Irish Daily Mirror

2ND CLASS CITIZENS

Fury after no Cabinet Minister is appointed from West of Ireland

- BY FERGHAL BLANEY and CIARA PHELAN

PEOPLE in the West of Ireland will be treated as second-class citizens after no Cabinet Minister was appointed from Donegal to Limerick.

Carlow, Kilkenny, Waterford and Wexford in the south-east are also left without a voice on the top table of Micheal Martin’s new Government.

Independen­t TD for Roscommong­alway, Michael Fitzmauric­e, branded the coalition’s snub “ridiculous, absolutely scandalous”. And Labour leader Alan Kelly said it was “astonishin­g and deeply worrying”.

Greens leader Eamon Ryan admitted the allocation of top jobs “may not have been perfect”.

MICHEAL Martin faced a double backlash within hours of his appointmen­t for ignoring the country’s west coast in Cabinet and sidelining others tipped for ministeria­l posts.

TDS from rural areas rounded on the Taoiseach after it emerged there are no senior ministers from any of the counties stretching from Malin Head in Donegal to the border of Kerry and Limerick.

And there’s nothing for most of the south-east, with Carlow, Kilkenny, Waterford and Wexford all without representa­tion too.

The combined population of the unrepresen­ted comes close to two million, which leaves almost half the country’s population without a decisionma­king seat in Government.

Labour leader Alan Kelly last night branded the snub “astonishin­g and deeply worrying”.

Mr Martin, on his first full day in the hotseat today, also has to quell divisions within his own party regarding those overlooked for Cabinet jobs.

One party source told the Irish Mirror: “It’s a bitter pill to swallow for many big names and I’m sure on reflection of their work up to this date within the party, it would of course instigate a lot of disappoint­ment.”

Nine of the 15 new ministers – 11 men and just four women – come from the Greater Dublin area, two from Greystones in Wicklow and three from the one constituen­cy in Cork.

Independen­t TD for Roscommong­alway Michael Fitzmauric­e was furious with the new Cabinet’s “ridiculous, absolutely scandalous” divide.

He produced a map of the country to illustrate the imbalance.

It shows a huge red patch from Donegal to Kerry and stretching over as far as Meath, representi­ng the areas where there are no ministers.

Mr Fitzmauric­e said: “After seeing the make-up of the Cabinet, I was baffled to see that there is not one senior minister from the top of Donegal to the bottom of Limerick.

“I threw down the gauntlet to the new Taoiseach Micheal Martin to ensure that the people of the West of Ireland are treated fairly moving forward during the term of this Government.”

Independen­t Sligo-leitrim TD Marian

Our region has been shunned, slighted & spurned

ROSE CONWAY-WALSH YESTERDAY

Nine of the 15 new ministers come from the Greater Dublin area

Harkin last night raged: “My vote for the establishm­ent of this Government was based on the immediate need for a stable Government to tackle the very immediate challenges of the Covid epidemic and the serious economic outcomes which will arise from Brexit.”

In negotiatio­ns with the coalition parties on the formation of Government she said she had “stressed the vital need for more balanced regional developmen­t”.

Sinn Fein Mayo TD Rose Conway-walsh said the Government will pay the price for turning its back on Mayo and the West. She added: “Shock tremors have been vibrating throughout rural Ireland since the new Government’s Cabinet appointmen­ts were announced.

“Not one senior minister for the western seaboard. Our region was snubbed, shunned, slighted, spurned, and disrespect­ed.”

Galway West TD Hildegarde Naughton has been picked as a Super Junior Minister by Fine Gael leader Leo Varadkar and she has a seat at the Cabinet table – but no vote.

She has the mouthful of a title of being the new Junior Minister with Special Responsibi­lity for Internatio­nal and Road Transport and Logistics. Ms Naughton defended the Government’s regional allocation of ministers when she was rolled out on behalf of the new Government yesterday. She said: “Myself and Dara [Calleary, Fianna Fail’s Super Junior pick from Mayo] will be serving and attending Cabinet and representi­ng the West I believe very strongly.”

Green Party leader Eamon Ryan admitted the divvy-up may not have been perfect.

He said: “I don’t think Government can ignore any part of the country – be it the South, East or West or any part. It is difficult to get that regional balance when you have three different parties so you’re not picking for a full Cabinet when you’re making your selection.”

The pressure will be on Mr Martin, Mr Varadkar and Mr Ryan to try and correct some of the imbalance when they announce 20 junior ministers this week.

As the new look Cabinet meets today, Fianna Fail backbenche­rs continue to lick their wounds having thought they were “dead certs” at the top table.

Junior minister positions are set to be handed out in the coming days and newly-elected Fianna Fail deputy Jennifer Murnane O’connor said she wants the Taoiseach to give her a gig to represent the south-east.

The former senator said: “The southeast and Carlow in particular needs to be put back on the map.”

IT may be the end of Civil War politics but many have been left bruised over their positions on the frontline.

It’s already been a rocky start for the new Government with Micheal Martin facing criticism over the lack of regional voices at senior Cabinet level. There is no one to fight for the southeast, the northwest or Connacht.

The combined population of the unrepresen­ted comes close to two million people, which leaves almost half the country without a decision-making seat in Government.

Seven members of the 15-strong Cabinet come from just three constituen­cies. And it appears junior ministers will fill those gaps with Green Party leader Eamon Ryan stating it will be “fixed”.

To add fuel to an already burning fire, the Climate Action Minister has hinted sun holidays won’t go ahead. That’s despite former Taoiseach Leo Varadkar indicating they were a runner to countries which have controlled coronaviru­s from July 9.

Fianna Fail’s new Health Minister Stephen Donnelly said there is no sign of a “green list” being produced soon.

Confusion mirrored with anger is how this new Government’s first few days in office will be remembered. Civil war politics may have ended between Fine Gael and Fianna Fail but Micheal Martin has already made some enemies within his own party.

 ??  ?? ANGRY Roscommon Galway TD Michael fitzmauric­e
ANGRY Roscommon Galway TD Michael fitzmauric­e
 ??  ?? JUNIORS Ms Naughton and Mr Calleary
JUNIORS Ms Naughton and Mr Calleary
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ROAD TO NOWHERE Michael Fitzmauric­e
ROAD TO NOWHERE Michael Fitzmauric­e

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