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God help us, that would be consistent with most of his performances, including more recent ones.... A day later Gormley sounded like a fool when interviewed on the radio, when he could not even answer the most basic questions.
He is a trained barrister so I would expect him to be able to communicate and argue well.
Unfortunately, his job - that of finance minister - requires different skills than those of an orator. He requires skills in the areas of finance, business, banking and economics. He should have a high level of numeracy and analytic abilities. He should be able anticipate the economic and financial effects of his decisions. In all these areas he, in my opinion, has demonstrated fatal weakness.
So no - the fact that he comes across as decisive while giving radio interviews, etc. does not make me think he is doing a good job as a finance minister. The fact that he has made some very poor (in my opinion) decisions which may well cost us 10s of billions of euro makes me think he is a very poor finance minister.
Perhaps they can become astronauts through FAS sponsored programme, and the billions we wasted on this state agency can bear some fruit.
That's not how the executive branch generally works in this country. Ministers are not simply the public face for decisions made by technocratic monkeys who "count beans". Ultimately they make the executive decisions.I honestly believe that comments like these betray a lack of insight into how government works.
Lenihan is supposed to have his officials to do the number crunching - that's what civil servants are for, or at least that's what they are being very well paid to do. Why have a dog and bark yourself?
I never voted for any prospective TD based on his/her ability to add or subtract, to analyse a balance sheet or annual report; the bean counters. economists and data analysts are in the Department of Finance, at Briano's beck and call. "Analyse this", quoth Briano. "Yes, Minister", respondeth a chorus of lackeys, civilly, diving for their networked PDAs (or quills and ledgers if they are there a while).
The greens should stick to green issues - Did you hear Mansearagh on Marion Financane yesterday - now there's a buffoon......
Are you now blaming Germany for our problems? Now that's not hilarious, that is sad. What Ireland in all it's false confidence has forgotten, is that Europe doesn't actually need us, but hell, do we need Europe. Not only should we be doffing the cap to Germany, but we'll probably end up going down on bended knee, pleading for a bailout.This is amusing. Our membership of the Eurozone (completely dominated by the requirements of the German economy) is the primary reason for the property bubble and resulting systemic banking collapse, but you want us to doff the cap to Germany? Simply hilarious.
That's what I said - decisions are made collectively at the Cabinet table, not by any one individual.... Ministers are not simply the public face for decisions made by technocratic monkeys who "count beans". Ultimately they make the executive decisions...
He wasn't elected on the basis of his analytical or mathematical skills - he was elected because he was a party member with a powerful constituency machine and generations of party contacts and was seen as a candidate that could further the needs / wants of the electorate.... I find it very odd that you would think that lack of numeracy, understanding of finance and banking, economics or analytic skills is no barrier to having to deal with all these facts, figures, opinions and analysis (often contradictory) and chose the course of action which is most likely to benefit the country...
I agree... In the case of the banking crisis, BL would have heard disparate arguments from senior civil servants ...
civil servants, who clearly didn't know a lot and did even less... representatives of the regulator ...
civil servants, who didn't know much... the central bank. ...
more civil servants... would have also heard the views of our neighbours in the EU ...
No he would have made representations to Cabinet who ultimately took the decisions and based on the fact that most of the input they / he got was based on inaccuracies, their decisions were poor, and continue to be for the same reasons.... From all of these views, he made and makes decisions...
My answer was similarly brief and simple and to the point; i.e. that I believed that he had done very poorly as a result of his apparent lack of skills and knowledge in the relevant areas. In particularly numeracy and understanding of banking, finance and economics.How do people feel Brian Lenihan is performing as Finance Minister?
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