Perhaps you missed the point. Labour wanted to see it voted DOWN, not voted through.
So they called for a vote knowing that they would lose and then said that the vote was cynical? Good to see Happy Gilmore up to his usual populist tricks.
Perhaps you missed the point. Labour wanted to see it voted DOWN, not voted through.
The criticism isn't on holding the vote. The criticism is on passing the vote.But what's with the criticism of holding the vote?
There is also the trifling matter of the constitution. They were the good reasons for having the vote.
Congratulations on your 20/20 hindsight. It is a great skill to be able predict the outcome of a vote after it has happened. Unfortunately, those who actually do the politics don't have the luxury of waiting till afterwards to know the result.Not sure if you noticed this, but Labour don't have a majority either. They can't even get independents to support them.
Not a great poll for Labour all right. However, it is worth pointing out that Gilmore still has the highest satisfaction ration of all the party leaders, and Labour's numbers are still way, way up on previous elections.Poor Eamonn.
Perhaps he's starting to realise that merely being a good public speaker cannot convince the electorate of Labour's competence.
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Governments shouldn't come and go on the basis of opinion polls.
They're put in to do a job and sometimes the job is difficult and unpopular.
One of the opposition parties wouldn't have signed us up for the unlimited bank guarantee that has cost us about €50 billion.My concern is that none of the opposition look like they'd do a better job than FF.
Not so sure about this. These folk do their exams in public view with every meeja interview. They do their job interviews in front of a panel of 100,000 decision makers every five years. If the voters can't make the right decision with all the information that is available, I'm not sure that we should be blaming the politicians.We should have exams for politicians on important matters of governance, as opposed to whether they know the law [Barristers], serve papers [solicitors] or pull a pint [Publicans].
One of the opposition parties wouldn't have signed us up for the unlimited bank guarantee that has cost us about €50 billion.
That is a matter of opinion, not a matter of fact. There are plenty of experts who have pointed out alternative options for that night, that would not have cost the taxpayer €50 billion.left us in a position that there was no maneuvering out of on that night.
That is a matter of opinion, not a matter of fact. There are plenty of experts who have pointed out alternative options for that night, that would not have cost the taxpayer €50 billion.
That is a matter of opinion, not a matter of fact. There are plenty of experts who have pointed out alternative options for that night, that would not have cost the taxpayer €50 billion.
I'd pretty much concur with your view that the damage overseen by the Govt was irreversible by Sept 2008. The Labour solution would have ensured some degree of sharing of the cost amongst those who bought the risk, instead of putting the entire cost onto the State.Yeah, me saying that the cost of the banking crisis was largely irreversible by September 2008 is an opinion, as much as your belief is an opinion (i.e. that a Labour solution, presumably involving letting Anglo collapse with depositors, bondholders and the ECB taking the hit and all the collateral damage along with that course of action, would have saved the state €50bn).
In fairness, I don't think I've ever claimed infallibility, but perhaps you'll prove me wrong on that. You're right in that I am talking about a hypothetical situation. The fact remains that FF did sign up to an unlimited guarantee, so no-one can speak with absolute certainty about what would have happened if other options were chosen. Still, €50billion worth of damage leaves a fair bit of wiggle room.Or am I wrong and everything you state is fact (including your hypotheses on things that have never happened)? In which case I humbly apologise for expressing opinions in the ignorance that everything being said here was fact.
Just as an aside, I don't like you referring to the €50bn cost as being to the taxpayer. It is to the state. They're not the same thing.