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Greens, far-right among big losers in Irish vote

 

AFP

 

DUBLIN — With vote-counting resuming on Monday in Ireland's closely-fought general election, the Green Party and far-right candidates are among the biggest losers so far.
 
The incumbent centre-right parties Fianna Fail and Fine Gael look set to retain power, with 170 of 174 seats in the lower chamber of parliament decided since Friday's vote.
 
Fianna Fail, on 46 seats, was well ahead of the main opposition, the left-wing nationalist Sinn Fein on 37, with Fine Gael also on 37.
 
But support for the Green Party -- the third coalition partner of the outgoing government -- collapsed.
 
And far-right candidates failed to win a single seat.
 
The Green Party secured just 3 per cent of the vote, down from seven at the last election in 2020 when it joined the coalition.
 
Its leader Roderic O'Gorman was the only one of 12 Green lawmakers to hold on to a seat, saving the party from a total wipe-out.
 
Analysts said the Greens were often scapegoated while in power by the big two coalition partners.
 
The party has "no regrets at all" about entering government in 2020, O'Gorman insisted to reporters on Sunday.
 
But he admitted he was "very nervous" about the future of some of the "distinctly Green" policies introduced during their time in government.
 
While relatively successful in pushing through climate-friendly policies, the party became widely associated with higher fuel taxes.
 
As cost-of-living became a key voter concern, its policies became seen as an electoral liability.
 
"As a small party, the Greens were always in a precarious position," said Eoin O'Malley, a political scientist at Dublin City University.
 
"They were responsible for many of the more unpopular government policies, while for environmentalists it was blamed for the inevitable compromises that come with government," he said.
 
"It benefited from being flavour of the month in 2020, but that soft support left it when the party was blamed for increasing energy costs," O'Malley told AFP.
 
The losses mirror similar defeats for green parties across Europe.
 
"We've done the things we believe in, there's been a cost but that's politics," said O'Gorman.
 
"Those issues that focus on climate aren't going away, and as a party, we're not going away either," he said.
 
The Green Party was almost wiped out in 2011 after serving in government with Fianna Fail.
 
"Small parties in Irish coalition governments have to sacrifice more of their core policies in the government programme," said political analyst Gail McElroy from Trinity College, Dublin.
 
"This inability to fulfil their campaign promises leads to electoral penalties at the following election."
 
No far-right breakthrough 
 
The election was also marked by the failure of far-right candidates to enter parliament for the first time.
 
Ireland is one of the few European Union members without any large established far-right party
 
But for the first time, immigration became a prominent issue during this election campaign.
 
Some 20 per cent of Ireland's 5.4-million population is now foreign-born.
 
Asylum applications have surged to record levels since 2002.
 
Around 110,000 Ukrainians have also arrived in Ireland since Russia's full-scale invasion in 2022, one of the highest per capita influxes in the EU.
 
Rising anti-immigration sentiment has sparked protests in working-class and rural communities that have sometimes spilled over into violence.
 
In June five candidates campaigning on mainly anti-immigration and ultra-conservative platforms were elected to local councils, the first ever far-right representatives in Irish institutions.
 
But the ultra-nationalist vote was fragmented among a wide range of micro-parties and independent candidates at the general election.
 
"There were so many anti-immigrant candidates that they split the vote," O'Malley told AFP.
 
No far-right candidate gained more than 4 per cent of the vote in any constituency.
 
"So many of the candidates were too extreme, it made it difficult for someone concerned about immigration to vote on that basis," he said.
 
The issue also dropped in importance for voters in the run-up to the election as the main parties pledged to tighten up migration policy.
 
In an exit poll Friday, housing and homelessness, cost-of-living and health were all deemed more important than immigration as influencing voter decisions.
 
Only 6 per cent said immigration was the biggest factor in how they voted.
 

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