Nora Owen, Prof Michael Laffan, Madeline Taylor Quinn, Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney.
MINISTER FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS, Simon Coveney (FG) has told supporters in Co Clare that Fine Gael must aim to dominate the centre of Irish politics.
Up to 100 people gathered in The Temple Gate Hotel as Minister Coveney, Professor Michael Laffan and former Minister for Justice, Nora Owen (FG) assessed the achievements of Cumann na nGaedhael from 1922 and 1932 and the foundation of the Irish Free State.
Addressing the crowd, Minister Coveney highlighted the need for the decade of centenaries to be โrespectful and inclusive as it can possibly beโ recounting โextraordinary moments of change for Ireland, moments of pain and tragedy for individuals and familiesโ. 100 years on, he said the country was learning from its past and he referenced the acknowledgement of โgiants in Irish historyโ such as the recent centenary commemoration of Michael Collinsโ death at Bรฉal na Blรกth.
Looking at politics today, the Cork native said for Fine Gael โto thrive and survive, we need to become the trusted party that people turn to when it comes to election timeโ. Holding the role of Deputy Leader of the party is โa real privilegeโ, he admitted. โWhat drives the party today is not that inconsistent of what drove people during establishment of the State in that decade,โ Coveney added and referenced the โunpopular decisions of 2011 which arrived following an extraordinary election where the country effectively voted for a national Government of Fine Gael and Labour to restore the countryโs spirit and an economy which had been brokenโ.
There was a time during this economic crisis that the State came โwithin a monthโ of not being able to pay civil servants, he revealed. The first Cabinet meeting of Enda Kennyโs Government is still vivid in his mind with the then Taoiseach telling Ministers if they were not prepared to turn the numbers on youth unemployment, the national debt and emigration around that they should leave the room.
Brexit was handled by Fine Gael โwith a toughness and an intelligence,โ he believed. โIf we got through it then weโd be able to show what we could do in Government but then came COVID,โ he said. The six month period during the height of the pandemic where the Government only the support of a third of the Dรกil was among his โproudest momentsโ. He added, โFine Gael was happy to move into the opposition but there was no viable Government, this party made a decision based on what was the right thing to do for the country. We said to ourselves once we get through pandemic, we said weโd show what we could do, then comes the crisis in Ukraine. The last decade has been one crisis followed by anotherโ.
He acknowledged, โweโve made mistakes but I think weโve got the big calls rightโ. Minister Coveney stated, โWe are a party that can and will dominate the centre of Irish politics, we need to be a party for everybody and one that pulls society together rather than drive it apartโ.
Irelandโs political landscape is โmuch more fractious and fracturedโ and it is one operating in a sphere where โtrust is in short supplyโ. โWe need to try insist that at the centre of Irish politics we are a force of unity and not division, that value that Fine Gael bring to politics will be tested over and over again,โ he said.
Labels of Fine Gael being โconservativeโ, โstaleโ and โin Government for too longโ were inaccurate, he insisted and he pointed to his 25 years in politics which have coincided with votes for same sex marriage, abortion, a separation of church and State, โwe are outward and modern, we are facilitating change the whole timeโ.
Chair of Fine Gaelโs Clare branch and former TD, Madeline Taylor-Quinn (FG) praised the Minister for โa most inspiring addressโ while a party supporter from Bodyke shared her pride at the โhonesty and integrityโ of the Deputy Leader.
Former councillor, Joe Arkins (FG) picked up on a comment by Minister Coveney that Sinn Fรฉin werenโt โall badโ and the Ruan man asked him, โcould he elucidate on their good pointsโ leading to widespread laughter from Fine Gael supporters.
Historian Joe Power asked the Minister to expand on what he felt the differences were if any between Fine Gael and Fianna Fรกil in the present day. โThere is still a difference between Fianna Fรกil and Fine Gael but because weโre in Government together I wonโt say anything,โ Coveney quipped.