Right2Water leadership announce national demonstration set for April 8th

Right2Water Ireland called for a national demonstration for Saturday April 8th 2017 in Dublin..

Brendan Ogle, Unite trade union, Jonathan O'Brien, Sinn Fein and Maeve Curtis, Dundalk R2W, held what could be described as unrepresentative and a R2W self-promotional press conference last Thursday in Dublin.  Quite a bit of; we did this, we did that and not much humble pie going around.

However, we prefer the term 'National Anti Water Charge Demonstration'.  That is a more fitting and inclusive name given the fact that a broad range of political groups, organisations and individuals throughout the country have done the work up to now.  No one group should take credit or assume leadership but any praise going must be given to the people of Ireland, even Fianna Fáil supporters.

Eureka! was the term shouted by Archimedes, a while back, as he ran down a Syracuse road naked after a mathematical brainwave hit him while taking a bath in the Sicilian sun.  The Archimedes Principle kind of calculates volume and loosely describes what you put in to something you get an equivalent amount out.

It doesn't take a brainwave to twig that an anti water charge demonstration is called for at this juncture in time especially since Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil and others in the Oireachtas Committee on 'Domestic Water Charges' are or reported to be, dilly dallying around some type of compromise.

And it doesn't take a genius to know that the more anti water protesters throughout the country that show up at the April 8th demonstration, the more will be got out of it.

Therefore, we encourage as many people as possible to take part in what could either be a protest demo or a celebration march, depending on the Oireachtas show.

Archimedes, we rest our case!

The Fianna Fáil/Fine Gael political show in town

Enda Kenny, Fine Gael, Taoiseach and Michéal Martin, Fianna Fáil Leader

For the past year and a bit the democratic wish of the Irish was usurped by political agendas.   After last year's General Election, Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil's used the 'Confidence and Supply Agreement'  to kick the water issue down the road by establishing an 'Expert Water Commission' and now this Oireachtas Water Committee on Funding Domestic Water Services,  somewhat partisan outfits dressed up by Fine Gael's Simon Coveney.  

It is now crunch time but the committee on domestic water has reached a deadlock and the Minister has extended it's deadline by another four weeks to come up with some type of compromise.  By the way, how many compromises make a whole?

It is our opinion that, as far as the water issue goes for a start, Fine Gael do not deserve any backing.  First of all, it is not in their ultra right-wing fibre to compromise and secondly for the past three decades or so they have been pushing their water charges agenda down our throats and and into legislation.  Look where it has got us! 

Fianna Fáil cold feet

Are Fianna Fáil getting cold feet or will they stick to what were water-tight promises on abolishing water charges, metering and Irish Water Ltd?    We are under no illusions that political parties have a Jekyll and Hyde personality when it comes to electoral promises but which one will Fianna Fáil adopt?   The answer my friend will unfortunately have to wait.   And that is why pressure must be put on Fianna Fáil.  They must be held accountable and be reminded that they can not make clear and unambiguous promises and not keep them.

What has been given, can easily be taken away and given Fianna Fáil's lengthy list of past indiscretions, not least was their 'Letter of Intent' to the IMF in 2010.  They have much to prove.


Dublin Says No National Demonstration - Maith Sibh go Léir!

by James Quigley

A Dublin Says No poster advertising a National Demonstration, Dublin, January 21, 2017 - A non-politically aligned people's movement event.

"Shall we weep, moan, rend our garments, cover ourselves with sackcloth and ashes?  Shall we sit upon the ground and tell sad stories of the death of republics?  Shall we cower in the shadows and sing glamorous dirges for the 'Lost Cause', for vanished glories and broken dreams?
 
Or shall we come out fighting, unbowed, heads high, laughing fools to scorn, rejecting at every turn the moral authority of murderers and thieves to rule our lives or determine our reality or act in our name?  Let's dispense with lamentation - give not a single moment to that emotional indulgence - and get right back to work, more determined than ever to bear down harder, dig deeper and excavate the radioactive nuggets of truth still glowing beneath the slag-heap of ruin."  Chris Floyd, Nov 5, 2004, 'No Ways Tired'.

 

A national demonstration took place in Dublin yesterday orgainised by Dublin Says No.  According to the organisers it was 'A Non-Politically Aligned People's Movement Event' and they called on the people of Ireland to stand together, united against:  Evictions, Homelessness, Water Charges, Soaring Rents, Repossessions, Health Cuts, Slave Job Schemes, Child Poverty, Hospital Waiting Lists, Patients on Trolleys, Suicide Epidemic, Socail Injustice, Mass Emigration, Income Inequality, Pensioner Poverty, Politicl Pay & Pensions, Corportate Tax Avoidance, TTIP/CETA, Natural Resources Fleeced."  In short a demonstration against austerity measures that have been dished out on the Irish people.
 
 Mr Paddy Healy described it as "a great first step" and said "Maith Sibh go Léir! Congratulations to the participants and to the organisers of the demonstration to-day.  It was fitting that it took place on the anniversary of the first meeting of the First (all-Ireland) Dáil . The statement read by Pól Ó Scanaill, National Organiser of the 1916 Societies, was truly inspiring!"


 

Despite realistic criticism by some marchers and comments on facebook about the size of the attendance at the demonstration, credit indeed must go to the organisers for pulling off this feat at all.  Not only was the group of activists operating with scant financial resources but they were up against quite an array of obstacles not least the lack of support from most of the main leftist actors in the present day Irish political scene and some so called progressive forces such as Right2Water Ireland and it's controlling unions. 

There was a comment in Right2Water Ireland's facebook page which summed it up, one I wholeheartedly agree with.  The comment queries why a notice about the demonstration was put up only 2 days prior to the event.  It stated "Mr Ogle you should have gotten behind this protest a lot sooner by advertising on Right2Water's page, all hands on deck for every protest it's the only way we are going to get proper results" 
   
This event marks a defining moment, in my view,  a concrete example of a division and lack of unity in left/radical politics in Ireland today.  It is one of agenda driven, top down, personality centered protest.   This national demonstration was a strike at bringing back the power of protest to ordinary people, a 'bottom up' approach which, apart from the obvious, seemed to be trying to create an effective, united and non-political aligned people's movement.  

As such this demonstration was successful and we hope it is indeed the first step.
   
While armani suited Sinn Féin TD's were in town on the very day of the protest, discussing unity in their 'Toward a United Ireland' event, it was ironic that in reality they practiced disunity by not taking part in such a people's national demonstration.  They neither supported it nor did they acknowledge it, not even a little mention in their multifaceted media outlets.
  
 Finally it is depressing to think but it has to be mentioned and the question asked why the Irish left parties such as People Before Profit and Anti Austerity Alliance were noticeably absent from the demonstration and indeed why they did not support it wholeheartedly and call for support for such a people's power protest.