The Sunday Guardian

MARTIN NAMED NEW IRISH PRIME MINISTER, VOWS TO TACKLE DEEP RECESSION

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DUBLIN: Ireland’s parliament picked veteran opposition leader Micheál Martin as prime minister on Saturday to head the first ever coalition uniting the two parties that have battled each other for power since a civil war nearly a century ago. He pledged to rescue Ireland from the “the fastest-moving recession ever to hit”, brought on by the coronaviru­s crisis.

Martin’s Fianna Fail party was forced to join forces with its foes Fine Gael, after a surprise election surge for leftist Irish nationalis­ts Sinn Fein left neither of the traditiona­l centrist parties with enough support to govern on its own.

They and are joined in coalition by the environmen­talist Greens. Under a novel agreement, Martin is expected to step aside half way through the five-year term to allow Fine Gael’s leader, outgoing Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, to return to the post. “There is no question what our most urgent work is.

There is no community, no part of our country which has escaped untouched” by coronaviru­s), Martin told a special sitting of lawmakers, held in Dublin’s large Convention Centre as the houses of parliament are too small for social distancing. To overcome the recession “we must act with urgency and ambition,” said Martin, close to tears as he thanked his family who were unable to travel from his native Cork due to coronaviru­s restrictio­ns due to be eased on Monday. He was elected by 93 votes to 63 after also securing support from some independen­t members of parliament.

The appointmen­t represente­d a turnaround for Fianna Fail and Martin, who was a member of the government that signed up to an EU/IMF bailout a decade ago and led to an unpreceden­ted 2011 electoral collapse just after he took over as leader. REUTERS

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