Irish Daily Mail

‘There’s nothing unusual about this’ – Varadkar rejects calls for an early election

- By Gráinne Ní Aodha

THE Taoiseach clashed with Opposition leaders as he rejected calls for an early election following his dramatic resignatio­n yesterday.

Sinn Féin, the Social Democrats and People Before Profit have called for a general election after Leo Varadkar announced he would step down as Fine Gael leader.

He said he would stay on as Taoiseach until a successor has been chosen by his party.

In what was likely Mr Varadkar’s final appearance at Leaders’ Questions in the Dáil yesterday, he once again branded Sinn Féin’s Mary Lou McDonald ‘the great misleader’.

Ms McDonald said his resignatio­n marked ‘a critical moment in Irish politics’.

She said: ‘The decision of who now leads government as taoiseach must be placed in the hands of the people.

‘The decision of who is in government must be placed in the hands of the people. And today’s announceme­nt can have only one conclusion: the calling of a general election.’

She said if the Government is ‘so confident in your achievemen­ts’, then it should be ‘tested and validated through the ballot box’.

‘Rather than limping on, and rather than passing the office of taoiseach amongst yourselves again, the correct democratic route at this point is to go to the people,’ she said.

Social Democrats leader Holly Cairns said that while she wished Mr Varadkar well, that the ‘writing is on the wall for this Government’.

‘And it’s clear that this Government don’t believe the public have confidence in their leader. Taoiseach, it is in that context that the next taoiseach should be elected by the electorate, not by Fine Gael.

‘We don’t need a new Fine Gael taoiseach. We need a new government. We need a general election.’

In his reply to Ms McDonald, Mr Varadkar accused her of ‘misinforma­tion’ and said that under the Irish constituti­on the taoiseach is voted in by the Dáil.

‘It’s not unpreceden­ted for the Dáil to elect a new taoiseach during its term: that’s how I succeeded Enda Kenny.

‘That’s how Brian Cowen succeeded Bertie Ahern. It’s how Jack Lynch succeeded Seán Lemass and indeed there are many other examples in our 100 years of democracy where a taoiseach changed without there being a general election.

‘We even have one example where an entire government changed and that is when John Bruton became taoiseach after Albert Reynolds. So there’s nothing unusual about any of this.’

He told Ms Cairns that ‘the work of the Government will continue’.

‘Any government has to be bigger than any one person that’s in it. And this Government always has been. I’ve no doubt that it will do its work, perhaps better under future leadership than it has to date.’

He said that when he first entered government in 2011, there was ‘mass unemployme­nt’, ‘people were leaving the country in droves’, and there was a ‘big budget deficit’.

‘It meant that we sat down as ministers every couple of months writing a budget, “How do we cut another 400 million?’”

He said that they also had to grapple with Brexit, the Covid-19 pandemic, and an inflation crisis that he said was ‘coming to an

‘That country only exists in fairytales’

end’. ‘There will always be problems and challenges.

‘There will always be a crisis, and if not one, there’ll be two or three.

‘That perfect country that has no problems, it doesn’t exist.

‘It only exists in fairytales. We have to be honest with the public about that.’

After speaking about the challenges of the housing crisis, he said: ‘I wish we could have done more and done it faster. Absolutely, I do.

‘And my biggest regret, if there is one, is that it’s not possible to solve all the country’s problems at once. But we’ll keep working on it.’

Ms Cairns said that it was ‘farcical’ to suggest it was a ‘fairytale’ to own a home or to have access to disability services.

‘The problem is that on this journey that you’re speaking about going from deficit to surplus, people have been left behind.

‘And when you have that surplus, you’re not using it to address those issues.’

She added: ‘We need real change in Ireland, the kind that can only be brought about by a general election.

‘We need to give people in this country a say on who will be the next person to lead this country, who will form the next government and what their mandate will be.

‘Calling an election now is the only way out of this mess for so many people.’

Mr Varadkar accused Ms Cairns of trying to ‘misreprese­nt and twist my words’ and asked whether she had ‘engaged in honest politics’.

‘I think there’s potential in you and… in your party, but my fear is an obvious one, it’s that you are very much a politician of the social media age. And it’s not about truth. It’s not about informatio­n. It’s about the clip to post online.’

 ?? ?? Writing on the wall: Holly Cairns wished Mr Varadkar well but called for an election
Writing on the wall: Holly Cairns wished Mr Varadkar well but called for an election
 ?? ?? Step down: Leo Varadkar following his resignatio­n
Step down: Leo Varadkar following his resignatio­n
 ?? ?? Critical moment: Mary Lou McDonald said decision should be in the hands of the people
Critical moment: Mary Lou McDonald said decision should be in the hands of the people

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