*Eddie Punch

PROBLEMS in the health services which have been visible for over a decade and declining rural services crop up for Eddie Punch (II) as he puts forward the case for electing an Independent TD with bargaining power.

Fresh from attending the Clare Leader Forum hustings on Monday, Eddie arrives in Kildysart with an enthusiastic crew of half a dozen canvassers. โ€œYe were sheep farmers and have cattle now,โ€ he points out to one man who stops to chat with the assembled team before heading on their separate routes.

Press and communications manager with the ICSA, Neassa Fitzgibbon is among his canvassers for the day. The Carlow native believed Eddie would serve as a very strong voice for farmers in the Dรกil.

โ€œI thought you were taller,โ€ remarks the first business man that Punch comes across. โ€œCharlie Haughey wasnโ€™t too tall,โ€ says the Cratloe man.

Back to the more important matters, โ€œbusiness isnโ€™t what is used to be in Kildysartโ€ and the consequence has been felt since the closure of the bank in 2014. โ€œIt went from being a small town to a village, dropped from five days to three day a week in 2009, it was ok and we were managing, we didnโ€™t miss the two days, closed in 2014 and within a month my Mondays halved in turnoverโ€.

Residents of Cranny, Coolmeen and Kilmurry McMahon would have made transactions at the bank and while in the locality made purchases in local shops but that trade has disappeared. โ€œItโ€™s the same with the post offices,โ€ noted Eddie of the impact of their closure.

This prompts the fear of the business man that the current post mistress wonโ€™t be replaced, โ€œthey wonโ€™t consider giving it to someone else in a place like this or Labasheedaโ€.

At Fitzgibbon Butchers, Tommy confirms that steak and mince are โ€œselling bestโ€ in Kildysart. โ€œThe days of buying a load of meat and putting it in a pot is gone,โ€ he said.

Along main street in Kildysart, Eddie points out a trend noticeable across villages in Clare, โ€œwhat youโ€™ll find is a lot of closed businesses on main streetโ€.

โ€œItโ€™s cold for ye,โ€ remarks one woman queuing in the post office. While behind the counter, Eileen gets Eddie to sign a document pledging his support for postmasters which he is happy to do, โ€œweโ€™re hoping to get ten to twelve TDs electedโ€ and in the process create a voting block or a cohort with enough numbers to potentially prop up a Government.

He recalled, โ€œBack in Cratloe we had a post office problem and we had a fight to hold onto it but we didโ€. During his time as General Secretary of the ICSA, he said he worked with postmasters and their cause is something he is familiar with. โ€œWe have had loads of canvassers,โ€ Eileen tells him and he replies, โ€œwell you know what Iโ€™m aboutโ€.

A missing letter from a sign aboard a shop prompts Punch to issue an election promise before entering the premises where he says heโ€™ll get the absent part of the sign if he becomes a TD.

โ€œHe stood for Europe,โ€ Chairperson of the Clare branch of the ICMSA Martin McMahon, a vital member of Punchโ€™s canvassing team outlines as they enter the next premises. โ€œThere is a lot of those in it,โ€ says the less than enthused man behind the till.

McMahonโ€™s pitch is more well received at the next stop, โ€œhe is hoping to make some bit of a change and rattle them upโ€. The business owner admits, โ€œIโ€™ve seen your posterโ€ to which Punch interjects โ€œwell here I am and now you see meโ€. Providing support for small businesses is one of his aims, โ€œI have opposed bureaucracy in Europe and I know how it impacts ye with paperwork. The experience of working in a business sector is useful to have and we need more people with this background in the Dรกilโ€.

On the doors, Eddie prefers to take time to discuss issues in the hope that โ€œmeaningful engagementโ€ will result in first preference votes.

Best wishes are voiced at the doors as Punchโ€™s team underline, โ€œhe is a very good speaker and a very good communicatorโ€.

As the rain begins to pelt down, umbrellas are fetched for. Issues on health are raised at the door step with a woman revealing that she waited three hours for an ambulance which never arrived and subsequently a loved one spent 25 hours on a chair in Galway, the wait of such a length in Galway as opposed to Limerick surprises Eddie.

On health, he said that people are being mixed in with other individuals in corridors that they shouldnโ€™t be. โ€œThe problems have been there for ten years, it is not workingโ€.

Trying to take a swing at fixing the problems is Punch who is viewed as the strongest Independent in the field.

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