CobraClan wrote: » So if there is another election, do you think RTE will exclude Mary Lou again from the leaders debate? Wouldn't surprise me!
votecounts wrote: » Don't where you get this from but SF have been out on day 1 trying to form a govt but when FF and FG won't even talk to you, they are screwed. I don't think it is a case of being afraid imo.
Spanish Eyes wrote: » I think we were getting there somehow with housing. It takes time really and we all know that. But the instagram generation want it NOW.
Jinglejangle69 wrote: » Mary Lou said FF it FG in government would be a disaster. Yet she is trying to form a government with them?
votecounts wrote: » ff and fg together she means, she was willing to be lead partner with either, but needed to see what sort of numbers she had on the left before doing this. Can't say she was afraid of going in to govt now.
mickdw wrote: » Why would FF agree to go into government with SF and allow SF to be leader. FF have more seats.
Flying Fox wrote: » Only because the Ceann Comhairle is automatically returned. SF did win the popular vote, to dismiss that is only storing up problems for the future.
_Brian wrote: » It’s likely we’re heading to another GE.
JohnnyFlash wrote: » Back to the country so and let SF run more candidates.
Plumbthedepths wrote: » Neither FF or FG will let that happen, considering so many of their TDs barely scrapped across the line.
Flying Fox wrote: I'm in my mid thirties and the housing market in this country has been dysfunctional, to say the least, for almost my entire adult life. Yes I want it sorted now, because I'll need a mortgage and I don't have an infinite amount of time to get it. And I'm sick of paying rent and having no security. I'm not asking for a free house, I'm simply asking for fairness. People who work hard shouldn't be struggling to get a secure home.
First Up wrote: Not dysfunctional - changing.
Mike_C wrote: » So FF say they won’t talk to SF because they said they would pre election. They also said they wouldn’t go back into gov with FG. The numbers therefore don’t add up for any minority gov so why not just call election no 2 now......see if the people really want change
SafeSurfer wrote: » One thing consider with an enlarged Sinn Fein leading the opposition is their ability to agitate through labour disputes as many union activists seem to be also Sinn Fein members. Maybe this has been a deliberate strategy to place members in key roles within trade unions. Positions which previously would have been dominated by Labour members.
Wanderer78 wrote: Its clearly obvious our housing market is highly dysfunctional, and slowly getting worse, with no clear solutions on the horizon, nobody really knows what to do about it, younger generations are in severe trouble with this one.
First Up wrote: The model we grew up with is unsustainable. Blame who you want but it is simply the reality of a growing population, limited land and low interest rates making rental returns a good investment.
threeball wrote: » I don't know if the SF vote holds up next time round. They got a ton of protest votes from people who now faced with the actual possibility of an SF government will most likely backtrack. Especially in the light of the behaviour of some candidates post election. Their vote will hold in Dublin and border counties but elsewhere in think it's very fragile.
Wanderer78 wrote: There's no question the financialisation of our economies has had a detrimental effect on our housing markets, only problem is now, what the hell do we do about it
woohoo!!! wrote: » It's a unique situation with 3 parties effectively tied and each one naturally wants to be top dog. If keep SF out is the priority for FFG then there's some things they need to clear about in the election campaign. That they would consider coalition with each other and that a rotating taoiseach would also be a possibility. They would also be well advised to concentrate on policy and to tone down the ra hysteria (didn't work last time so don't repeat). There would also be the issue of transfers. For example FF could say, after us vote FG, Greens, SDs in order of your preference. We've seen that vote left has worked so it will need a counter message. In other words, election pacts and Civil war politics left where it belongs, the past.
is_that_so wrote: » It's not a matter of keeping them out, they have explicitly and clearly stated they cannot countenance going into government with them. That looks like an immovable red line. If we do get a functioning government out of a FF/FG arrangement expect it to go all out to nullify the SF USP, especially on the trigger issues, by borrowing their policies and modifying them.
Alondra Damp Publisher wrote: » All the criticism of FG and FF for not breaking their pre election promise to not enter coalition with SF annoys the hell out of me. I'm not a supporter of any particularn party but I voted for FG and FF specifically to try and prevent SF being in government as I believe it would hurt our economy. If FG and FF break their promise I would be regretting how I voted. Wouldn't actually know who to vote for being honest. Anyway surely SF entering into coalition with either of those two parties would limit this change we keep on hearing about.
First Up wrote: » Communism?
woohoo!!! wrote: » Absolutely. And the tactic for SF would be to up the game to keep the two out with the aim of getting say 50ish seats