The Guardian (USA)

Ireland's old political rivals hold talks over historic coalition

- Rory Carroll Ireland correspond­ent

The coronaviru­s crisis has spurred government formation talks in Ireland between Leo Varadkar’s ruling Fine Gael party and its old rival, Fianna Fáil.

Both parties lost seats in a general election last month that marked a revolt against the political establishm­ent, but parliament­ary arithmetic and the coronaviru­s pandemic have prodded them towards an unpreceden­ted coalition.

After weeks of explorator­y talks the two parties issued an agreed statement on Wednesday night that cited the need to form a strong, stable government to help Ireland recover from an emergency that is set to affect the health of thousands and plunge the economy into a deep recession.

“They are working to develop a programme for government that provides stability and majority support in the Dáil,” the statement said, referring to the Irish parliament’s lower house.

A coalition would mean Varadkar, currently caretaker taoiseach, would stay in power and rotate the office with Micheál Martin, the leader of Fianna Fáil, during an expected four- or fiveyear term.

The two parties would still be short of a majority in the 160-seat chamber, so would need to bring onboard independen­t TDs (MPs), the Greens or small leftwing parties to form a ruling coalition – a courtship that could last weeks.

Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil, centrist rivals that have dominated Irish politics for a century, have ruled out a deal with Sinn Féin, which won a quarter of the vote in the 8 February election, making it the most popular party in a fractured political landscape.

On Thursday, the Dáil met for 12 hours to debate emergency legislatio­n on new measures to slow coronaviru­s contagion and to cushion workers, the self-employed, renters and companies from economic devastatio­n.

Varadkar said preparatio­ns for a nodeal Brexit had left Ireland better prepared for Covid-19, as some of the stark challenges facing the country came into focus on Thursday.

Officials are working on establishi­ng temporary morgues to deal with expected deaths, it emerged. “We are still in the preparatio­n phase to deal with the surge when it comes,” Elizabeth Canavan, assistant secretary for social policy at the Department of the Taoiseach, told a press briefing.

The Economic and Social Research Institute, a Dublin-based independen­t research organisati­on, said the economy could contract by more than 7% this year, and unemployme­nt could jump to 18%, if restrictio­ns to contain the pandemic remained in place for 12 weeks. Before the crisis, Ireland’s economy was the EU’s stellar performer and on track for 4% growth.

The Republic of Ireland has recorded 1,564 cases of Covid-19 infection and nine deaths. Northern Ireland has reported 241 cases and 10 deaths.

In the election, voters punished Varadkar and his party for a housing and healthcare crisis, but in recent weeks the taoiseach has won plaudits from across the political spectrum for his handling of coronaviru­s.

 ?? Photograph: Paul Faith/AFP via Getty Images ?? Caretaker taoiseach Leo Varadkar on the front pages of Irish national newspapers on Wednesday.
Photograph: Paul Faith/AFP via Getty Images Caretaker taoiseach Leo Varadkar on the front pages of Irish national newspapers on Wednesday.

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