The Timaru Herald

Rival political parties agree on coalition govt

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Ireland’s long-dominant rival political parties said they have agreed on terms for a coalition government, four months after an election that shook the country’s political landscape.

The deal will see Fine Gael — the party of incumbent Prime Minister Leo Varadkar — and Fianna Fail led by Micheal Martin govern alongside the smaller Green Party.

Under the proposal, which must be approved by the parties’ membership­s, Martin will become taoiseach, or prime minister, national broadcaste­r RTE reported. He will serve until the end of 2022 and then hand the job back to Varadkar.

‘‘It’s a good package overall. Now we need to make it happen,’’ said Varadkar, who admitted he didn’t know what Cabinet post he would get when Martin led the government.

The left-wing nationalis­t party Sinn Fein looks set to be shut out of the Irish government despite an electoral breakthrou­gh that saw it win the largest share of the votes in February’s election.

The election result was a blow for Fianna Fail and Fine Gael, the centrist parties that have dominated Irish politics since the country won independen­ce from Britain a century ago. Fianna Fail holds 38 seats in the 160-seat Dail, parliament’s lower house. Sinn Fein has 37, Fine Gael has 35 and the Greens have 12 seats.

The parties have held protracted negotiatio­ns since February in an attempt to find a stable governing coalition, a process complicate­d by a nationwide lockdown imposed in March to slow the spread of the new coronaviru­s.

Sinn Fein was unable to assemble enough support to govern. -AP

 ??  ?? Micheal Martin
Micheal Martin

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