
CrisisJam #5 Out Now!
What a week. So limited were the parameters of Tuesday night’s TV3 Future Taoiseach debate, it’s a wonder the papers succeeded in eking more than a tweet’s worth of commentary out of it. CrisisJam felt the Empty Chair put on an excellent show. Student nurses and midwives took to the streets to protest against government plans to gradually eliminate their pay and an Independent candidate in Dublin South East returned to his hip-hop roots. Meanwhile, a dictator remained 99% uninstalled in Egypt. Curated by Eadaoin O’Sullivan, CrisisJam refuses to button its lip even as we are told that the slightest flapping might sink the good ship Éireann; succumbs to the inevitable and analyses the leaders’ debate; shines a light on public funding for private schools; takes a look at Donal O’Connor’s glittering career; and finds that, whatever the mistakes of social partnership, unions are as essential as they ever were.
As ever, click below or visit politico.ie/crisisjam for more
A common theme of the crisis has been the idea that the eyes of the world are on Ireland, a coded - and sometimes not so coded - way of tellings dissenters to button it for fear their flappy jaws will land us in even more trouble with those we like to call our European ‘partners’, for want of a better word to describe them. Business, policy and media elites, eager to embrace what they see as the shiny cosmopolitanism of an imaginary Europe in the sky, are slow to point out that European institutions may not have the best interests of all classes of Irish society at heart. The word ‘Euroscepticism’ has been transmogrified, and is now just another sock to stuff in the mouth of anyone who would criticise power differentials. This, writes Hugh Green, has everything to do with looking after narrow national class interests, and nothing to do with the advancement of a European-led universalism.
With electoral annihilation pending for Fianna Fáil, Micheál Martin’s election as that party’s leader had the potential to be interesting only for its facilitation of yet another round of ‘where have all the fadas gone?’ But, writes Harry Browne, his ‘prolier-than-thou’ posturing in last Tuesday’s leaders’ debate may signal an opportunistic shift by his party that, while intellectually incredible, may be politically important in the years to come. That the government-in-all-but-name of Fine Gael and Labour are already spitting teeth before they have even assumed office suggests at least the possibility that the potential for a genuine transformational politics has not been entirely lost. Yet.
Fee-paying schools and education cutbacks: Every little helps?
Cuts in funding and resources hit those schools which cater for children with special needs and children from lower socioeconomic backgrounds hardest, and are being imposed across the public education system. Meanwhile, private fee-paying schools, which rank ‘close to the bottom of the table’ in their provision for children with learning difficulties, received €100 million in state subsidies last year. Alison Spillane reports.
Guess who’s having a good recession?
The onset of recession has offered an opportunity to the powerful and the wealthy to seek to drive a wedge between those ordinary folk in Ireland who draw an income from the public purse and those who do not. The self-serving hostility towards the public sector that exists within corporate circles invariably reveals itself in the advocacy of a certain, predictable version of shock therapy. If those who are employed by the state were to be subjected to the same pressures and standards that prevail in the private sector, the argument goes, they would be whipped into line double quick. The prospect of salaries being dependent on performance would raise standards and increase ‘productivity’, while the spectre of unemployment would serve to concentrate the minds of even the most feckless public employees. Incredible though it may seem, however, failure, at least in the upper echelons of private industry, is no barrier to success. Colin Coulter casts an eye over the career of Donal O’Connor.
Union density in the Irish private sector stands at 20 per cent. If the Sindo and its readers had their way, it would stand at zero. Despite a recent ILO/IMF paper pointing out that high collective bargaining density is correlated with economic stability and low levels of inequality, some elements of Irish mainstream opinion see any and all failures in social partnership agreements here as reason enough to dispense with unions altogether. Were one so inclined, a self-serving element could conceivably be detected in attempts by those powerful individuals who so frequently find themselves given access to public platforms from which to broadcast their views to discredit not just unions as they actually exist and function here, but the very idea of unionisation. Aidan Regan traces a history of Irish trade unions, and suggests they move away from policies that simply service the immediate wage interests of their members to active engagment in a long term political strategy aimed at developing as counter-powers at firm and sectoral level across the economy.


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