Slugger O'Toole

Conversation, politics and stray insights

Government

Would the legalisation of cannibis help reduce the drug problem in Derry (and elsewhere)?

Tue 15 May 2012, 1:43pm

Right, I have no personal interest in pushing this line (‘if you’ll forgive the pun’). In other words I don’t do illegal drugs. That may be a result of the happy accident of never having really smoked and on the few occasions I’ve been offered canibis (a long long long time ago), it made only [...] more »

“Mr Varadkar said Ireland and Britain could become a ‘mini-Schengen’”

Mon 14 May 2012, 7:53pm

The Irish Times reports some odd comments by the Irish Government Tourism and Transport Minister, Leo Varadkar, at a meeting of the British Irish Parliamentary Assembly at Leinster House in Dublin.  Odd, that is, given what we already know.  From the Irish Times report Mr Varadkar said tourists and business visitors should not be forced [...] more »

“I don’t think this generation is any different than the last…”

Mon 14 May 2012, 4:33pm

The Guardian’s Henry McDonald reports from anarchic Londonderry on the continuing activities of vigilante group, Republican Action Against Drugs (RAAD).  Watch the accompanying video report here.  From the Guardian report Some RAAD members are ex-Provisionals who back the peace process but still take up the gun against members of their own communities accused of antisocial activities. [...] more »

#EUREF: Sentiment swings towards a Yes vote (whilst FF and SF consolidate)…

Mon 14 May 2012, 1:15pm

The only extraordinary thing about yesterday’s Red C poll results for the SBP, was the clear swing towards Yes, by six per cent age points. That’s probably reflective of a poor campaign thus far, and the degree of uncertainty thrown up by the chaos in Greece… And, as Stephen Collins noted on Saturday: …far from [...] more »

Ian Junior claimed £10,000 in postage in his six last months in office…

Mon 14 May 2012, 9:52am

Hmmm… First we had Inkgate, then Inkgate II … Now it’s the DUP’s turn to answer some awkward question regarding a spot of free riding by Ian Junior this time… According to Diana Rusk in today’s Irish News that equates to about 112 letters a day… In response the North Antrim MP said that that [...] more »

#EUREF: Fate of Greece will delineate Ireland’s means of remaining within the Eurozone

Mon 14 May 2012, 9:41am

RTE’s The Week in Politics is well worth watching… It was the Tanaiste Eamon Gilmore who drew the short straw left him by the Taoiseach’s refusal to debate Gerry Adams on television.. It was notable more for the heat than any modicum of light it generated from either side. “Let’s stick to Ireland…” was Gerry [...] more »

#EUREF: Heart saying ‘no’; but will the head say otherwise?

Sat 12 May 2012, 9:04am

Right, you cannot put much store by one trip out with a couple of canvassing groups, in two very different parts of north side Dublin; Ballymun with Sinn Fein and Sutton Park (on the Dart line to Howth) with Fianna Fail… Harry McGee makes a very interesting observation: Party leader Micheál Martin has joined Senator [...] more »

Euro crisis: “Hold your sides and laugh out loud, otherwise you’ll have to cry.”

Fri 11 May 2012, 4:33pm
EU flag

Despite some optimistic noises overnight, it still seems more likely than not that Limbo Greece will face new elections.  As the Guardian live-blog noted earlier today The Democratic left party in Greece has said it will not back a pro-bailout government. That almost certainly means that Venizelos’s attempts to form a government coalition around agreement on the bailout [...] more »

Martin asks who on the No side will fill Ireland’s €18 billion shortfall?

Fri 11 May 2012, 4:17pm

A broadside from Micheal Martin the Irish Times today… He warns the Yes campaign not to get bogged down in a rebuttal game, but instead make its own case for a yes vote: namely that “for Ireland to recover we need Europe’s support”… And he explains why he thinks that: Any alternative funding would lead [...] more »

Pay your rates by credit card: you pay 2% extra. Pay by debit card: LPS pay 29p.

Fri 11 May 2012, 10:53am
LPS logo

Northern Ireland ratepayers choosing to pay their rates bills by credit card contributed around £32,000 to Santander last year. How do you pay your rates? Pay the whole year off up front and get the small discount? Pay monthly? Direct debit? Post Office? Or maybe you put on your credit card? Increasingly, government bodies are [...] more »

Without a new approach to Education, the Minister is condemned to micromanaging micro outcomes…

Thu 10 May 2012, 1:53pm

Well, I didn’t hear it, but apparently the Education minister John O’Dowd let rip this morning on the Nolan Show (42 minutes). But some time earlier, his party colleague Daithi McKay gave a fairly calm account of the Department’s request to school inspectors to report primary schools found to be giving special tuition to pupils [...] more »

Euro crisis: “Europe will be lucky if it ends up in stagnation like Japan for the next ten years”

Wed 9 May 2012, 8:38pm

Back in Limbo Greece, stage 2 in the 4-stage attempt to form a government with a parliamentary majority ends without agreement – as the BBC notes Mr Tsipras said he had failed to reach agreement with mainstream parties because of his insistence on rejecting austerity measures demanded by the EU and IMF as part of a [...] more »

“UK courts cannot force the handing over of journalistic material to foreign organizations…”

Wed 9 May 2012, 6:29pm

Just a quick note of the BBC reporting that Garda have failed in their attempt to force the BBC and UTV to hand over unbroadcast video footage of rioting in Dublin during Queen Elizabeth II’s visit last year.  From the BBC report The request which was made through the Home Office failed after Senior Belfast Judge Tom [...] more »

Austerity is a dish Ireland will almost certainly have to eat, hot or cold…

Wed 9 May 2012, 4:31pm

Markets are itching again… The Greek indecision over forming the next government is such that the Euro has slid to just under $1.30, and yields on Spanish debt are rising to $6.06… [Ms Lagarde, got yer umbrella handy? - Ed] Scary stuff… What’s even more scary is that those economists who cast a darkening glance [...] more »

A flexible library service for the 21st century?

Tue 8 May 2012, 11:00pm

Following Alan’s piece on libraries, I picked this ‘advertorial’ from Google plus this evening… about how a US county library system is cutting costs and improving flexibility in their free at the point of delivery services by enabling the whole library service act as a functioning unit as opposed to the one discrete library… more »

Euro crisis: “Hollande is man of the moment, but Europe’s gaze is firmly fixed on Athens”

Tue 8 May 2012, 4:49pm
EU flag

As the Irish Times’ Arthur Beesley notes All of this puts Hollande’s push to renegotiate the treaty in the shade. German chancellor Angela Merkel was quick to rebut her new French partner yesterday, but that can be read as the opening gambit. Her staunch ally Nicolas Sarkozy has been deposed. She has no choice but [...] more »

Perhaps politicians should check their own houses are in order before attacking the church?

Tue 8 May 2012, 12:33pm

On Saturday, I remember reading Noel Whelan’s sage, but ultimately hopeless, advice to politicians to steer clear of beating up on Cardinal Sean Brady, and shaking my head thinking, why would he think they could ever resist the temptation to get in on the act? As a former FF politico he knows the creature better [...] more »

Can Cameron get beyond “jejune policy and serial incoherence”?

Tue 8 May 2012, 10:18am

I offer this as an addendum to Turgon’s piece… First, Matthew Parris in the Times on Saturday… To Mr Cameron’s critics first. Spare us, please, every sentence with the words, “bedrock”, “core”, and “traditional supporters”, abiding values or “traditional conservatism” in it. What do these words mean – what in terms of doable legislation that [...] more »

Are public libraries under-appreciated and under-used?

Mon 7 May 2012, 11:29pm
Carnegie UK Trust 2012 library report

From the 1880s, Andrew Carnegie began to give money to build libraries – the most widely recognised feature of his philanthropy. From that date, he devoted himself to providing the capital for the building of public libraries and the development of library services. Between 1883 and 1929, 2,509 libraries were built, including 1,689 in the [...] more »

The Coalition’s woes: mid term blues or the times they are a changing?

Mon 7 May 2012, 7:51pm

The backlash to the Labour gains in the council elections seems to be continuing. Some such as William Hague have tired to write the election results off as a typical mid term result (and to be fair although good for Labour they were not a Tory melt down) but others are more concerned. The results [...] more »

Copyright © 2003 - 2012 Slugger O'Toole Ltd. All rights reserved.
Powered by WordPress; produced by Puffbox.
38 queries. 1.945 seconds.