Blanco100 wrote: » Its going to be a FG-FF government again, confidence and supply motion. Probably FF as main party this time with MM as taoiseach There's no other possibility. "for the good of the country" will be the buzz phrase for few weeks after. This is a certainty.
mgn wrote: » A Green Party candidate that doesn't believe in carbon taxes, that has to be a first.
whatawaster wrote: » Not sure why Saoirse McHugh is even in the Green Party. Disastrous interview for her and the party
ricero wrote: » Saoirse McHugh is useless. Find her quite poor anytime I see her in this type of forum.
boardise wrote: » Good God ,and to think she was in contention for a seat as an MEP ! County Council material at best.
gmisk wrote: » The national broadband plan is going to be a disaster and seriously out of date when delivered...and let's be honest massively over budget probably
Calhoun wrote: » Ill need to watch it, did she go on a solo run of tax everything that Eamonn has been trying to distance himself from. its good when the veil slips as you get to see the true intentions.
BrianBoru00 wrote: » Sweet Jesus - looks likes she s believing her own publicity gained since the euro elections . She cannot articulate very straight forward policy questions.
Jinglejangle69 wrote: » Elaborate?
NIMAN wrote: » She just seems to have her own beliefs and to be fair she is probably being 100% honest In her answers, but since when was any politician honest?
Mickeroo wrote: » Other way around. She said she's against carbon taxes which isn't in line with her party's views I don't think. Her problem is she doesn't wear a veil for it to slip in the first place. She's entirely honest in pretty much everything she says which is anathema to doing well in Irish politics.
gmisk wrote: » That definitely isn't the party line...
tayto lover wrote: » Like a Junior Cert student who hasn’t prepared for a debate.
mgn wrote: » No, but it might give her a better chance of getting elected in a rural area.
Dionysis wrote: » This is the probably the most important investment this country will make in the next 20 years. Good high speed fibre optic broadband, lets a lot of people work from home, and removes people from having to live in the cities as they can work online in rural areas and in well paid jobs, without needing houses in Dublin region or transport to get to it or around it. It offers the chance of balancing moving people back to rural areas, at cheaper living costs. €3billion if done right is a drop in the ocean for the benefit it will bring.
Loafing Oaf wrote: » I'm from Mayo and I can't see this working. She's trying to appease people who would never vote Green anyway. Her best (but still slim) hope was to mobilise the same progressive younger voters who got behind her in the euros.
gmisk wrote: » I am not denying a national broadband plan is needed quite the opposite. My point is that the proposed technology will be out of date by the time it is put in place, it will also likely cost more than 3 billion.