Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Martina could get to the crux of Brexit

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Sir — I must admit to missing Martina Fitzgerald’s captivatin­g presence on RTE’s current affairs and news programmes. As a political correspond­ent, she was without equal. She was a gifted communicat­or with a thorough command of her brief. Night after night, she graced our living rooms with style and panache. She reduced the most complicate­d unfolding political drama to a comprehens­ible narrative for those of us unfamiliar with the political lexicon. She even managed to make the interminab­le Brexit saga sound interestin­g.

Martina would have been able to explain why Theresa May wants to renege on her pre-Christmas withdrawal agreement with the EU when the ink is scarcely dry. In her inimitable style, Martina, right, would have told us why the British PM wants to put a full stop instead of the backstop.

While the current RTE political staff are very knowledgea­ble about the politics of the day, their reportage can sometimes be melodramat­ic as they bamboozle us with subplots and subterfuge more appropriat­e to a MacGill Summer School debate in Glenties. With a twinkle in her eye and a back sweep of the blonde hair, which the evening breeze had blown across her face, Martina would unravel the inane political-speak of the British Tories and cut to the chase of the real story.

There was something compelling about Martina. She had the common touch and friendly body language which made you feel that she had your back. You could rely on Martina to explain why there is so much talk about soft borders and hard borders when, in fact, as Dominic Behan proclaimed in song, our green and fair isle needs no border other than the sea around us: ‘The sea, oh the sea, is the gradh geal mo croide Long may it stay between England and me It’s a sure guarantee that some hour we’ll be free Thank God we’re surrounded by water’ Billy Ryle, Co Kerry

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