Ta ceist agam wrote: » Interesting to see John Sweeney and his wife sitting at the top table with the legal pals et al, as they are the company Directors of Western Railway Operations LTD, oil retailers and hotel management. Western Railway operations ltd may trade as Clifden Station house or Sweeney Oil. Cahoots!!...I'll scratch your back if you scratch mine!https://www.solocheck.ie/Irish-Compa...Limited-573077 Does anyone think there's a dirty connection between the Directors of Clifden Station House and the influential people they were seated with and dined with in their own hotel? There has been 5 mortgage/charges against Western Railway Operations ltd all on the same day this year 28th February 2020. John Sweeney that was seated at the table with the High court Judge , has 38 directorships spanning mainly oil retail and mining, legal and construction / planning and parkrite parking.https://www.solocheck.ie/Irish-Direc...hn/2105755823/ The particular Sweeney family are highly influential people worth billions. Why was Station House Hotel owned by the Sweeney family chosen? Is there a link as to why they 81 party knew the Hotel management would let the Golf party go ahead without social distancing? There's something very fishy going on and more questions must be asked about this relationship with the hotel owners and those that attended the Gold dinner.
Shefwedfan wrote: » I think you will find I dont approve of the event. But you will also find people with employment and working are getting on with their lives. Their whole life doesn't revolve around what MM and FF say on a daily basis or if some TD went for a few pints and got sacked. Dont think at any stage you are or ever will be speaking for the rest of Ireland. Please note neither am I, that is the beauty of free living, people an decide for themselves
Mrcaramelchoc wrote: » I for one want him gone.
RickDeckard wrote: » I want them to defend him publically, as Irelands Commisioner, you know exactly what I mean. you aint funny at all so dont flatter yourself. Fuk, my will to live is draining talking you.
Pelezico wrote: » It wont happen...nor should it happen. The man apologised. Why should he give up his livelihood for attending golf day? Is this the world you want? Really?
Pelezico wrote: » Ah...so this has nothing to do with covid?
the purple tin wrote: » I have seen these tactics used before, a tag team of posters that chips away at you until you lose your temper and tell them to f..k off or something and get banned. No point replying to them.
LillySV wrote: » This man had fuct Irish people over for years. I forget what it was but he made some deal around a month or two ago which was totally against all Irish peoples interests... even annoyed the govt... does anyone here remember what exactly happened again ??? Hard to find story with all the current events!
intellectual dosser wrote: » Phil Hogan is a See You Next Tuesday, but he's our See You Next Tuesday. If people want to be virtuous, you're better than me. We need him in his role defending our interests throughout Brexit negotiations. The Brits will do all they can to make hay out of this.
When Mr Hogan moved to Europe late last year, the Government went on to overturn the system he set up for water charges. This included dropping a threat to reduce people’s water supplies to a trickle if they did not pay and dropping a system to charge households by their usage. Mr Hogan provoked outrage in January 2014 when it was revealed Irish water had spent €50m of taxpayers’ money on consultants. “I don’t micro-manage. You can’t make an omelette without breaking eggs,” he said at the time. When Mr Hogan was the minister overseeing the setting up of Irish Water, legislation for it was rushed through the Dáil in four hours. Later, it emerged that Irish Water staff would be entitled to a system of bonus payments. While the Coalition tried to stop this, employment authorities last week approved the pay hikes. Despite the former Fine Gael minister’s defence yesterday, others firmly blamed Mr Hogan for the controversies associated with Irish Water. It was also suggested that the Coalition could have opted for other revenue- raising measures in the bailout troika deal, instead of water charges, when they took power in 2011.Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin, whose former government originally agreed to the bailout and to the water charges, said: “He is responsible for it [the mess]. "He must be the only man in Ireland now that is saying its not a mess and not a debacle because most Fine Gael ministers start off by saying we didn’t get that quite right did we and Labour ministers were blaming Fine Gael for the mess.”
Dáil health-and-safety official attended #Golfgate event. The civil servant with responsibility for health and safety in the Oireachtas was present at a golf outing that flouted Covid19 guidelines.
Hawthorn Tree wrote: » Yes he is a hero. He has served Ireland so well....
intellectual dosser wrote: » There is no doubt that Phil Hogan is Mr. Irish Water, and all the **** that it was. I'd rather have him loose on the UK and USA in trade negotiations than whoever else would replace him.
There are no minutes from a series of high-level Irish Water meetings held in 2012, including some attended by then environment minister Phil Hogan. Mr Hogan met with Bord Gáis chairperson Rose Hynes in October and November that year but no notes were kept during the discussions. In total, there are no minutes from more than half of all meetings between the Department of Environment and Bord Gáis in the six months after they set up Irish Water. Overall, 23 meetings occurred between April and September 2012 but according to documents obtained by RTÉ's 'This Week' programme, there are only notes from 10.
Concerns over awarding of €50m contract for Irish Water’s call centre
Former minister of state Fergus O’Dowd has claimed he was ignored when he warned then environment minister Phil Hogan that Irish Water needed a “proper, professional communications strategy” when it was being established. Mr O’Dowd, who was involved in the establishment of the water authority, said he told Mr Hogan, now European Commissioner for Agriculture, “that it would be an unmitigated disaster”. “Needless to say I was not listened to and hubris and arrogance won out over logic and concern for ordinary people,” Mr O’Dowd said.
FORMER JUNIOR MINISTER Fergus O’Dowd, one the people involved in setting up Irish Water, said last night that he felt that there were “forces at work” with “agendas” to privatise the utility company. He said he remains “deeply concerned at other agendas, they may be European… I don’t know where they are coming from…” and said we have “real reason to be concerned” about the possibility of Irish Water being privatised.
KaneToad wrote: » I'm no fan of Phil Hogan but I think Irish Water was a good idea and much needed. The govt should have stuck with the original plan but they lost their bottle and started farting around with grants and the like. Meanwhile water still needs to be paid for and there is no incentive for users to curb their usage.
He said he wanted a ban on privatisation to be included in previous legislation, but that proposal was deleted.
Hawthorn Tree wrote: » I see. He has a track record of failure and dishonesty and you reckon that makes him a great negotiator?https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/water/no-minutes-for-irish-water-meetings-attended-by-former-minister-hogan-31086769.html
Penn wrote: The group wasn't split in two. It was the same event and a flimsy half-open partition between the the two groups doesn't negate the mingling likely before and after.
Penn wrote: It was one event and the reason they put up a partition was because they knew they were having an event for more than 50 people. Trying to wave it away as "We put a partition up" doesn't change that.
Penn wrote: If it had been a 140 person wedding split into 3 groups with the same partitions, the same people would be condemning it.
Mrcaramelchoc wrote: » Phil i hope you sleep terribly tonight but even more so i hope people don't forget.we want you out.you are an arrogant man and you don't represent anything irish. go phil! resign ! We don't want you anymore.
LillySV wrote: » Anyone who thinks Phil hogan works for the interests of the ordinary Irish person is a dumb Cnut... sorry for saying that .: I just can’t believe there is fukin idiots spouting that ****e...: I’ve yet to see one sign of that cnut working for the interests of the ordinary man in all his years
Ta ceist agam wrote: » Is there anything to be said for a Mass or Protest outside Leinster house or should I say their new location at the Convention centre Btw, the Dail are now meeting at the Convention centre at 25k a day for TDs to social distance meanwhile 81 of them are wined and dined at the Clifden Station house. Hypocricy at its finest!
RickDeckard wrote: » Time to declare a new Republic and wash the ****e away, the French are serious about this stuff, and they are right.
s1ippy wrote: » There's going to be a protest today if you're up for it.