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Who is the best/worst Taoiseach in modern times?

124

Comments

  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,714 ✭✭✭ThewhiteJesus


    Edgware wrote: »
    Go off and read your history and and you should have a different opinion

    I’m well read in Irish history so your advice is nonsense.


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


    I’m well read in Irish history so your advice is nonsense.
    Well then you are not doing a fair comparison of the achievements of the various Taoisigh.
    Are you seriously saying De Valera was worse than Haughey, Reynolds or Bruton?


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,617 ✭✭✭votecounts


    what did leo achieve as taoiseach, more soundbite than anything.
    Martin got to be up there as the worst along with Bruton


  • Registered Users Posts: 21,517 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    votecounts wrote: »
    what did leo achieve as taoiseach, more soundbite than anything.
    Martin got to be up there as the worst along with Bruton

    8th Ref was repealed during his time.
    Irelands position and front line team was very strong during Brexit negotiations.
    Initial response to Covid was viewed as positive by most.

    Think people can expect too much from a government leader, as in any success must have been demonstrably down to them and them alone in the face of broad opposition. Real world doesn't work like that.


  • Registered Users Posts: 58 ✭✭Hollybeg


    Best - Garret Fitzgerald followed by Sean Lemass.
    Worst - Brian Cowan... and in recent times, Micheal Martin is making ground on him.

    Anyone who says Charlie Haughey was our best Taoiseach, deserves to be pillered for that view. An odious, corrupt individual.


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


    Hollybeg wrote: »
    Best - Garret Fitzgerald followed by Sean Lemass.
    Worst - Brian Cowan... and in recent times, Micheal Martin is making ground on him.

    Anyone who says Charlie Haughey was our best Taoiseach, deserves to be pillered for that view. An odious, corrupt individual.
    His best work was as Finance Minister and Justice. As Taoiseach no great achievements


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,748 ✭✭✭ExMachina1000


    Leo was the worst while Cowan was the best.


  • Registered Users Posts: 58 ✭✭Hollybeg


    Leo was the worst while Cowan was the best.

    You are taking the p1ss?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,816 ✭✭✭skooterblue2


    votecounts wrote: »
    what did leo achieve as taoiseach, more soundbite than anything.
    Martin got to be up there as the worst along with Bruton

    Leo was all spin, all image and no substance. He was a blunt instrument use by our evil EU overlords to kick the British.<SNIP>


  • Registered Users Posts: 21,517 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    Leo was all spin, all image and no substance. He was a blunt instrument use by our evil EU overlords to kick the British. <SNIP>

    Bet you're sorry the 1916 rising ever happened.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,816 ✭✭✭skooterblue2


    Bet you're sorry the 1916 rising ever happened.

    Meh, Under the British, or the EU or maybe if the Soviet Union has persisted for a war after the fall of Berlin, it would have all been the same under a different power.


  • Registered Users Posts: 629 ✭✭✭Mehapoy


    Best: Leo, when you see what a mess MM is making you realise leadership on something like covid looks easy but can be messed up very easily, also did very well throughout the whole brexit debacle in keeping NI aligned to the EU

    Honourable mentions, Albert Reynolds Laid alot if the groundwork for peace with John Major and the good relationship he had with him brought the British to the table.

    Worst: Cowen for guaranteeing every debt of the developers and saddling the country for 100 years
    Ahern, a grifter that had no vision for the country only stadiums and corruption, handed a loaded grenade to Cowen
    Ends Kenny, had an opportunity to fundamentally remake the country but was a real status quo'er that carried on the ff raid on the country


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,617 ✭✭✭votecounts


    Mehapoy wrote: »
    Best: Leo, when you see what a mess MM is making you realise leadership on something like covid looks easy but can be messed up very easily, also did very well throughout the whole brexit debacle in keeping NI aligned to the EU

    Honourable mentions, Albert Reynolds Laid alot if the groundwork for peace with John Major and the good relationship he had with him brought the British to the table.

    Worst: Cowen for guaranteeing every debt of the developers and saddling the country for 100 years
    Ahern, a grifter that had no vision for the country only stadiums and corruption, handed a loaded grenade to Cowen
    Ends Kenny, had an opportunity to fundamentally remake the country but was a real status quo'er that carried on the ff raid on the country

    deserves a lot of credit for peace in the north with the Good Friday Agreement


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,788 ✭✭✭10000maniacs


    For me, I would say Bertie was by far the worst, given the outcome of his tenure. He put absolutely no control on anything, anybody who talked about a downturn was told to commit suicide. Between him and Charlie "When I have it I'll spend it" McCreevy, they set the traps for what was a crippling recession.

    Cowen was useless but he was given the ultimate hospital pass.

    I think Enda was OK in fairness to him (and probably the best we had). Himself and Noonan got more right than wrong. Irish Water was their biggest disaster in my view. I would say he didn't tackle waste in the public sector like he could have and Dr. J's plan for the health service floundered badly.

    I think Leo's administration was a lot poorer than people remember. Yes they did well in Covid but where was the same urgency regarding housing, where was the control of costs at the childrens hospital, where was the accountability for cervical check. I also never liked that they didn't try to get more corporation tax from multi national companies but kept hammering the squeezed middle.
    We have to realise that the squeezed middle with huge mortgages are the ones who are going to have to pay the bill for the 100,000s of social houses promised in the last election. Any leader who has misgivings about this is a good leader in my opinion.


  • Registered Users Posts: 26,916 ✭✭✭✭Dempo1


    Leo seems to get Kudos for his initial handling of the Pandemic but in reality his decisions were quite easy. Seems to me he's done a "Bertie on Cowan stroke" and has been crowned the new "most devious & Cunning" of them all.

    Very dissapointing that the minute Michael Martin took over the poison chalice that is actually requiring real and tough decisions, Leo & is FG cohorts have been acting disgracefully underming everyone from Martin to the acting CMO, his interview on the news at one yesterday reminded me of a petulant child who's lost his toy.

    This all said, Michael Martin, Leo, Bertie Ahern, John Bruton, Brian Cowan in order of lack of preference.

    Is maith an scáthán súil charad.




  • Registered Users Posts: 28,783 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    We have to realise that the squeezed middle with huge mortgages are the ones who are going to have to pay the bill for the 100,000s of social houses promised in the last election. Any leader who has misgivings about this is a good leader in my opinion.


    With record low rates, effectively, nobody should have to pay for those social houses, just borrow borrow borrow, we could even borrow a few quid from ourselves if needed


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,266 Mod ✭✭✭✭Chips Lovell


    Mod Note

    Please heed the charter folks
    Keep your language civil, particularly when referring to other posters and people in the public eye. Using unsavoury language does not add to your argument. Examples would be referring to other people or groups as scumbags, crusties, sheeple, shills, trolls, traitors or saying that recently deceased people should “rot in hell” or similar. Repeated use of terms like that will result in a ban from the forum.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,788 ✭✭✭10000maniacs


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    With record low rates, effectively, nobody should have to pay for those social houses, just borrow borrow borrow, we could even borrow a few quid from ourselves if needed

    This is how we ended up in the last mess. Borrow, borrow, borrow. And Also, Covid19 borrowings are in excess of €30 billion this year. We can't afford the election promises any time soon.


  • Registered Users Posts: 28,783 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    This is how we ended up in the last mess. Borrow, borrow, borrow. And Also, Covid19 borrowings are in excess of €30 billion this year. We can't afford the election promises any time soon.

    it was indeed from borrowing, but that was private debt, from private sector financial institutions, public sector borrowing is less risky, and less likely to lead to the calamity we ve just pulled ourselves out of, even though im expecting private sector debt issues to resurface again very soon, due to our current situation


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    hard to have a discussion on anything govt related without one of two posters informing us that govt spending isnt real

    its somewhat of a limiter to serious discussion tbh

    lemass is probably up there

    kenny is a favourite target of the 'free everything' brigade but history will be very kind to what he achieved, tho he and varadkar were far too conservative in what they were willing to do in tackling property interests


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  • Registered Users Posts: 28,783 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    hard to have a discussion on anything govt related without one of two posters informing us that govt spending isnt real

    its somewhat of a limiter to serious discussion tbh

    lemass is probably up there

    kenny is a favourite target of the 'free everything' brigade but history will be very kind to what he achieved, tho he and varadkar were far too conservative in what they were willing to do in tackling property interests

    unsure what this means?


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,336 ✭✭✭beggars_bush


    This is how we ended up in the last mess. Borrow, borrow, borrow. And Also, Covid19 borrowings are in excess of €30 billion this year. We can't afford the election promises any time soon.

    Borrowing money cheaply to actually build housing is better than paying private landlords millions every month to house families


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Strange logic.....

    The reason we don't talk about it is because it is not costing the tax payer, if Paddy Murphy wants to pay 5 people to do something inefficiently, more the power to Paddy!
    It is a different kettle of fish when the tax payer is footing the bill. Then people are entitled to expect value for money.

    the private sector costs the taxpayer enormously

    huge elements of govt spend is taken up by repairing damage done or regulating activities that otherwise would do damage by those whose only ethos is short term profit motive


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,788 ✭✭✭10000maniacs


    Borrowing money cheaply to actually build housing is better than paying private landlords millions every month to house families

    Borrowing from future taxpayers is always a bad thing in a country with no natural resources of it's own to use as collateral. It's burdening Irish kids with huge debt. Auction politics is a dangerous thing.


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


    We have to realise that the squeezed middle with huge mortgages are the ones who are going to have to pay the bill for the 100,000s of social houses promised in the last election. Any leader who has misgivings about this is a good leader in my opinion.

    Rather pay towards building and renting out our own than leasing, renting and buying from private concerns.
    Borrowing from future taxpayers is always a bad thing in a country with no natural resources of it's own to use as collateral. It's burdening Irish kids with huge debt. Auction politics is a dangerous thing.

    We are spending more than we could be so private rentals companies can make profits.
    Edgware wrote: »
    Well then you are not doing a fair comparison of the achievements of the various Taoisigh.
    Are you seriously saying De Valera was worse than Haughey, Reynolds or Bruton?

    Are you familiar with the Irish Press shares? Essentially Dev floated two lots of shares, A and B, for Irish Press. He used patriotism at home and abroad to get people to invest/buy shares in 'our' news paper. The shares he sold to the public where worthless, it was basically them giving him money. The other true actual shares, he kept for himself.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,632 ✭✭✭Bobtheman


    All of them did some good .
    Cosgrave- established the state
    DEV - dismantled what remained of the treaty
    Built a lot of houses.
    Costello- provided an alternative to FF. Set up the IDA.
    Fought TB
    Lemass- opened the economy
    Lynch - fought the IRA
    Garrett- Anglo Irish agreement
    You get the drift.
    Nobody really stands out bar lemass-


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,632 ✭✭✭Bobtheman


    Bowie wrote: »
    Rather pay towards building and renting out our own than leasing, renting and buying from private concerns.



    We are spending more than we could be so private rentals companies can make profits.



    Are you familiar with the Irish Press shares? Essentially Dev floated two lots of shares, A and B, for Irish Press. He used patriotism at home and abroad to get people to invest/buy shares in 'our' news paper. The shares he sold to the public where worthless, it was basically them giving him money. The other true actual shares, he kept for himself.

    The economic war with the UK was a huge diaster
    Set back agriculture 20 years.
    He also continued the policy of handing over kids and women to the church that only stopped in the 1970s.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,632 ✭✭✭Bobtheman


    All Irish governments since the 1990s
    were complicit in creating a dysfunctional housing market and a below avg health system. Actually let's call it what it is - ****.
    That's not to say that within that period real achievements didn't occur. The good Friday agreement and not all of the growth 1997- 2007 has totally disappeared.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,167 ✭✭✭Good loser


    Borrowing money cheaply to actually build housing is better than paying private landlords millions every month to house families


    That depends on a number of other variables.


    The Govt have to spend money on many things - not least on paying their employees quite handsome salaries. Plus this year they are accumulating a new debt of 30 billion due to Covid. What will that increase to next year?


    Many people buy/construct their own houses at no cost to the State; they then have to pony up the money for the houses the State builds for others.


    A rent subsidy may come to €8000 per annum whereas a new house in Dublin will cost €300,000 plus.


    All good reasons to limit Govt house building as much as possible.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,739 ✭✭✭johnmcdnl


    Leo followed on Repeal and SSM, not led.
    He did well on Covid initially but many medical staff who rushed home to help were abandoned when it came to getting permanent roles.
    He targeted people committing fraud and would have let Maria Bailey get away with her fraudulent claim but for the public uproar.
    He took no ownership in delivering on the commitments to the Paris Accord which he signed us up to.

    Overall I'd probably give him a 6 out of 10.

    Micheal Martin 2/10 Not looking good but early days
    Enda Kenny 7/10 Well capable of looking out for his buddies but represented country well abroad
    Brain Cowen 4/10 Always seemed out of his depth but hard not to be during that time
    Bertie Ahern 3/10 Was up to all sorts but probably was Taoiseach during period of best growth in the states history. Think people forget just how popular he was in 2002
    John Bruton 5/10 No great recollection
    Albert Reynolds 4/10 Did good work in peace process but was weak in face of CC influence leading to government collapse
    Charlie Haughey 3/10 Would have been a great leader if you were within his inner circle but he shafted the people of the country with his 'way beyond our means speech' and was the original bandwagoner

    It's mad how Ireland as a country have improved it's international status and ranking in almost every quality of life metric you can think of between roughly the mid 80s to 2020 with such a band of inept to average leaders.

    Maybe leadership isn't as important as they make it out to be. Maybe we don't give them the credit they actually deserve. Maybe other countries have just had even worse leadership than our own. Maybe had Bertie retired before the GFC came along he'd get more than a 3 which might average then numbers out a little better. Maybe something else.
    Whichever it is, it's interesting all the same.


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