    It might just be me, but since we were getting weekly warnings in 2010 from experts like David McWilliams that the country would be bust by the end of the week, stabilising the public finances outweighs any amount of stories about men with pints.

    I've news for you, we passed crises (plural) point some years ago. The important people aren't feeling it is all. The public finances are far from stable. Wasteful spending, lack of accountability and taking from the bottom to give to the lower bottom will be the downfall. Anything could tip the apple cart.
    I'll give you a good one, likely we'll have some form of economic downturn and we may rightly attribute that to Brexit, however watch for them all acting like they only heard about Brexit the day of.
    The fact remains FG said FF were the absolute worst in the run up to 2011 and now they are partners.
    This says to the voter either FF weren't as bad as FG made out or they were bad but FG think they're fit for responsibility now.
    That's one of the problems in having the two main parties so close.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,304 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    I've news for you, we passed crises (plural) point some years ago. The important people aren't feeling it is all. The public finances are far from stable. Wasteful spending, lack of accountability and taking from the bottom to give to the lower bottom will be the downfall. Anything could tip the apple cart.
    I'll give you a good one, likely we'll have some form of economic downturn and we may rightly attribute that to Brexit, however watch for them all acting like they only heard about Brexit the day of.
    The fact remains FG said FF were the absolute worst in the run up to 2011 and now they are partners.
    This says to the voter either FF weren't as bad as FG made out or they were bad but FG think they're fit for responsibility now.
    That's one of the problems in having the two main parties so close.


    It is not as simple as FG making FF partners.

    Governments are formed because of the way people vote and the choices that people make. After the last election, the people elected a number of parties - Sinn Fein, PBP, Labour - who were not going to go into government for varying reasons, a plethora of independents - about 23 in total - who had about 23 different points of view and FF and FG.

    Out of that result, the only possibility was FF supported by FG or FG supported by FF. Otherwise, we would have another election.

    We got the government we voted for, and that is on all of us, not on FG partnering FF.

    You are not happy with the make-up of this government, neither am I, but that is what the people voted for. If the people want a different government, they will vote en masse for someone else.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    blanch152 wrote: »
    It is not as simple as FG making FF partners.

    Governments are formed because of the way people vote and the choices that people make. After the last election, the people elected a number of parties - Sinn Fein, PBP, Labour - who were not going to go into government for varying reasons, a plethora of independents - about 23 in total - who had about 23 different points of view and FF and FG.

    Out of that result, the only possibility was FF supported by FG or FG supported by FF. Otherwise, we would have another election.

    We got the government we voted for, and that is on all of us, not on FG partnering FF.

    You are not happy with the make-up of this government, neither am I, but that is what the people voted for. If the people want a different government, they will vote en masse for someone else.

    I was very happy with the make up of government in 2011, what do I know?
    That's not the case. FG weren't forced to look to FF. They chose to.
    People didn't vote for a FF/FG coalition which is essentially what we have. If they ran on that, don't you think the votes may have landed differently?


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


    Where is my free house?

    Not anywhere near where paul murphy or richard boyd barrets parents mansions are anyway


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,371 ✭✭✭Phoebas


    People didn't vote for a FF/FG coalition which is essentially what we have. If they ran on that, don't you think the votes may have landed differently?
    If all of the parties had ran with their coalition partnerships on offer, we would still end up with FG and FF, because, as you'll recall, after the last election all of the other parties declined to do a deal.

    And that included the parties that campaigned together under the common 'right2change' platform. They set out their stall and then dismantled it after the election.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,367 ✭✭✭micosoft


    His bare faced lies aside, we are constantly told the current myriad crises may have been dealt with several years ago but we've no option but to carry out current policies.
    The major disservice he did to the Irish people was continuing to do the way we do business, continue with cronyism and create the IW quango. All things he promised to address. Working and needing state aid to pay rent to vulture funds and securing ever worsening crises is his legacy not to mention the man with two pints, exploding wallets and the army at ATM's. Today we've the party responsible for everything he 'saved us' from in cahoots with FG. Great man all the same. He'll go down in history as the biggest waster, by waster I mean wasted opportunity, he had it, promised change, got in on change and wasted the opportunity.

    Irish water is not a quango anymore than the ESB is one. It delivers clean potable water to 4 million people daily and takes their waste away. The fact you and a group of people reject a reasonable usage charge that every other modern country supports (as an aside true left wingers support well funded public services) is a reflection that perhaps you are part of this problem you describe (housing). Creating no funding flow for IW is having real consequences in terms of investment and yes, creating one of the real reasons that we have a housing crisis in Dublin - lack of serviced land.

    Whatever about Enda Kenny, and like all politicians he had his flaws, your meandering post demonstrates the difficulty of being a politician in Ireland. Using buzzwords you don't fully understand (Quangos, Vulture funds!) to smear quite worthy endeavours (Food Safety Authority of Ireland IS a Quango - is that bad? The "Vulture Funds" that bought debt off our banks, helping recapitalise them so they can lend again, wrote off debts and basically cleaning up the banking ecosystem just like real vultures who are essential) strike me as the blunt populism that actually does hold this country back.

    Finally the hyperbolic statement. You saying that Enda Kenny will go down in history as the biggest waster is similar to Trump supporters blaming Obama for inheriting the mess Bush W left. That's interesting company.


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