Contact

Should we be covering something? Email us your ideas, rumours or comments.

WTO Talks


What now boss? That pending WTO deal

The WTO talks are a little like the Tribunals. For the most part, progress is confined to a tiny box on page 8 of the Irish Times or Indo unless the leading lights drag it up the agenda. While both are meaningful in themselves and have great symbolic (on the perception of cleansing politics or [...]

Lisbon or Doha?

The World Food Summit being held by the Food and Agriculture Organisation in Rome today is likely to call for a successful conclusion of the Doha WTO talks (see for example the going-in position of the US Agriculture Secretary).  This is symbolic of why Brian Cowen cannot make a formal commitment to veto an agreement [...]

Farmers Will not Call for a Yes Vote

Today’s Sunday Times story would have been old news had the IFA Executive Council meeting gone ahead last week and not been delayed. As it stands the IFA are due to decide their position on Tuesday or Wednesday. There are at least 28 members of the 53 member of the Executive Council calling for a [...]

Another view of Lisbon

The Wall Street Journal has an article today about the referendum.  To the reporter’s credit, he avoids the usual style of foreign reporting — asking taxi-drivers on the way in from the airport to the 5-star hotel — and goes to Carlow and Laois to get the viewpoint of farmers.  Declan Ganley and Ulick McEvaddy [...]

Airports gone wild

One of Bertie Ahern’s home stretch events today was to launch the Dublin Airport Authority’s plan for Dublin Airport City.   Not to put too fine a point on it, this seems like one of the crazier proposals to have emerged over the last year, and symptomatic of much of what is wrong with governance and [...]

The best is yet to come*

Newstalk’s Marc Coleman has a nice perch on the Financial Times comment page today to outline his fairly optimistic long-term view of the Irish economy despite the current property downturn.  His essential argument, to be outlined in more detail in his book, is that Ireland has two key assets for its long-term growth prospects: people [...]

Six 1 News or reeling in the years

The Six one News had a report about the todays jobless figures showing a rise in unemployment coming mainly from construction. They had a report about how many rural areas depend much on construction something I mentioned a few weeks ago. What it reminded me of was a clip on reeling in the years. In [...]

Wikipedia shenanigans ar an Roinne Gnóthaí Pobail, Tuaithe agus Gaeltachta

This is a story that was supposed to be published in The Irish Times way back when but for some reason or another it didn’t.
It relates to wikipedia edits made by someone in a Government department and was researched and written back when the joys of the WikiScanner was discovered by everyone.
To the best of [...]

The future for Irish Farming.

Governments in the west spend over $300 billion a year on farm subsidies. Think about that figure. Imagine what could be done if that figure was invested in health care in the third world? But not also is it diverting finds that could be used for better means it also hurts people in [...]

Aer Arann as the way forward for the BMW region?

Here’s an interesting profile from the Financial Times a few days ago of Padraig O’Ceidigh, now the chairman but at one time the hands-on businessman who developed Aer Arann out of its island service base into a decent sized regional point-to-point carrier.   It’s not clear whether this is the right model for Shannon, where long-haul [...]

Ryanair calls government’s bluff

What does a company do when a majority of its ownership wants to pursue a particular policy? This is the issue that Aer Lingus in theory faces with 50.3 percent of its ownership claiming that the Shannon-Heathrow route should be maintained. Thus the hot potato that Michael O’Leary has tossed towards the government.

Money is the root of all elections

In 2002 the Government was accused of buying the election with an overly generous budget. This year it could be argued that they’re trying to do the same again with the majority of SSIAs maturing in the coming weeks (what a coincidence!), the launch of the next NDP a few months ago and a not [...]

Fianna Fail Follow Labour Follow The Greens and Promise Viable Bio-Fuel Market

Title edited because JohnMac in comments is spot on.
Seems likely now that any government elected will follow a policy of promotion a viable bio-fuel industry in Ireland. Fianna Fail launched their document on Agriculture this morning accouncing supports for Farmers and incentives for producers. Labour did similar recently and it seems unlikely one of these [...]

Removing CAP

The economics of removing CAP do make sense. The free market is the fairest way for world trade to work. Countries in Africa, Asia and South America can often produce food at a cheaper price then we here in Europe can. Thus consumers would choose their products and we all save money. Then this money [...]

Walking the land.

Hands up here who is getting pissed off at farmers. Now I come from the countryside so I am not some city slicker that comes down in my SUV to take my morning constitutional. Farmers keep going on about how the hill walkers should not be allowed to walk across their lands without compensation as [...]

Get Irish Election updates via email. Enter your email address:

Latest Links of Interest

Links Feed Links Archives »