_Brian wrote: » Aontu will make gains at the expense of both SF and FF.
Loafing Oaf wrote: » Gains of seats? They'll have to make that 1% in the opinion polls goa long way... As for SF, I think Mary Lou will have to go if they lose 5+ seats, as seems likely. Then they'll have to find a new policy direction, or a different tone at least, that will go down better among swing voters...
mariaalice wrote: » Not shouting up for SF, but no they haven't they have taken on those who feel they are marginalised ( whether they are marginalised is another question ).
decky1 wrote: » Time to move on , maybe give them a chance and see if they live up to their promises, could they be any worse that previous elected , we can't just keep going around in circles with the same parties every few years and spent that time saying their no good , lets give them a chance.
IAMAMORON wrote: » I don't honestly think Mary Lou is their problem. She is a very competent politician and I would hate to see her not involved in home politics. It took a lot of guts to do what she has done and I would hope she is not judged harshly if they have a poor election. Ireland needs people like Mary Lou in politics, she could make a great Taoiseach one day. None of that is possible however until they take a hard look at themselves and see where they want to go and what sort of an offer they want to provide Ireland with. But Mary Lou is not the problem , at all , they would be in much worse nick without her.
Loafing Oaf wrote: » Well she seemed almost machine-tooled as the SF leader to win over Middle Ireland but it doesn't seem to be happening and the party can't wait around forever for her to turn things around...
mariaalice wrote: » Mary Lou on RTE at the moment doing much better than Micheál Martin, however, they may fall off a cliff after this election? The issue is they have a few very competent people who are heled back by being in SF and the rest of SF Locally they attract a lot of chip on their shoulders and crank type supporters which does affect their vote and its possible the same in each constituency?. N.I is different.
JohnnyFlash wrote: » The main problem for Mary Lou is she has a voice like a fücking foghorn.
Bass Reeves wrote: » I am not sure the country could survive 4years of listening to Mary Lou's shrill voice if she was Toiseach
Mad_maxx wrote: » O Broin championing Margaret Cash went down like a led balloon as well They've lost their identity a little
IAMAMORON wrote: » As I said, until the Sinners can genuinely attract the genuine working " middle" class of Ireland they can't and won't grow.
Millionaire only not wrote: » I’d say they were due to fall off that cliff! Leo and Flanagan threw them a life line last week !
IAMAMORON wrote: » It amazes me how people have not read through this nonsense at this stage? As long as people are bitching about Fine Gael liberalism and their indifference to civil war politics, the less likely people are going to concentrate on the genuine issues at large in 2020. The PR squad in FG are more than happy for people to gripe about the blueshirts and supporting the Tans.... as long as they are not considering the real issues such as homelessness, an economy potentially entering a recession, the childrens' hospital and in particular to last week, the HSE queues … If you ask me the whole commemoration rubbish is a massive red herring in the grand scheme of things and has been dumped into the spotlight to get people off the real issues.
Matt Barrett wrote: » The Tan commemoration was simple arrogance. Not related to the election or anything else. Arrogance.
Bambi wrote: » FGs evil plan is to have people not vote for them because of the Tan War (2020 edition) rather than not vote for them because of housing and health? Sounds like a swiss watch of a plan...
is_that_so wrote: » Overall votes for the hard left will probably be down as their angry message is not going to work anymore. That could put them out of the running for some seats. Retirements too will hit them. Even if they hold up around where their support level was in 2016, it is doubtful IMO and they will naturally lose seats anyway through lack of transfers. I think they'll lose 3 seat straight off - Louth, Kerry and Meath East. You could probably add Cork NC to that list. If their vote doesn't go south of 13%-14% I'd say 6-7 losses in seats will be good. If it does go under 13% then we could be talking about double figure losses. FF will probably gain from that, but so will others.
Matt Barrett wrote: » I think all parties need to find a back bone. There should be no 'no go' areas. The first party to get in and take a run at the HSE and the Civil Service etc. will win my respect. FF/FG are not those parties. Kenny had the best chance for that. We need a change from FF/FG. I'll be voting SD/Indie/SF etc. The Greens are a novelty party and Labour cannot be trusted.
dulpit wrote: » You say you want a party who will get in and take a run at the HSE/etc, but then say the Greens are a novelty party and Labour can't be trusted, but these are the parties who have actually had a go at government in the past, but got bashed for it..
IAMAMORON wrote: » If you think about it for a second.No one is not going to vote for FG because they agreed to an RIC commemoration. But they could definitely lose support if they raise taxes and cost the country money, which they are doing. So they would rather have a load of bar stool republicans, a lot of who won't leave the pub to vote anyway, bitch on about 100 year old politics, that makes no difference to what is happening in Ireland for the next 5 years. It actually makes a lot of sense. You were never not voting for FG because you didn't agree with Cumann na nGael policies of the 1920's... but their major support base will see the commemoration issue as meaningless, as will other non republicans who also vote.