Interview with Dr. James Reilly of Fine Gael… October 24, 2010
Posted by WorldbyStorm in Irish Politics, Uncategorized.7 comments
…Isn’t James Reilly TD one of the more fascinating individuals in Irish politics, only elected in 2007 and by judicious choice of sides winding up as a key figure in the retention of Enda Kenny earlier this year – with more than an outside chance as Fine Gael spokesperson on Health to ultimately be Minister of Health in any upcoming coalition arrangement, whether with Labour or Fianna Fáil
. Jason O’Toole has an interview with him in the Mail on Sunday which almost glancingly refers to this meteoric rise. Of course being President of the Irish Medical Organisation before his political career was no doubt a solid training.
Considering his rapid ascent to deputy leader of Fine Gael since joining Enda Kenny’s team four years ago, it’s perhaps surprising that he confesses to actually only first thinking about running for public office when he was ‘persuaded’ to contest the 2007 general election. That decision was ultimately prompted because, as a practising GP in north Co. Dublin, he was becoming disillusioned by his first-hand experiences of the rapid decline in the health service under Mary Harney. ‘The minister, who I thought was going to do the business, was not doing it. As a GP, I couldn’t do my job any more. I was seeing the situation change from where I get a patient seen the next day, to where they now sit on chairs for four days in A&E and wait years for essential treatment. In Holland, patients are seen by a consultant within four weeks, max. I haven’t visited every single health service in the EU but I haven’t visited one that’s worse.
And he figures he can do better than the present incumbent.
Dr Reilly says he would enthusiastically ‘grab it with two hands’. And even though he damningly describes our A&E units as ‘third world’, Dr Reilly is confident he can succeed where previous ministers have failed. He vows to radically shake up the health system – and says the HSE ‘without a shadow of a doubt’ will be abolished under Fine Gael. ‘There’s hard things that are going to be done and hard things are going to be said. And there’ll be blood all over the floor and some of it may be mine. And that’s the way it’s going to be,’ he declares.
And although he’s a peacemaker, he’s ready for war.
‘I’ll make it real clear: I believe in consultation, I believe in compromise and I believe in conciliation – but if all that is left is confrontation, I will not shy away from it. And woe betide those that would stand in the way of the will of the Irish people because the will of the Irish people is what we’ll be mandated to carry out. ‘We will fix the health service. We can achieve what needs to be done in five to 10 years; we’ll have it bedded in very well in five years’ time. People can judge us on this – the waiting lists will be gone and we will have free GP care in by the last year. ‘I’m prepared to take responsibility and say I’ll do it. And the buck stops with me, unlike the current minister. So, if the buck stops with me and you’re a hospital manager and you see me coming, you’ll know I mean business. Because I want it done. I’m not going to fail because you won’t do your job.’
Incidentally notice how the ‘frontline’ argument beloved of some creeps in. I’m no master strategist, but supply chains are sort of important too and the current vogue for ringfencing the former and assuming the latter are somehow optional is a little concerning.
Dr Reilly is clearly irate with Minister Harney’s shock plans to cut €1bn from vital frontline hospital services and he warns: ‘There’s no question that by doing so she is putting patients’ lives at risk.’ He insists cutbacks can be found elsewhere to make up the deficit. ‘The minister is lazy. She allows the HSE to take the lazy way out. She therefore allows them to cut the frontlines because that’s the easiest thing to do, instead of making the hard decisions. ‘Savings can be achieved from the horrendous waste within the HSE. There was €1bn alone last year in overtime. Now overtime is not a core part of the Croke Park Agreement. And one junior doctor last year got €130,000 in overtime on top of his pay. That’s not his fault, that’s the stupid rostering he was put on. ‘So, look at the €1bn in overtime. Look at the €300m that could be saved by generic drugs and if the Government tackled the price of drugs in this country. There’s a cholesterol drug down here that in the generic form costs €27 and in the North it only costs something like £1.40. So, you don’t have to go to Spain or Portugal, you only have to go up the road. There’s something radically wrong there and we need to address it. €121m in taxis! Clearly, proper logistics control would sort a lot of that out. The list goes on,’ he sighs.
Interesting too the following…
Dr Reilly says he doesn’t believe ‘it’s appropriate’ for him as a doctor to comment on Finance Minister Brian Lenihan’s health. But, I suggested, for someone with cancer to hold such an important position was surely not only detrimental to the individual’s health but that the chemotherapy might also affect his thought processes. He says: ‘Well, I mean, all those things are true,’ adding that ‘some might agree with you’ when I suggest it’s surely not ideal to have someone with a life-threatening illness in charge of the country’s deteriorating purse strings during possibly the worst-ever recession. ‘In fairness to him, he’s made his own decisions and they are his decisions to make. He’s doing his job to the best of his ability as he sees it and that’s his decision. And that’s a personal and professional decision for him. In relation to the job he’s done, it’s been a catastrophe. ‘His plan for the banks has been an unmitigated disaster for this country and it’s landed us in the serious predicament we find ourselves in, where our very sovereignty is now in question, with the IMF and the ECB crawling all over the Department of Finance. You cannot say we turned a corner unless you acknowledge that we turned a corner and went straight into a ditch – and it’s a hell of a ditch.’
Radical History Winter Talks – Solidarity Books in Cork City. The Lost Revolution – a talk by Brian Hanley, Tuesday, 26th October October 24, 2010
Posted by WorldbyStorm in The Left.3 comments
The Lost Revolution – a talk by Brian Hanley
Tuesday 26th October @ 8pm
Brian Hanley is a lecturer in Modern Irish History. Since 2001 he has taught history at the National College of Ireland, Trinity College Dublin and NUI Maynooth. His research has focused on Twentieth Century Irish republicanism, particularly the politics and activity of the Irish Republican Army after 1923. He is co-author of The Lost Revolution a study of the Official IRA and the Workers Party which will be the subject of his talk. A year on from the release of his book guarantees that this talk will be a lively affair with much debate and discussion to be had with the co-author.
Well, what did they eff-effing expect? October 23, 2010
Posted by WorldbyStorm in Irish Politics, The Left.25 comments
More on this during the week…
Meanwhile, for some unaccountable reason the Irish Times front page on the website hadn’t noted this not insignificant news (at least as of 23:46).
And indeed no mention by 11.58 this morning either.
Lisdoonvarna 1983 October 23, 2010
Posted by WorldbyStorm in Culture.add a comment
Thanks a million to AK for passing this on to the CLR, found by him on the Galway Advertiser site, and a little piece of social history…
ICTU Estimates 15,000 at Stop the Cuts Rally October 23, 2010
Posted by Garibaldy in Northern Ireland, Trade Unions.11 comments
Big turnout at today’s rally against the Tory-Lib Dem vicious programme of cuts despite the torrential rain, with trade unions, political parties and community groups mobilising for it. The turnout was a reflection of the depth of anger felt by people in Northern Ireland at the cuts. The left parties were of course prominent on the march, with a variety of placards, flags and banners. At least some of those who will soon be implementing the cuts were present at the rally. Leading figures from PSF were there including (I was told) Junior Minister in the Office of First and Deputy First Minister Gerry Kelly and Bobbey Storey and I saw Margaret Ritchie and other MLAs from the SDLP. Dawn Purvis was also there. There may well have been MLAs from other parties. Given Sammy Wilson’s comment that the trade unions were wasting their time, I doubt that there were any DUP MLAs protesting. Red Sammy has certainly changed his tune from days of yore. As the ICTU’s Peter Bunting said,
Thousands of good people came on the streets, braving awful weather, to say a clear ‘No’ to the plans outlined by Cameron, Clegg and Osborne. Despite what Sammy Wilson thinks, these people are not wasting their time. Democracy is about choice, and when government makes the wrong choices, then the people have not only a right, but also a duty to peaceful and good-humoured protest.
Today is only the start. This issue is not accepted or acceptable. The trade unions are determined to build the alterative coalition required to defeat these cuts and provide a better and fairer future.
A big and vibrant rally, complete with bands etc. Personally, I could have done without the person screaming variants of the word cuts down the microphone for what seemed like five minutes, and there were perhaps too many speakers for the day that was in it. But a very successful rally, and hopefully a sign of a coherent opposition to the cuts being brought together to put pressure on the politicians, especially on local politicians. Joke of the day, it must be said, goes to the IRSP shouting start the cuts with the PSNI. All in all, an impressive start to what will most likely be a long and bitter campaign, that we can only hope will draw people in Northern Ireland’s attention to their class interests.
UPDATE: Rabelais has footage from the demo here
This weekend I’ll mostly be listening to… The Slits October 23, 2010
Posted by WorldbyStorm in Culture, This Weekend I'll Mostly Be Listening to....7 comments
There’s no pleasure at all in hearing of the passing of Ari Up (Arianna Foster), lead singer of peerless outfit, The Slits. They were a wonderful earthy, raw, honest oddly transcendent band whose sound was a genuinely unique mixture of post-punk, reggae, dub.
Years ago, probably the late 1990s, Channel 4 showed a film which had been made, I think by Don Letts, to accompany their first album. It was bizarre and strangely moving, filled with skies and towerblocks and streetscapes and the Slits themselves in a landscape entirely familiar to anyone who had lived in London.
The album Cut, released in 1979 is a marvel, unusual changes in tempo and tone, elements of punk, but also much more. Ari Up’s voice an instrument in itself, all quavery tones turning into vocal lances that cut through the melody. And the songs too. Viv Albertine’s guitar creating often skeletal works that have little flourishes of piano here and there and then are immersed in waves of sound. The aesthetic one which saw the immediacy of punk submerged, or overwhelmed, by dub and other rhythms creating almost the perfect example of post punk at its most wide ranging. Maybe that shouldn’t be such a surprise, a fairly eclectic crew were members at one time or another of the band, from Palmolive to Budgie. It sounds absurd, but listen to this and you can hear hints of the sounds that would inform so many different genres subsequently from new wave to dance and even electronica. And without being too chin-stroking this is mature both lyrically and musically. Yet, Ari Up was 17 when it was produced.
I saw them live in the mid-2000s, the gig was good, infused by reggae, unbelievably energetic, but it was a later line-up and there was something divergent from the earlier songs that was simultaneously off-putting and yet also intriguing. And yet home I went to listen again to the first album.
They weren’t exactly prolific. Three albums or so in three decades. But that wasn’t a problem when the first album is so stunningly different.
Actually, I’ve been mulling this over for the last day or so, but in a way the feminism evident, not in the music, but in the approach, the autonomy of these women as distinct individuals, is as much a product of the time as the music itself. It’s easy to make grand claims as to these matters, but in some small way I think they are representative of gains already made by the late 70s and supporting those after them. And perhaps that is overstatement, but consider how fundamentally different they are to the presentation of women in music, say, in the 1960s. Every bit helps in changing the world, however small or large.
What a loss.
Typical Girls
Instant Hit
Shoplifting Peel Session – 1977, a punkier version than the album cut.
New Town
Ping Pong Affair
Spend, Spend, Spend
And an inspired moment on German TV from 1979
Thoughtless comparisons October 22, 2010
Posted by Tomboktu in Africa, Gender Issues, Inequality.1 comment so far
I was at a conference the Equality Authority and Equality Tribunal held yesterday to mark their tenth anniversaries. (Mathematics clearly wouldn’t be their strong point: both organisations were established in 1999, a year after the Employment Equality Act of 1998 came into force. But, as eleventh anniversary conferences go, it was grand.)
Two of the speakers (independently of each other) made a specific point about gender equality. For the most part, their arguments were fine. There was, however, one aspect of how they made their cases that I was unhappy with. So, what I have to say is unrepresentative, both of the overall thrust of what those two speakers said and of the tenor of the conference as a whole.
The point of gender equality that they were concerned with is the number of women in the Oireachtas. Ireland doesn’t have a good record on that: in a poster, the UN reports just under 14% of the members of the Dáil are women. (The data is a bit out of date, as it gives the current membership of the Dáil as 165. But when you have over 180 countries to report on annually, that’s not a major defect.)
Both speakers reported where Ireland stands in the rankings (88th). And both of them then compared that ranking with the ranking of an African country — one mentioned Cameroon which is also ranked 88th, and the other referred to Sudan, which is in the 60s in the rankings.
It strikes me as a form of racism that when they two speakers wanted to show how poor we are, they compared us with African countries and only African countries, as if lower standings in wealth and industrial development in Africa should automatically translate into lower standards in other areas.
They could, for example, have said we are worse than Slovakia but better than Hungray.
At last — court appearances on corruption charges October 22, 2010
Posted by Tomboktu in Uncategorized.6 comments
Yea Gods. Charging of those on either side of the middleman has started. (And not too soon, said I last Nov.)
This week on the Irish Election Literature Blog… October 22, 2010
Posted by WorldbyStorm in Irish Politics, The Left.3 comments
From AK is a fine selection of material which deals with the contemporary, and the not so contemporary… including a fascinating document from Fianna Fáil. Excellent range, thanks as always to AK.
From the 1997 General Election “My Contract with the Northside” from The Democratic Left’s Helen Lahert running in Dublin North Central
An abridged version of the 1977 Fianna Fail Manifesto, the inaptly named ‘An Action Plan for National Recovery’
A “Make Dublins New Mayor Work For You” leaflet from Paul Gogarty
A 2007 leaflet from the Socialist Party’s Mick Barry
A 2004 Election Newsletter from the SWP’s Shay Ryan.
A poster from the 1970s for the Murrays.
And…
The final one is Mary Harney from 1992
Resistance from the Irish Socialist Network… October 22, 2010
Posted by WorldbyStorm in Irish Politics, The Left.1 comment so far
Many thanks to John O’Neill for the following. It’s an excellent edition of Resistance and well worth a read.
Articles from the latest edition of Resistance, the Irish Socialist Network publication, can now be read on the ISN site.
Resistance includes contributions from Cieran Perry about his first year on Dublin City Council and a review of Ed Moloney’s Voices from the Grave by Tommy McKearney of Fourthwrite, along with Paul Moloney’s thoughts on the commercialisation of football and Ed Walsh on the proposal to make July 12th a holiday in the South.
You can get printed copies of Resistance in Connolly Books in Dublin and Solidarity Books in Cork, or contact the ISN at irishsocialistnetwork@dublin.ie to be put on their mailing list for a free copy.



