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Could SocDems and Labour merge to form SDLP in the south?

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  • 12-09-2020 6:39pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 1


    Was thinking it might be a good strategy for the Social Democrats and Labour to merge (considering their recent polling numbers) and form SDLP in the south, thus becoming a larger left leaning party to challenge SF? With SF’s recent growth and that they may potentially get into government in the Republic in the next GE (with FF possibly being wiped out), You could potentially see a lot of people from FF without a home but with a new SDLP party option, could that become their new home? For a lot of left leaning people also that can’t stomach SF because of their history etc, could a new SDLP option become an option for them also?

    What are people’s thoughts on this, do you think it could happen?


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  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,469 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    Was thinking it might be a good strategy for the Social Democrats and Labour to merge (considering their recent polling numbers) and form SDLP in the south, thus becoming a larger left leaning party to challenge SF? With SF’s recent growth and that they may potentially get into government in the Republic in the next GE (with FF possibly being wiped out), You could potentially see a lot of people from FF without a home but with a new SDLP party option, could that become their new home? For a lot of left leaning people also that can’t stomach SF because of their history etc, could a new SDLP option become an option for them also?

    What are people’s thoughts on this, do you think it could happen?

    Unfortunately, small ideological parties generally tend towards splitting rather than coming together.

    The Social Democrats were formed by Roisin Shortall and Catherine Murphy (two former Labour party candidates) and Stephen Donnelly (who has since left to join Fianna Fail). So it is unlikely that they would want to rejoin Labour or that Labour would want them.

    A further problem is that it's very difficult to be a centre left political party in Ireland because, despite their desire to paint Fine Gael and Fianna Fail as right wing parties, in reality all Irish politicians are Social Democratic left of centre economically and mostly only differ on social issues and the extent to which they are prepared to enact social democratic policies.

    The rise of Sinn Fein as the main "left wing" party is because they are prepared to be all things to all men and make all sorts of spending committments, safe in the knowledge that they will never actually have to implement these policies and, if they do, they can then claim that the other parties or the EU won't let them do it.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Computer Games Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 8,464 CMod ✭✭✭✭Sierra Oscar


    I think it's inevitable the SD's and the Labour Party will merge at some stage. A lot of the membership of the SD's couldn't stomach being in the same party as some of the senior membership of the Labour party from the 2011 - 2016 Government. However a lot of those figures are rapidly disappearing from the Labour Party. They're getting old. A lot of the SD's would have been members of the Labour Party if the party hadn't entered Government in 2011.


  • Registered Users Posts: 309 ✭✭O'Neill


    I'll never understand why SDLP didn't form a merger with SocDems instead of Fianna Fáil, I guess it's more in the fact they're the largest party. Terrible misjudgment though in my opinion.


  • Registered Users Posts: 26,078 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Worth pointing out that after a poor general election in 1997 Labour merged with the Democratic Left, which inaugurated a period of steady increases in both votes and seats that lasted nearly 20 years, until the 2016 election.

    Which is not to say that a merger with the Social Democrats now would be quite as attractive as a merger with Democratic left was then. But, in general, the policy of unifying left-of-centre parties paid dividends in the past. It could again.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,271 ✭✭✭Acosta


    Not anytime soon, if at all. Definitely not while Alan Kelly is leader.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    Unfortunately, small ideological parties generally tend towards splitting rather than coming together.

    The Social Democrats were formed by Roisin Shortall and Catherine Murphy (two former Labour party candidates) and Stephen Donnelly (who has since left to join Fianna Fail). So it is unlikely that they would want to rejoin Labour or that Labour would want them.

    A further problem is that it's very difficult to be a centre left political party in Ireland because, despite their desire to paint Fine Gael and Fianna Fail as right wing parties, in reality all Irish politicians are Social Democratic left of centre economically and mostly only differ on social issues and the extent to which they are prepared to enact social democratic policies.

    The rise of Sinn Fein as the main "left wing" party is because they are prepared to be all things to all men and make all sorts of spending committments, safe in the knowledge that they will never actually have to implement these policies and, if they do, they can then claim that the other parties or the EU won't let them do it.

    Neither FG or FF are even remotely left of centre economically. In European political terms, one is Christian Democrat, the other a (conservative) Liberal Party. Both follow the normal European centre/right-wing “paternalistic” model of social spending.

    Neither party though makes the slightest effort to overhaul the economic status quo in this country in an effort to open the door to disadvantaged groups, such as the poor or travellers, so that they can compete on an equal footing in society. Nor do they engage in radical overhaul in perennial problem areas such as the health system, opting instead to maintain the status quo - a status quo where some people can benefit from relying on VHI etc and others are left to flounder on waiting lists.


  • Registered Users Posts: 849 ✭✭✭petronius


    It would have to be the Labour and Social Democratic Party the LSD Party

    Traditionally Fianna Fail were more like Labour/SDP economically and more like Fine Gael in Dublin Socially

    They both get squeezed by FF/FG and SF/GP/and the left overs

    Labour in government in 2011 were just fatening up the pensions of Gilmore Rabbitte and Quinn

    No appetite for Alan Water Charges Kelly! or AOR - lets abolish the seanad, then applies to become a senator after losing his dail seat


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,345 ✭✭✭BluePlanet


    Labour should dissolve and many of their members will naturally migrate to SocDem.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 504 ✭✭✭a very cool kid


    Soc Dems have no interest in being in power/actually doing anything. They're a middle class SOL-PBP-RISE. Being pure is more important to them than improving a bit of their voters' lives.

    FF, FG, Labour, Greens have made some (major!) mistakes down the years but have also done an awful lot of good. FF in particular through attracting foreign investment have massively raised our standards of living in the past 40-45 years, again some seriously dodgy characters in there but still plenty of achievements. FG/Labour brought in free college fees, gave hundreds of thousands opportunity to go to third level.

    Soc Dems will never **** up but they'll never achieve anything either without a huge change in direction.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 504 ✭✭✭a very cool kid


    View wrote: »
    Neither FG or FF are even remotely left of centre economically. In European political terms, one is Christian Democrat, the other a (conservative) Liberal Party. Both follow the normal European centre/right-wing “paternalistic” model of social spending.

    Neither party though makes the slightest effort to overhaul the economic status quo in this country in an effort to open the door to disadvantaged groups, such as the poor or travellers, so that they can compete on an equal footing in society. Nor do they engage in radical overhaul in perennial problem areas such as the health system, opting instead to maintain the status quo - a status quo where some people can benefit from relying on VHI etc and others are left to flounder on waiting lists.

    This view is nonsense - FF literally bankrupted the country spending every penny they had available to take low paid earners out of the tax net! They also hired over fifty thousand civil servants to improve services amongst all the other money they spent. Right wing parties don't do stuff like that 😂🀣


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,886 ✭✭✭megaten


    Soc Dems have no interest in being in power/actually doing anything. They're a middle class SOL-PBP-RISE. Being pure is more important to them than improving a bit of their voters' lives.


    Wasn't one of the Soc dem founders one of the major architects of Slaintecare? I wouldn't mind the Social Democrats trying to build themselves up into a bigger force but why would you go into government if you can achieve major policy goals from the opposition benches.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,681 ✭✭✭jd


    O'Neill wrote: »
    I'll never understand why SDLP didn't form a merger with SocDems instead of Fianna Fáil, I guess it's more in the fact they're the largest party. Terrible misjudgment though in my opinion.

    The SDLP have quite a socially conservative membership


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Social Democrats would have to be sky high to go near poisoned Labour.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,875 ✭✭✭Edgware


    Acosta wrote: »
    Not anytime soon, if at all. Definitely not while Alan Kelly is leader.

    The Soc dems cant even decide on a leader so imagine what would happen if Kelly arrives on the scene


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    This view is nonsense - FF literally bankrupted the country spending every penny they had available to take low paid earners out of the tax net! They also hired over fifty thousand civil servants to improve services amongst all the other money they spent. Right wing parties don't do stuff like that 😂🀣

    Actually right wing parties frequently do that. It’s plain old fashioned populism which is as much, if not more, a right-wing phenomenon as it is a left-wing one.

    And FF bankrupted the country due to rigging the housing market to enrich their friends in the building trade and their banker buddies who helped finance their projects.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 504 ✭✭✭a very cool kid


    megaten wrote: »
    Wasn't one of the Soc dem founders one of the major architects of Slaintecare? I wouldn't mind the Social Democrats trying to build themselves up into a bigger force but why would you go into government if you can achieve major policy goals from the opposition benches.

    Well Soc Dems declined to join the government and Sláintecare is not implemented....


  • Registered Users Posts: 534 ✭✭✭Ekerot


    I'd be very surprised if Labour ever became relevant again, they've already been outpaced by SD and it's already a crowded arena with the amount of left leaning independent TD's in the Dáil


  • Registered Users Posts: 6 MaryL88


    It's hard to see the Soc Dems having the guts ot go into government - they will let labour do that and then complain. Unless their TDs get wiped out I can't see them joing with Labour


  • Registered Users Posts: 6 MaryL88


    Ekerot wrote: »
    I'd be very surprised if Labour ever became relevant again, they've already been outpaced by SD and it's already a crowded arena with the amount of left leaning independent TD's in the Dáil




    If FG get too much influence or FF are wiped out then the public sector workers may well go back to Labour. Bertie took a lot of that support from them but the growing influence of FG may well bring it back.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,015 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    Labour need to rebuild after many years of willfully playing second fiddle to FF/FG before anyone should touch them. I say that as a former Labour party member.
    Labour needs to decide if it's for the people or desperate to be in government despite the costs.
    Kelly needs to go and the unelected behind the scenes people need to be honest with themselves and join FG or form a FG-lite.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,015 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    Well Soc Dems declined to join the government and Sláintecare is not implemented....

    Puts them above Labour IMO.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 11,310 Mod ✭✭✭✭Hermy


    Why does Kelly need to go?

    I'm asking in ignorance - not opposition.

    Genealogy Forum Mod



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,015 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    Hermy wrote: »
    Why does Kelly need to go?

    I'm asking in ignorance - not opposition.

    He's a symbol of the party moving in the wrong direction IMO. If Labour is to be improved it needs to get rid of him. His attitude and stance on issues.


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 67,766 Mod ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Bowie wrote: »
    He's a symbol of the party moving in the wrong direction IMO. If Labour is to be improved it needs to get rid of him. His attitude and stance on issues.

    That really doesn't answer the question you were asked in any way.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,015 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    L1011 wrote: »
    That really doesn't answer the question you were asked in any way.

    It absolutely does.
    He's an aggressive and poor attitude. He's an issue with ego. He chastised members of the public who protested. These are not good qualities IMO. Specifically in a party supposedly to support the right to protest.
    If you've a yearning for something else please let me know.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,681 ✭✭✭jd


    Unan Mullaly talks about Alan Kelly today.
    https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/una-mullally-alan-kelly-is-shrewdly-hitching-labour-s-wagon-to-sinn-f%C3%A9in-1.4390922
    Yet on the Kelly front, it’s beginning to seem like the detractors were wrong. In media and for the most part in the chamber, Kelly’s gasket-blowing is often reduced to a simmer. Remarkably, here is a politician who has mellowed with responsibility. The perception is that he is maturing into the role of leader. We won’t know (for now) what an Ó Riordáin-led Labour would have looked like, but Kelly-era Labour is shaping up to be a little more intriguing than predicted. So can Labour, with its smattering of all-male TDs, progress?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,015 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    jd wrote: »

    Read that. I took, "...the Labour "brand" and legacy is held far to dearly (and rightly so) to dilute it for the sake of opportunistic short-term electoral success" as sarcasm. It's that very trait sums up the party and Kelly looking to sidle up to any rising star for the chance of getting in is not new territory.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 11,310 Mod ✭✭✭✭Hermy


    Bowie wrote: »
    It absolutely does.
    He's an aggressive and poor attitude. He's an issue with ego. He chastised members of the public who protested. These are not good qualities IMO. Specifically in a party supposedly to support the right to protest.
    If you've a yearning for something else please let me know.

    Yeah, I get the aggression - just wondered where his politics fit with where Labour are now and where they need to get to.

    Genealogy Forum Mod



  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 67,766 Mod ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Bowie wrote: »
    It absolutely does.
    He's an aggressive and poor attitude. He's an issue with ego. He chastised members of the public who protested. These are not good qualities IMO. Specifically in a party supposedly to support the right to protest.
    If you've a yearning for something else please let me know.

    You original answer could be translated to "because things". You gave no indication of the specific attitude, stance or direction that you opposed

    This one actually gives some content.

    Which of the other five TDs do you think is more suited?


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,112 ✭✭✭paul71


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    Worth pointing out that after a poor general election in 1997 Labour merged with the Democratic Left, which inaugurated a period of steady increases in both votes and seats that lasted nearly 20 years, until the 2016 election.

    Which is not to say that a merger with the Social Democrats now would be quite as attractive as a merger with Democratic left was then. But, in general, the policy of unifying left-of-centre parties paid dividends in the past. It could again.

    It also happened earlier than that with the workers party.

    Edit: Sorry they formed democtratic left.


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