Maman Poulet | Clucking away crookedly through media, politics and life

Cluck incoming

February 15th, 2012 · Uncategorized

Party Ard Fheis/Conference season will soon be upon us.  Motions are being submitted and will soon be amended, composited and ruled out of order before reaching the final agenda. And some are arriving into the hen house.  (All chicken feed is greatfully received to tips(@)mamanpoulet.com).

First up is the Labour Party preliminary agenda.  Here you can see what party branches around the country have on their minds.  At first glance there is plenty of criticism of government policy involving cuts to Lone Parents, CE schemes and the lack of equality focussed policies.

But the first thing to catch my eye.

Conference calls on the Irish Government to re-open the Vatican Embassy in recognition that Ireland as a small open economy can benefit greatly from engaging at this international crossroads on a range of global, social political and international issues of interest to Ireland, and furthermore, in recognition of the great affinity that so many Irish people have with their Catholic Religion and its central role in their lives.

Tuam Bobby Burke Branch, Galway East

I’d say that’ll get amendments proposed.  Maybe from the secularists in Dublin North Central.

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Labour members meet to talk about policy alternatives

February 14th, 2012 · Irish Politics

As they approach their first year in Government the Labour Party have held carefully choreographed meetings of party members before their equally carefully choreographed conference in Galway next month.

Last night about 200 members met in Stillorgan to question Eamon Gilmore on the party’s actions in government on subjects including the Vatican Embassy, tax breaks for investors and the like.

Independently of the head office verbal dances, a grass roots members meeting is being held in Dublin this Saturday.  Entitled the Labour Members Forum, the organisers have sent out word far and wide.

A group of grassroots Labour members from a broad range of constituencies have come together to start a discussion about how we as members believe our party can deliver on the values of the Labour Party. We are organising a Labour Party Members’ Forum, “What can Labour do in government?” on Saturday 18th February in Wynn’s Hotel in Dublin. The Forum is aimed at grassroots members of the Labour party, to hear and debate alternative policy solutions to Ireland’s social and economic challenges.

Speakers confirmed  include Dr. Mary Murphy (NUI, Maynooth), Michael Taft (UNITE), Mags O’Brien (SIPTU), John Douglas (ICTU), Orla O’Connor (National Women’s Council of Ireland) and Tom Healy (ICTU).

Labour Party Head Office seem to have themselves in a quandry as they try to find who has organised the meeting with a very interesting line up.  A little birdie tells me it kicks off at 10.30am and runs all day in Wynnes Hotel.  Maybe head office will send along someone to take notes.  More information from Labourmembersforum(@)gmail.com

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Civil Partnerships – the numbers 10 months on

February 14th, 2012 · Irish Politics, LGBT, Same Sex Partnerships, Social Policy

For day that is in it (Bah Humbug) GLEN have released some statistics on Civil Partnership in Ireland.

The figures, provided by the General Registrars Office show that:

· 536 couples entered civil partnership in Ireland in the nine months from April 5th 2011, when civil partnership first became available

· the 1072 people entering an Irish Civil Partnership came from Ireland and 58 other countries throughout the world, including the UK, Brazil, the United States Poland and the Philippines.

· couples entering civil partnership live in every one of the 26 counties in Ireland

· people of all ages entered civil partnerships: most were aged between 41 and 50, followed by those aged between 31 and 40. 5 people were aged between 18 and 20 and 8 people were over 70 years of age.

· civil partnerships took place in 25 of the 26 counties in Ireland – all except Co. Clare.

These figures do not account for the many more hundreds of Irish citizens who were married or entered a civil partnership abroad whose marriages and civil partnerships are automatically recognised in Ireland as Civil Partnerships.

And the world still turns.

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Mauled by the Celtic Tiger – CESR report published

February 13th, 2012 · Irish Politics, Recession, Social Policy

International human rights organisation the Centre for Economic and Social Rights yesterday published a report reviewing the impact of recession on human rights in Ireland. Mauled by the Celtic Tiger: Human Rights in Ireland’s Economic Meltdown reviews Ireland’s commitments to international human rights instruments, research and statistics available on the impact of austerity on Human, economic and social rights and interviews with key actors. The report outlines where Ireland has consistently violated its obligations under international human rights law in its handling of the economic crisis. The CESR have provided reports on this area before including a submission about Ireland to the Universal Periodic Review last year. A read through the other countries who have been examined by the CESR might depress you further – Afghanistan, Angola, Bangladesh, Bolivia, Cambodia, Ecuador Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Ghana, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras India, Iraq, Ireland, Kenya. Liberia, Madagascar, Nigeria, Occupied Palestinian Territories, Peru, Spain, Syria, United States. All this before Ireland seeks election to the UN Human Rights council next month.

Hopefully this makes for very difficult reading for people on the backbenches of the Labour Party before the meeting with their party leader on Thursday.

A series of recommendations are made about the human rights impact assessment of government policies, need for action on social housing provision, importance of independent equality and human rights infrastructure and positive action measures that are needed to support vulnerable groups and minorities.

One area I have not seen before is a call on the countries and institutions bailing us out to remember their human rights obligations in lending.

Creditor countries and institutions should comply with their extraterritorial obligation not to impede economic and social rights protection in Ireland.

Governments in countries that either count themselves among Ireland’s creditors, or are home to its creditor institutions, must take steps to comply with their extraterritorial human rights obligations by ensuring that the repayment of Ireland’s debts does not interfere with the protection of economic and social rights in the country. International institutions that influence the enjoyment of economic and social rights in Ireland, in particular the EU and IMF, should likewise ensure all policy agreements with Ireland comply with human rights standards, and should consider renegotiating the terms of rescue loans where these have undermined economic and social rights.

Similarly, the European Central Bank should take steps to protect economic and social rights in Ireland, including considering the recommendation to take on some proportion of the country’s unsustainable debts itself and/or requiring bondholders to accept an appropriate level of responsibility. Those foreign banks proven to have behaved irresponsibly should meanwhile be pressured to take on a fair proportion of the debt through equity swaps or other similar means.

So next time they are in with the Troika the various pillars of the social partnership and opposition parties might try that one on Klaus, Istvan and Craig. Or maybe Vincent Browne can read the report and use it for his questions at the next press conference.

The paragraph below looks at the impact of austerity and recession on people with disabilities. We have had very little reflection on the totality of the cuts and delays and denials of rights – I would think that interviews with people with disabilities rather than the organisations paid for by the state might say even more if the CESR want to come back again.

People with disabilities have likewise been negatively affected by recent budgets. This group has experienced a long history of mistreatment at the hands of the Irish state, which has yet to ratify the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

Ireland’s disabled population was severely affected by both the 2010, 2011 and 2012 budgets, with successive cuts to the disability allowance. The 2012 spending plan sees the allowance paid to people with disabilities aged 18 to 21 reduced from €752 to €400 a month, though this measure has been put on hold pending a review by the Commission on Taxation and Welfare. The disablement pension has also been slashed, along with the carer’s allowance, thus creating a situation in which many disabled persons may be effectively ‘imprisoned in their own homes’.

Needless to say, those with disabilities have also been disproportionately affected by the aforementioned cuts to education services, such as student support grants and teacher support services, which have been subject to successive reductions. Civil society’s capacity to respond in the face of regressive policy measures has simultaneously been weakened by drastic reductions in state support to the voluntary sector, with a recent Disability Federation survey finding over three quarters of member organizations had been either ‘significantly’ or ‘very significantly’ hit by the recession.

Although such cuts affect other groups as well, it must be underlined that people with disabilities are particularly reliant on the support of the voluntary sector. Meanwhile, Ireland’s disabled population continues to wait for the governing coalition to publish an implementation plan for the National Disability Strategy, as promised in its Program for Government.

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Irish journalist couple to challenge anti-fracking campaign

February 12th, 2012 · Irish Politics

Give it a few weeks but soon enough you’ll be hearing from US based Irish anti environmentalist film makers Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney on a radio/TV programme near you.

They are raising money to make a documentary titled >Frack Off which purports to challenge Gasland, the documentary about the damage caused by fracking made by Josh Fox which has been shown around Ireland.

This pair have form.  Anti global warming form.  They made Not Evil, But Wrong in response to Al Gore’s An Inconvienent Truth.

McElhinney may also be known to you as one of the people who has questioned inter country adoption.  She made a documentary with McAleer on the Tristan Dowse story.  McElhinney is also a darling of the Tea Party and regularly addresses conservative conferences including CPAC.  This is where I last came across her in 2010. She didn’t much like the movie Avatar either (neither did I but it was just because it was a rubbish movie not for it’s anti-mining properties.)

So maybe we’ll finally have other pro fracking people to knock Ed Walsh (Did you know he founded the University of Limerick?) off his podium.  Neither of these film makers have any scientific  or other qualifications but sure that won’t stop them getting on a programme near you in the interests of ‘balance’.

Update

McElhinney spoke about the Frack Off project during an interview at CPAC yesterday. She describes herself as a ‘recovering European’.

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