Gorey Guardian

POLLS BUT LARGE MEDIA TURNOUT AT THE COUNT

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Blackmore to bring some normality to proceeding­s, her declaratio­n that, in light of Verona’s high number of first preference­s (9.543), this could only be seen as a ‘sad day’ for Wexford politics reminding us there were winners and losers here. The other two to bow out on the first count were, unfortunat­ely, nowhere to be seen; Melissa O’Neill leaving early so she could take down her posters and Charlie Keddy still stuck in 2018 campaignin­g for a No vote.

Then the waiting resumed, the doomlords, the cynics warning us it’d be midnight before we’d see someone elected - the ghosts of ‘45 having whispered it to them in a dream the night before. So when, just 30 minutes after the first count, we heard the tip-tap-tap of the microphone, the clearing of one’s throat, we sneered at those negative nancys and their erroneous prediction­s; the second count was already here, we’d be home in time to watch The Irishman and Match of the Day.

“Could the owner of the vehicle with the registrati­on 192 D….”

A collective groan went up, followed by mutterings about some big-shot from Dublin and his 192 car coming down here and taking all our spaces. That bloody motorway should never have been built.

Some time later, and after three more car-owners were told to get the hell out of here and never come back, the actual second count came. It offered little in the way of surprise, less in the way of hope. Someone had been eliminated, someone else had stretched their lead. No one cared.

Then Malcolm came and all was well again. Ever the diplomat, he advised everyone there ‘was a long way to go yet’ while he simultaneo­usly accepted the congratula­tions of everyone in the building. He was then whisked off to be devoured by the national media; so long Malcolm, we hardly knew ye. Thankfully he survived, which was more than could be said for Johnny and Karin, both eliminated on the third count, giving the room a much-needed boost as it became clear we were in the final straight, down to the final three; Malcolm, Verona and George. At this point there were over 1,400 votes separating the latter two, not quite a chasm, but a gap which didn’t seem surmountab­le, even for the bauld George.

Then the rumblings began. The whispers. We had a dead heat. Between Verona and George. The Mayor of Wexford who up to this point had been a picture of calm, suddenly became quite animated, conferring with his allies, scrutinisi­ng the scraps of paper pushed into his hand. ‘He’s up by 20,’ someone said.’ ‘No, it’s by 40,’ said another. ‘There could be a recount,’ laughed Pip Breen. Oh please God no, not a recount. Anything but a recount. When the final tallies had been made there was 71 votes in it, George had leapfrogge­d Verona. But where was the Fine Gael candidate? Off requesting a recount? No. Mercifully, and with great grace, she accepted her third place. Leaving the two lads to battle it out and the rest of us dreaming of De Niro, Pacino and three-and-a-half hours on the sofa.

With Verona’s sizeable quota to be shared out between the two lads, and a belief that maybe George would receive the majority of those votes, there was, for a nanosecond, a brief moment in time, the prospect of Mr Lawlor staging one of the unlikelies­t of comebacks of our time. But those were put to bed a short time later when the Fianna Fáil crew, minus Malcolm, minus Lisa McDonald, began to assemble in one corner of the room. Dutifully we followed them over, only to be caught in traffic as they changed their minds and relocated to the other side of the room – a rogue basketball hoop, and the prospect of it damaging the new TD’s crown forcing their decision.

But where was he? This new TD of theirs? At the Farmer’s Kitchen apparently. A fine place to be. Summoned from his stool he returned post haste, smiling and content, accepting more handshakes, more pats on the back, as he strode into the loving arms of his most ardent supporters. And there he remained, like a kid on Christmas morning, waiting for it to become official. Shortly thereafter it did so and up he went, hoisted aloft, not a basketball hoop in sight, only cameras and smiles, pumping fists and shining eyes.

Summoned to the stage Deputy

Byrne accepted the applause and immediatel­y went on the offensive, his words providing the perfect book-end to what had been an an unusual, occasional­ly tumultuous period in Wexford politics: ‘Racism and the language of hate and division has no place in Wexford politics. Wexford is better than that,’ he declared. And there to listen to these words, having been ushered to stageleft as the third-placed finisher, was Verona Murphy. Her own words were bland, without note. And one feels they will have to remain so if she is to reappear at this grandest of stages any time soon.

IT MAY HAVE BEEN FOR ALL THE WRONG REASONS BUT ON SATURDAY LAST, FOR AT LEAST A FEW HOURS, WEXFORD WAS THE EPICENTRE OF THE IRISH POLITICAL LANDSCAPE

 ??  ?? Anita Clince congratula­tes Malcolm Byrne’s mother Mary.
Anita Clince congratula­tes Malcolm Byrne’s mother Mary.
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