*Ian Lynch. Photograph: Martin Connolly
Having narrowly retained his place on Clare County Council, Ian Lynch has urged Fianna Fรกil to continue the power sharing agreement that has existed with the local authority for the past fifteen years.
With the Independents losing two seats following the retirements of Christy Curtin and James Breen, their presence is not as strong. However Roisin Garvey of the Greens may join their alliance and Lynch is hopeful Fianna Fรกil who added an extra seat will not seek to try take control of the local authority.
โI know Fianna Fรกil have the higher number and they might try form a technical group but I wouldnโt like to see that happen. Iโd like to see power sharing across the three different groupings, weโre all there for the one county, having come from a party I know party politics, we have to make sure we work together as a unit. If thereโs no clashes, weโre doing something wrong. I hope a mix of how it works wonโt affect it and that decisions will be made on the merit, not because one particular party wanted it and the other didnโt,โ he told The Clare Echo.
In the space of five years, the Kilrush councillor lost 192 votes which he outlined did not come as a major surprise. โI was late out of the traps and I had personal hard luck, we had a funeral which would have took time out of it and took me a while to get my head back into it, I hadnโt the people met on the ground so we knew we were going to be in trouble, we thought we might have been battling for the fourth but not the fifth seat, we got over the line. I have to give credit to Joseph Woulfe, a first time Independent candidate, a phenomenal campaign, the big difference was Miltown were afraid they were going to lose and they came out and voted for him, he got huge votes in his own area and thatโs what it is about, he ran a nice and clean campaign, the same for Violet-Anne Wynne, Mike Taylor and Noreen Lynch. It was a lot to learn, it was the first campaign I did where I lost two stone and that was just at the countโ.
On the campaign trail Ian was surprised people did not understand the difference between a TD and a councillor. No such shock came from the strength of parties throughout the county. โThe parties have come back strong, the Independent vote is hard to get now, itโs fine in a localised area but to get the spread across the place. If youโre a Fine Gael or Fianna Fรกil candidate youโre aligned to the party and the vote is everywhere whereas if youโre an Independent candidate in Kilrush youโre a Kilrush candidate and the same in Miltown. I watched the other candidates and what theyโve done, I wouldnโt always be one for putting myself forward, if I do something itโs because it is the right thing to do and I donโt like the fanfare around doing but you have to tell the people the work youโre doing, what happens if you donโt other people will take the credit for it and we had a good campaign around that. We got across the line, we learned a lot and weโve a lot of notes taken so weโre gearing up for the next one in five years timeโ.
He is confident the election of Cillian Murphy (FF) will lead to a strong dynamic alongside experienced councillors PJ Kelly (FF), Bill Chambers (FF) and Gabriel Keating (FG) in West Clare. โThere is a good mix of the old heads with the knowledge, myself and Cillian have good synergy, we worked quite well on previous projects like Scattery Island, we didnโt do it on our own, we had Scattery Island Ferries and the Heritage Group but we work well together, we have a good vision but we will clash on a few things when it comes to tourism, Cillian is very big into sustainability, weโre only getting going with our industry in Kilrush, North Clare has seen it too where the tic tac of each otherโ.