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

Campaign Diary #3

September 27th, 2011 · Irish Politics, Trot for the ARAS 2011

Happy Super Tuesday!   ‘Super’ for two reasons. Firstly the 7 councils who are considering motions of support for independent candidates today.  The diary for the day is as follows (with the candidate who is schmoozing seeking a nomination beside them.

Donegal 10am Dana
Cork County 11am ? – Norris
Waterford City 1pm – Both seeking
Westmeath 2pm – Dana
Longford 4pm – Dana
Dublin City 6:45pm – Norris
Cavan 7pm – Dana

and

Kilkenny Wednesday  8:30am –  Both seeking a nomination

Update: Kildare Co. Council are meeting on Wednesday at 8.30am also.

Today is also Super Tuesday as the posters are going up – it’s a month to the election.

First in my timeline at 12.21am was a picture of a Michael D Higgins poster up in Dublin City.

In a first for a Maman Poulet diary I have some campaign art for your delectation. The Norrisettes (their term!) have been given a picture for their facebook profiles and other avatars. James Delaney is the artist.

Mary Davis is having a golf classic in a few weeks at the same club that saw Europe win the Solheim Cup (Great golf, great result, gratuitous opportunity for me to mention I was watching golf all weekend!) – Davis is looking for  €500 for a 4 ball.

Meanwhile Martin McGuinness’s campaign is celebrating that they have become the 2nd most popular candidate facebook page with over 3000 likes in a week.  You can find pictures like this on the page.

PS – Gay Mitchell is not getting a lot of love on his Facebook Page – only 728 likes.  However he is recreating the popular image of escalator canvassing in Blanchardstown Shopping Centre. (Pic: Maxwells)

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The culture of entitlement and #Aras11

September 24th, 2011 · Irish Politics, LGBT, Trot for the ARAS 2011

Some of the ‘clamour’ to get David Norris nominated has been nasty but I was going to ignore it whilst marvelling at the fact he was running again, getting nominations signed despite the letter, the terribly worded explanations and the poorly run campaign.

While Norris himself was working behind the scenes this week seeking nominations rather than election to the office itself (might have been better doing that first time out), members of the public have been calling their public representatives, emailing or contacting them on facebook.

Many of them don’t take no for an answer easily. Others according to a member of the Fine Gael parliamentary party I was in touch with today have been receiving plenty of abuse. One who answered the phone themselves was called a ‘wanker’ while he tried to explain that the party were nominating their own candidate while another had to calm a member of staff who had a morning of handling calls to the office including people who screamed down the phone at her.

Most of the people involved in supporting Norris have not a clue on how the political system works or how party politics operates. Some of them have no manners either. Their views on democracy are all one way traffic too. Democracy is about also about saying no , it’s about the right to make a decision, not making a decision the way you want it made. Pity the councillors this weekend before the votes next week. They are probably going to vote the way the pack want and I doubt Norris knows what is happening outside of Leinster House.

I think the independent Oireachtas members have probably had it worse and as the number of votes required (and available) have decreased the volume of the invective has increased considerably. Listening to Senator Jillian Van Turnhout speak about her experiences of abusive ‘lobbying’ on the radio this morning and reading the comments about her online has truly saddened me. That someone who has fought for the rights of children and young people for so long cannot be understood or respected for her decisions by some leading members of gay organisations and others with a high profile in the gay community is incredible to observe. Including people who libelled other candidates last month in their fit of pique.

Norris will get his nomination. But in the campaign are we going to witness people being called homophobic if they don’t vote for him? Because that is where this type of hysteria is leading us. That is a witch-hunt. It is the politics of Family Solidarity, Campaign for Conscience and other squinting windows organisations who for decades controlled the country and it’s politics by fear. Way to go. Is this the legacy of campaigns and movements for marriage equality, the narrow vision and it’s sense of selfish entitlement at all costs, especially ignoring others who are vulnerable, living in poverty or discriminated against or violated?

Not all involved in the abuse are gay or lesbian, the anti establishment crew are also involved, and those who think Ireland will be a better place with a gay president. Invective turned tonight to Mary Davis for not handing back her nominations. She can’t hand back the ones she already has but that fact unsurprisingly didn’t seem to be understood by those leaving abusive comments on her Facebook page.

I doubt we’ll see such a clamour in a children’s rights referendum from those in this ‘group’. Can’t see further than the end of their nose most of them.

And yet there is more dirt and many more personal attacks to emerge in this campaign as we have have hardly yet begun.

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Meet Elizabeth Warren

September 23rd, 2011 · Uncategorized

Meet Elizabeth Warren, a democrat who is running for the US senate 2012 in the state of Massachusetts. Last weekend she was at a house meeting and was explaining her version of the economy. It went viral and when you watch it you might understand why. More social contract discussions this side of the pond please.

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The Cost of Disability

September 23rd, 2011 · Disability, Equality, Irish Politics, Social Policy

I’m currently reading a new publication from the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) on A Social Portrait of Disabilities in Ireland. The authors Dorothy Watson and Brian Nolan are the leading experts in examining the statistics on poverty in Ireland and both of them have examined disability statistics for many years. Their publication is based on examination of Census figures and the National Disability Survey. I might be back to comment on the publication as I read it but thought some others might be interested in reading it.

A quote from the summary of the chapter on Education Work, Living Standards

People with a disability in the 25 to 64 age group are less than half as likely as those without a disability to be at work. Finally, we saw evidence that people with a chronic illness or health problem or whose activity is limited by illness or injury have a higher risk of consistent poverty than those without an illness and not limited in their activities. We note that existing poverty measures do not take account of the additional costs associated with the disability itself (estimated to be in the region of one third of average household income). If we did take account of these additional costs, the poverty rate of people with a disability would be even higher than the current statistics suggest.

Thus current Social welfare rates for people with disabilities actually disadvantage them and they are at further risk of poverty. Those people with disabilities lucky to be in work are worse off than their able bodied peers and receive no supports to take account of the cost of disability and are at risk of poverty. But the way that the state assesses poverty does not take disability into account. There we go in print, a government agency is stating it, not someone in the poverty sector. More anon.

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Campaign Diary #2

September 22nd, 2011 · Elections, Irish Politics, Trot for the ARAS 2011

Campaign buses, poster trucks and samba bands are being reported the last few days as operations swing into gear and nominations are confirmed.

  This pic was sent to me of the Mary Davis bus spotted over the weekend.

 

Those buses don’t come cheap. So Mary has taken to her kitchen to look for donations.

Sean Gallagher meanwhile has reached out to the Deaf community to explain his campaign and has this signed video from one of the new RTE news signers Wayne Reid.

Andrea Pappin had a very interesting post yesterday on the state of play and the 20 nominations that David Norris is seeking and profiles many of those who might or might not sign the nomination paper.  At the time of writing Norris has 14 nominations and has a week left to get the other 6 or another 3 council nominations.

Sean Healy (no not Fr. Sean) wants your vote, he’s all trees and Yeats. And yes interesting trousers.

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