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

Presidential Pay

October 10th, 2011 · Elections, Irish Politics, Trot for the ARAS 2011

Last week on the Last Word during a review of Vincent Browne’s ‘Big’ Presidential debate, I addressed the issue of Presidential Salaries and my opinion on the futility of questions being asked about the issue during interviews and debates. Kites being flown by various candidates on the matter lead to questions being asked and the discussion going round in circles.

I got three emails (negative) and a few reactions on twitter (positive) so thought I would expand a little further as we have more debates this week and as sure as night follows day the issue will be brought up again.

1) The President has no control over their salary. Yes they can decide to gift it back to the state but they can’t decide what the salary amount should be. It has been reduced already and indeed may be reduced further. The Government decides what it is.

2) This is an election, not an auction. A candidate basing a plank of their manifesto around the carrot that they will do the job for less money may appear appealing in these cynical times but I doubt any of the candidates are in it for the money and the debate around this issue obscures the other matters which could be debated. Doing a job for less money doesn’t mean the decision making whether a TD or the President would improve. Debates which circulate on whether people should do an elected office for less money devalue the role and ownership of the electoral process by the electorate.

3) Politicians deciding that they will only take a certain salary and gift the money to their party or other political causes is an issue which requires much more examination than has happened heretofore. See Faduda for some discussions on the matter of declaring such donations to the Standards in Public Office Commission. My issue is that political parties are already funded by the state in Ireland. I don’t think that politicians should be double funding parties through being required to gift their salary back to the party. If they are going to get involved in this type of ‘solidarity’ then they need to gift the remainder of their salaries back to the state.

I note that Martin McGuinness says the money he would hand back would be used to give jobs to six young people. Firstly I’m wondering why only young people, but more fundamentally there’s the rather significant issue that he can’t tell the government what to do with the salary he would hand back and invariably the IMF or the banks will get it.

4) The Presidency is a significant leadership (albeit mainly ceremonial) role in Irish Life thanks to the efforts and talents of Mary Robinson and Mary McAleese. While the salary is high and could be reduced I don’t expect people to do it for 35k a year. The position is not an average job. The office has been sullied enough by the nomination process and campaign to date.

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Campaign Diary #10 – Celebrity Edition

October 9th, 2011 · Elections, Irish Politics, Trot for the ARAS 2011

Given that Presidential campaigns are more about personalities destroying them than about political parties, the celebrity endorsement has been a feature of elections since 1990.

As the campaign continues we can expect to see (sort of) famous people arrive to speak at meetings for candidates or release statements.  Not all at once mind but more on a drip drip basis which indicates a build up of momentum.

So today on Campaign Diary some early shots in the I’m a Celebrity and this is who you should vote for President Jungle.

Mary Davis has Niall Quinn, former Irish Soccer International,out of the blocks first from what must be quite a list of contacts from that event in 2003. Niall has even got a video recorded to back up his endorsement, (somewhere very noisy).

I’m not sure if Denis O’Brien has recorded an endorsement for her yet.

Michael D has had a few endorsements, he has many artists selling paintings and performing at gigs and fundraisers for him including Mary Coughlan.

No sign of Gay Mitchell, David Norris or Sean Gallagher fans yet (where are the other Dragons?) or Dana for that matter (though Kathy Sinnott the former MEP is out and about with her in Munster looking for votes.)

The person who is attracting the largest number of endorsements at the moment appears to be Martin McGuinness. Now it’s important to note that the quality or should that be star rating of the celeb varies wildly.

Exhibit A
Roddy Collins, League of Ireland Football Manager

Exhibit B
Colm Meaney – Actor

Fionnula Flanagan, Frances Black, Peter Sheridan, and former Ulster GAA star Peter Canavan have all turned up too to back McGuinness.

I’ll keep an eye out for more star sightings as the campaign progresses, of course please let me know if you see anything? It’ll be our very own #Aras11 Hello magazine!

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Fine Gael take to the twitter for Gay

October 7th, 2011 · Elections, Irish Politics, Trot for the ARAS 2011

Imaginary conversation overheard last night in FG HQ Mount Street.

Ah Gay don’t worry at all of course we are fully behind you.  We’re pulling all the stops out.  Sure haven’t we Charlie Flanagan on radio all day saying that it’s early days in the campaign and all that.

So you stay up there in Donegal and Sligo visiting marts and the like tomorrow we’ll turn back on that twitter machine and get some of them auto tweet yokes.

D’ya remember them?  During the general election we just pressed a button and all the FG reps sent out the same message en masse and sure it was marvellous.  We’ll get everyone tweeting and retweeting each other and you’ll be all over the social media. It won’t cost a thing, sure we let that Singh lad go ages ago.

Anyway then you’ll know everyone in the parliamentary party is four square (ha) behind you. We’ll even get them putting dem twibbon thingies up on their avatars too.’

Bernard Durkan, Richard Bruton and Liam Twomey and others really did come back to twitter today after a long break (last February) and start spouting out  tweets and retweets for Gay Mitchell.  That’s sure to work that is.

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Campaign Diary #9

October 7th, 2011 · Elections, Irish Politics, Trot for the ARAS 2011

Excuse the interlude, the diarist needed a holiday. Wexford was quiet enough on the Presidential campaign front though I noticed that David Norris did pass through on Tuesday on a flying visit.

Speaking of Senator Norris did you see his official campaign video launched with his campaign and website rebrand on Wednesday?

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The polls yesterday have people going ‘Didn’t expect Sean Gallagher’. I did say last Saturday that he’s a grower. Cough.  Have been talking/listening to enough (straight) women who have had their heads turned to think about voting for him. In addition to the non posters, Sean has been speaking at conferences and events throughout the country for years never mind the last 5 months. Haven’t seen smiles on Fianna Fáilers in a very long time. Throwing that sort of mud at him might get your own candidate into trouble given the Gay Mitchell experience so the Labour Party would be wise to keep schtum.

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Someone is doing wordles of candidate’s websites. I’m not sure why or if there is any good to come of it but here you are, this is Gallagher’s, it looks pretty anyway.

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Spotted in Summerhill, free the Michael D 1!

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Yesterday Philip Boucher Hayes interviewed Mary Davis about her role as a board member of the ICS building society.  That interruption you hear on the podcast at the end is former TD Mildred Fox who comes in to rescue her.

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Anyone know where Dana is?  She is complaining that she’s not getting coverage in the media but is she actually running a campaign or merely showing up on tv waving a copy of the constitution about?

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Finally a health warning for journalists waxing lyrical about social media in this election, we can’t see who the thousands of people who like the candidates on Facebook are as their names are generally hidden. This means that there is a possibility that not all the people who have liked a candidate can vote for them or indeed many people might like a candidate without knowing they have done so. In fact lists of fans can be bought.

This privacy feature which does not reveal the list of fans therefore could be used to manipulate a candidate’s reputation. It’s not just something that is known in international elections, some social media companies have been known to do this for commercial clients. It’s just a health warning at this stage, we do need to look at getting independent verification of the figures that are being used by candidates in their claims of popularity.

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Guest Cluck: Sparkling White

October 4th, 2011 · Uncategorized

Niamh Ni Mhaoileoin emailed me recently and asked could she submit a guest post for the blog as she is a regular reader and is now living in Hekou, China and noticed something which she felt readers may be interested in. She recently graduated from English in Trinity and now lives in China where she teaches English and hopes to gain a greater understanding of Chinese culture and politics. Her blog is at Leigh anois go curamach.

A few weeks ago I was at a comedy show in Dublin. At least what was advertised as a comedy show, though the reality was sadly distinct from what it said on the tin. Of course, the Godwin’s Law of any dodgy Dublin comedy night is that at some point someone, desperately flailing for a laugh, will start to talk about fake tan. That night was no exception and, after a few requisite oompa-loompa references, the performer came to that hilarious dichotomy; while Irish women are painting on the fake tan, in Asia there’s a craze for skin-whitening. Let’s all have a giggle at self-loathing.

Now, I know that skin-whitening in Asia is a commonly discussed issue. I know the somewhat trite cultural analysis – poor people worked in the sun so white skin is a sign of prestige. I remember that Disney’s Mulan painted her face white to go to the matchmaker. I’ve heard the horror stories at the extremes of this issue, from skin products with highly dangerous mercury levels, to backstreet skin bleaching leaving women disfigured.

During my first few days here, I walked through the cosmetics section of a local supermarket and realised that Nivea’s flagship range in China is “Sparkling White.” It jolted me. It brought the issue in from the shocking fringe stories to the mundane, the everyday, to all those women walking around with statements of inadequacy in their shopping trolleys. Since then, I’ve been extra-attuned to the real manifestations of this complex. To all of the advertisements for all kinds of products that feature “sparkling white” models and to how much women I’ve met hate to go out in the sun.

The most frequent reminder of the white-bias is that I get told I’m beautiful. All the time. When I buy my bread in the morning, when I get in taxi, when my work is being assessed. My intention isn’t to brag (though over here I do sometimes have to force my ego back into its box.) My western female colleagues get the same attention. Being a white woman makes life very easy in China. Accordingly, everyday life must be that bit more difficult for the huge majority of non-Caucasian women. In my mind, this was an issue at the extremes, one that didn’t really affect ordinary women in any serious way. Sure, they’d like their skin to be a bit lighter, but aren’t there things we all wish we could change about ourselves?

Yes, there are. And companies like Nivea go out of their way to hijack those insecurities and use them as massively effective marketing tools. Of course, all advertising eats and breathes insecurity. Sometimes it’s dressed up as aspiration, but really our media culture drills us with reminders of our imperfections, and then sells us an unattainable ideal. To maximise profit it makes sense to bolster our hatred of things we can never fully change; skin colour, age, body- shape. Once you’re locked into negative self-perception it’s very difficult to find your way back out. So you keep trying to buy your way out.

One of the advantages of an unfamiliar culture is getting a fresh view of the cruelties you’ve grown used to in your own. It seems bizarre and wrong to me that Chinese women are told by skincare corporations that they’re less attractive because of their skin colour. Yet I accept that at home women over fifty, women over forty are constantly devalued because of their age and appearance. Whether old or young, we’re reminded to remain vigilantly anti-ageing. What does that even mean? Incidentally, this is another issue on which I’ve heard far more comedy than commentary.

There’s something particularly insidious about the way skincare products contribute to our little self-hatreds. Nivea don’t make products for occasional use. You probably use your Nivea product every day, while you’re standing in front of a mirror. A product that right there on the label says what it wants to change about you. So every day you look at yourself and are reminded that you’re flawed. You put on the cream and strain your eyes to see if your skin is whiter yet, or your wrinkles are disappearing yet. That’s not a small problem.

I recently read “Unbearable Lightness,” Portia de Rossi’s memoir of her battle with anorexia and bulimia. With the book, she hoped to help women suffering from severe eating disorders. But she also wrote for all of the perpetual dieters, the (many) people whose lives are made silently but significantly worse by counting calories and food-guilt and misery on the weighing scales, “every woman influenced by a society that values thinness over substance.” That society affects us all, whether it undermines our weight, our age, our dress-sense or our skin colour. The Chinese women I’ve met are beautiful, and we really should question the institutions and corporations that so consistently tell them otherwise.

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