logo
Fears over Russia being used to make ‘insincere' argument against triple lock, Opposition group says

Fears over Russia being used to make ‘insincere' argument against triple lock, Opposition group says

Irish Times10-06-2025

The Government is using fears about
Russia
to make an 'insincere' argument against the triple lock, according to an alliance of Opposition politicians.
Left-wing and Independent politicians have claimed that a number of Government TDs and Senators are uncomfortable with plans to relax the legal barriers that can stop Irish troops from being deployed overseas.
Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire
of Sinn Féin,
Paul Murphy
of People Before Profit,
Duncan Smith
of Labour, Patricia Stephenson of the Social Democrats, and Independent Senator Alice Mary Higgins held a joint press conference today along with a number of civil society groups calling for the retention of the lock.
The triple lock is the mechanism under which Ireland can deploy more than 12 troops on missions abroad. Such deployments require the approval of the Government, Dáil Éireann and the
UN Security Council
.
READ MORE
The Government has consistently argued that this gives countries like Russia or China, who enjoy permanent membership of the UN Security Council, the power to veto Ireland's participation in international missions. The UN has not agreed a new peacekeeping mission since 2014.
Last month, the
Government approved plans brought forward by Tánaiste and Minister for Defence Simon Harris to unravel the triple lock
. Mr Harris has said he wants to make progress with the controversial legislation before the Dáil summer recess.
Labour's Mr Smith said the Government's discomfort with Russia's place on the council 'seems to be quite recent' and that the issue was not about the status of the UN Security Council.
'I would say they are being insincere in that,' Mr Smith said.
He said he believed some Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael backbench TDs and Senators were against their own Government's plans to scrap the triple lock.
[
Government wants progress on scrapping triple lock before Dáil break
Opens in new window
]
'I do believe there are people in Government that share our position, and we need to reach out to them and try to get them to change the minds of what's going on in Cabinet at the moment, and the public are on our side.
'This is just stuff that you pick up on the margins of meetings or corridor chats and all the rest. They will be getting heat on this from people that don't want to see Irish troops being deployed, which is the majority of people ... it is a headache that backbenchers don't want.'
Ms Higgins said she believed Government politicians who want to keep the triple lock 'have a deeper understanding than maybe some of the Ministers seem to have'.
'Because we're getting a very, very narrow description of neutrality as being this entirely technical matter of, 'Are we fully paid up members of Nato?' rather than, 'Are we a country that fulfils that principle under Article 29 of the Constitution?' – which is the peaceful settlement of international disputes,' she added.
Save Our Neutrality, a cross-party campaign to keep the triple lock, will be holding a demonstration this Saturday against Government plans to relax the legal barriers for sending Defence Forces overseas.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scotch Broth – Frank McNally on Michael Cusack's frustrated hope for a pan-Celtic sports alliance
Scotch Broth – Frank McNally on Michael Cusack's frustrated hope for a pan-Celtic sports alliance

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Scotch Broth – Frank McNally on Michael Cusack's frustrated hope for a pan-Celtic sports alliance

Soon after he helped set up the GAA in 1884, Michael Cusack was also involved in a campaign for a pan-Celtic alliance to link the cultural and sporting traditions of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. One of his confederates in this enterprise was a Dublin-based Scot of socialist leanings, A Morrison-Miller, whose Caledonian Games exhibitions had already been a spark for the GAA. Together, in 1887, he and Cusack founded a newspaper to promote their joint cause: The Celtic Times. Alas, as it is in Ireland, the first item on the agenda in Scottish politics is the split. Thus in May 1887, to Cusack's disgust, Morrison-Miller was expelled from his own Caledonian Games Society by a Presbyterian faction opposed to the Irish outreach programme. Apart from having a stand in Croke Park named after him, Cusack went on to be immortalised by his portrayal as 'the Citizen' in James Joyce's Ulysses. Or at least by the perception that he is the Citizen. READ MORE In fact, like others in the book, the character was a composite of different people. And insofar as Joyce led readers to believe that the bigoted, anti-Semitic Citizen was him alone, Cusack might have had a case for libel had he lived to see Ulysses published. But as Luke Gibbons pointed out to me during the Bloomsday Festival, the same Cusack may also hold the key to one of the continuing mysteries of Joyce's masterpiece: the anonymous postcard with the message, as interpreted by Mrs Breen, wife of the agitated recipient: 'U.P.: Up.' The simplest interpretation is a slang phrase of the time, equivalent to kaput . If a person or thing was 'U.P.: Up', they were finished. Which might indeed be considered offensive, but hardly the basis for the £10,000 libel suit on which Denis Breen is seeking advice. Cusack, meanwhile, offers a different explanation, as Gibbons found out some years ago when tracking down a full set of the original Celtic Times print run. For there, in Cusack's gossip column of 18th June 1887, is the headline: 'U.P. Up'. Underneath it, Cusack reported the 'extraordinary treble-whip meeting' of the CGS that had 'unceremoniously deposed' Morrison-Miller. The piece includes reference to a 'United Presbyterian' faction, punning on their desire to keep up appearances, and ends by declaring: 'The CGS has died a sudden and unprovided for death. R.I.P.' Elsewhere in his newspaper, Cusack detected a part played in the coup by a shadowy organisation called The Irish Times. He suggested it was trying to wrestle control of the CGS in the same way (as he alleged) that the Freeman's Journal had tried to do with the GAA: 'Is the staff of The Irish Times trying to grab the work of Mr Miller's hands, much as the Freeman tried to grab the work of my hands? Answer at once, Mr James Carlyle, manager of The Irish Times. You signed the circular calling the meeting. Read Carleton's 'Rody the Rover,' and you will find that we ought to be very careful to avoid those practices which little by little qualify us to out-Judas Judas.' We don't know if Carlyle took up the suggestion to read William Carleton's novel about double-dealing among Ribbonmen – a militant Catholic movement of the early 19th century. We do know that the same Irish Times manager also was later namechecked in Ulysses, perhaps with mischievous intent. Even as he ponders the 'U.P. Up' mystery, guessing that Alf Bergan or Richie Goulding 'wrote it for a lark in the Scotch House', Leopold Bloom passes The Irish Times, and admiring the success of its small ads operation, credits 'James Carlisle' (sic), the 'cunning old Scotch hunks'. An effect of the internal coup in the CGS was the cancelation of the Caledonian Games planned for 1887 and their replacement by a 'picnic'. According to Cusack, this caused such an outpouring of letters to The Irish Times that the paper could carry only one tenth of them. Among those that made it in was a satirical proposal that the CGS be renamed the 'Scotch Anti-Irish Bun and Lemonade Society'. In his book Joyce's Ghosts: Ireland, Modernism, and Memory (2015), Gibbons suggests a link between the anonymous postcard and the sectarian commercial wars being fought in Dublin in the early years of the 20th century. Those included the setting up of an undercover Catholic Association, to counter Protestant dominance in business. The Denis Breen of Ulysses was a proudly devout Catholic, said to be related to a senior Vatican clergyman. This is a cause for ridicule in Barney Kiernan's pub. When Bloom sympathises with Mrs Breen's plight, the narrator sneers: 'Begob I saw there was trouble coming. And Bloom explaining he meant on account of it being cruel for the wife having to go round after the old stuttering fool. Cruelty to animals so it is to let that bloody povertystricken Breen out on grass…And she with her nose cockahoop after she married him because a cousin of his old fellow's was pew opener to the pope.' If the 'U.P.: Up' postcard was hinting that the pious Breen had secretly joined the United Presbyterians, that might indeed be grounds for a libel case. At the very least, it would explain why his goat was so much – as the expression puts it – up.

Assisted dying set to become law in England and Wales after bill passed by MPs
Assisted dying set to become law in England and Wales after bill passed by MPs

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Assisted dying set to become law in England and Wales after bill passed by MPs

Terminally ill people in England and Wales are to be given the right to an assisted death in a historic societal shift that will transform end-of-life care. After months of argument, MPs narrowly voted in favour of a private member's bill introduced by Labour's Kim Leadbeater, which could become law within four years. Her bill, which passed by 314 to 291 votes, a majority of 23, was hailed by campaigners as 'a day for the history books, where facts have prevailed over fear'. The emotional debate in parliament was dominated by pleas from opponents of the bill for stricter safeguards against coercion by abusers, concern from disabled people and warnings about the fundamental change in the power of the state when granted new rights over life and death. British prime minister Keir Starmer voted in favour of the bill, while MPs were given a free vote. It will head to the House of Lords and peers are not expected to block its progress, though opponents said they would continue to fight the bill there. Royal assent is widely expected by the end of the year. It will give people with less than six months to live in England and Wales the right to an assisted death after approval from two doctors and a panel including a psychiatrist, social worker and senior lawyer. — The Guardian Read More Tánaiste orders evacuation of Irish embassy staff in Iran

Irish embassy in Tehran closed due to ‘deteriorating situation'
Irish embassy in Tehran closed due to ‘deteriorating situation'

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Irish embassy in Tehran closed due to ‘deteriorating situation'

The Irish embassy in Tehran, Iran has been temporarily closed with staff being relocated to Ireland amid a 'deteriorating situation'. Tánaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Harris said he had become 'increasingly concerned' about environment in which the embassy was functioning and the ability of diplomatic staff to work safely. 'It is in light of the deteriorating situation, following consultation with my officials and in very close consultation and co-ordination with EU partners, I have now decided to temporarily relocate our personnel from Tehran,' he said. Mr Harris said the relocation of staff was 'not a decision that I have taken lightly.' READ MORE 'Arrangements have been made for the embassy to continue its operations from our Dublin headquarters. Staff at my department's headquarters have now assumed the embassy's consular functions, and they remain in contact with the small number of Irish citizens remaining in Iran,' he said. The arrangements will continue until it is possible and safe for personnel to return to Iran, he said, and thanked ambassador to Iran, Laoise Moore and her staff for operating under 'very, very challenging circumstances.' Mr Harris reiterated advice that Irish citizens should not to travel to Iran or Israel. 'Citizens who live there and who wish to leave might consider departing through one of the land borders that is open as long as it is safe to do so,' he said. Mr Harris said he will continue to monitor the situation in the region and will be engaging with EU counterparts. 'My hope is that a diplomatic solution can be found to resolve this very dangerous conflict without further escalation or further loss of life in Iran or Israel,' he added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store