This video says about itself:
Irish People protest (at last!)
Apr 16, 2012
On the 15th of April over 5,000 people demonstrated at the Labour Party Conference (junior partners in Government) in Galway, Ireland. There is growing discontent with increasing austerity, and the people are finally taking their anger to the streets. We have taken a lot, but enough is enough. Marie-Louise Kenny, freelance journalist, joined the protest in company with her friend Hilary Dully, who filmed the protest. Go on ye good things, bring forward the Celtic Spring!
From the daily News Line in Britain:
Thursday, 18 April 2013
Ireland heading for a general strike
THE Croke Park II proposals to cut the public sector pay bill, as part of an additional one billion euros of state cuts, have been rejected by Irish workers.
Two of the country’s biggest trade unions, SIPTU and the Irish National Teachers’ Organisation, have just voted against the deal, joining Unite and four other trade unions, meaning that the deal is dead.
The proposals in the deal included pay cuts, increment freezes and longer working weeks for no extra pay.
The rejection is a huge blow against the Fine Gael-Labour coalition Government, which has been forcing the Irish working class to pay for the crash of the Irish banks, and for the 64 billion euro EU-Troika bail out. It is an even bigger blow against the right wing of the Irish TUC which was willing to take joint responsibility with the government for imposing the massive cuts!
Under this austerity regime, the working class and the poor have suffered while the bankers have prospered. Up to 100,000 youth have been forced to emigrate,
This music video from Ireland is called Lough Sheelin Eviction, by the Wolfe Tones.
The song is about one of many similar tragedies in nineteenth-century Ireland. The lyrics tell the sad, but unfortunately, too typical story of a family being evicted from their home by a merciless landlord. In the song the woman, Eileen, dies in the cold and the man is forced to flee his native land in order to find a new home.
and housing and water taxes are being imposed, seeing evictions taking place on a scale not seen since the famine, under British rule in the the mid 19th century.
The crisis was caused by property speculation by the Irish banks on a vast scale. When the crash came, the banks lost 100bn euros. The government immediately stepped in to guarantee their losses, and that the Irish workers and small farmers would make them good. They were to be slaves of the banks.
SIPTU President, and former President of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), Jack O’Connor, who had said that the Croke Park II deal was the best that could be got, has suffered a major defeat as has the right wing of the Irish trade unions who were willing to assist the government bringing in the Croke Park II cuts.
Taoiseach Enda Kenny earlier told the Dáil that the options were now limited and the Government would have to carefully consider what to do next.
Labour Party Minister for Public Expenditure in the coalition Brendan Howlin has said that savings of 300m euros must be made.
He said he would be explaining the position to Troika officials by phone and that there would be consequences.
IMPACT and the PSEU voted in favour, but once SIPTU rejected the package by a margin of 53.7% to 46/3%, the deal was dead in the water.
On the No side, the margin of rejection soared to 95.5% in the Irish Nurses and Midwives’ Organisation.
Yesterday, O’Connor said: ‘The result reflects the deep and well justified sense of grievance among working people throughout the country and public service workers in particular. They feel that they are shouldering the lion’s share of the post-crisis adjustment while the wealthy are not contributing anything remotely approaching their capacity to do so.’
‘We urge the Government not to proceed with legislation to cut the pay of public service workers as it would inevitably precipitate a major confrontation,’ he said.
However, this confrontation is well underway, with even the Garda rejecting the austerity measures, and prone to catching ‘Blue flu’ when necessary.
See also here.
US Conservative Scholar: No More Austerity: here.
Related articles
- Bankers make Irish people homeless (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Irish workers defrauded by bankers (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- More homeless Irish people, IMF demands (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- British bedroom tax makes people homeless (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Industrial action over Croke Park ‘a possibility’ – IMO (irishtimes.com)
Reblogged this on Here and Now.
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