Questioning the decisions of public bodies is his job. Unlike the Public Sector Broadcaster that's allowed on commercial radio stations.
Again, questioning public sector organisations is his job. Given the very high spend and bad outcomes in so much of the public sector I'd like to see more questioning.
I've no problem with robust questioning, and indeed, I will delight in the robust questioning of someone like Sarah McInerney.
On the two occasions I've had the misfortune to hear PK over the pandemic, where I wasn't in control of the dial, he wasn't so much asking questions, more so positioning himself and Luke as the experts, and sure the big eejits over there in NPHET wouldn't know anything compared to Pat and Luke. He went way beyond questioning, positioning himself as an expert player in the discussions. It's easy to be the expert when you don't have the responsibility or accountability for anything that you say - classic hurler on the ditch.
As a cyclist I find his issue with cyclists annoying and disproportionate but it is worth questioning the stupid narrative that deaths and injuries to cyclists are caused by motorists. In my experience most are caused by the reckless and stupid behaviour of cyclists.
I don't think there's any evidence to support your (or Pat's) victim-blaming narrative, but either way, the disproportionate approach is the big issue. Even IF cyclists were largely to blame for their deaths and injuries, these are but a drop in the ocean of the overall deaths and injuries on the road. Most road deaths and injuries are single vehicle collision or motorist vs motorist collisions, so it's pretty difficult to suggest that cyclists are the big issue that need to be fixed on our roads. But you'd never hear Pat (sponsored by Jaguar) suggesting something revolutionary like drivers slowing down or putting their phones away.
His knowledge of politics and history is excellent and he avoids the Public Sector Broadcaster's habit of framing everything as an emotive human interest story. If there's a long waiting time in A&E RTE will interview Mary, the 78 year old whose left buttock fell off and who had been waiting in a chair for 6 days and the "hero" Nurses who work "tirelessly" for up to 36 hours a week helping people like Mary, and that adds nothing to the discussion but rather deflects from the facts and distracts us from the root cause.
He's certainly knowledgable on many topics, but maybe he could use his knowledge to be a great interviewer rather than a player in the discussion.
And yes, sometimes RTE does go a little OTT on the human interest angle. However, this can have value too. Going back as far as the Prime Time investigation in the Lees Cross nursing home, this public interest story basically brought about HIQA and a whole regime of regulating nursing homes and disability services that didn't previously exist. Coverage of kids awaiting scoliosis operations brought significant attention on HSE delays, resulting in significant improvements. They've done good work on various kinds of disabilities over the years, giving real insights into the harsh realities of living with such conditions.
This can be overplayed, and perhaps needs to be done along with robust investigation and questioning, rather than instead of.