Correspondent

  • Five more years for Bertie Ahern: Saturday AM

    May 26, 2007 @ 12:24 am | by Mark

    If one was under any doubt about Bertie Ahern’s current hatred of the media it was clearly on view for those who stayed up late to watch his television interview with RTE’s Mark Little.
    Some of his feelings about the Press are entirely understandable, given some of the things that were written and said about Fianna Fail during the campaign. A few of them are, undoubtedly, right.
    But his charge that they were dishonestly made “in return for good pay and expenses” is unworthy of him. And it is deeply, bloody offensive to the vast numbers of reporters, who might make a million mistakes a day, but who do not go around telling lies.
    Let us look back for a moment. What was wrong about the coverage. Firstly, not all media reported everything in the same way. Secondly, much of it centred around the reportage of opinion polls.
    The early ones were negative for Fianna Fail. Few doubted their general accuracy. Fianna Fail argued, but there was nobody in FF at the start of the campaign telling anyone that they were on 41%.
    Therefore, opinions change, as they often do during elections. However, the Taoiseach is making the mistake that because people report an favourable opinion poll - and not everybody reports all of them as enthusiasticallly - then they must be an enemy.
    So what else did the media do wrong? It questioned Ahern and others about the financing of his house. Clearly, he is still furious about that, though why he believes it is not a matter worthy of investigation is strange.
    If this happened anywhere else it would be the subject of questions. Anywhere else. But the fact that questions are being asked does not mean that the people asking the questions are party to a conspiracy.
    Let us imagine for a moment that there was a conspiracy. Just for a moment. The conspirators conspire and the target rises eight points in the polls. Is somebody seriously that the conspirators would come back for a second bite? Would you?
    No matter how many times Fianna Fail, or, indeed, other politicians are told, they continue to insist on believing that all journalists are partisan, and biased. Most other parties believe the same thing when they are under the cosh, so there’s no real difference, there.
    Certainly, a few of them are. But the vast majority of us do not care enough about them to be biased. Politicians are characters upon the stage. They come, they go. The reporters remain, and report.
    Though final figures are not yet in, Fianna Fail has undoubtedly produced one of the most extraordinary results in the long history of the party. They will get 78, according to predictions this morning.
    It could have been even better, but it now leaves open the possibility of a pact with the Greens, though that will be harder to achieve now following the lamented loss of the Greens’ Cork South Central, Dan Boyle.
    Since he is close to 80, Mr Ahern might try to repeat the 1997 minority administration, which depended on loyal support from four Independents, but that could be a bit more difficult to organise this time. Still, nothing is impossible.
    Jackie Healy Rae will be back, as will Beverly Flynn, while Michael Lowry, though formerly of a Fine Gael-hue, could be brought into a loose tent.
    The Greens’ National Conference would have to meet to approve the opening of the negotiations, let alone agreeing to a deal, and it would then have to come back for a final verdict.
    A lot of Independent ex-Fianna Fail “gene pool” TDs have disappeared after one of the toughest days in Irish politics, particularly people like Paddy McHugh.
    However, Taoiseach Bertie Ahern could look at people like Dublin North Central’s Finian McGrath if he survives battle with Fianna Fail’s Ivor Callely.
    The departure of Progressive Democrats’ Michael McDowell from the world of politics will be regretted by many, if only for the endless stream of excitement that he brought to the business frequently.
    Though hated by many in the world outside Leinster House, most inhabitants of said building - even if they disagreed with him fundamentally - actually rather like him, even if they would not want this fact known too publicly.
    He is often guilty of rash judgement, but those close to him insisted tonight that his decision was final. Mary Harney, presumably, will now resume the role of leadership, one that she only relinquished six months ago. Noel Grealish will hardly want the job.
    FF ministers have all produced fine performances. Dick Roche’s success in Wicklow and Martin Cullen’s showing in Waterford will do much to enhance the chances of both of them staying on in the Cabinet, regardless of their lack of popularity.

    ends

  • 12 Comments »

    1.
    May 26, 2007
    1:17 am

    Mark the media got it wrong…I’m a FG supporter but the Irish media are some of the worst in the world from a quality perspective….suck it up Mark

    Comment by SHANE
    2.
    May 26, 2007
    2:01 am

    Take it in context at the end of an exhausting day at the end of an exhausting, and somewhat personal campaign. he is angry, but exhaustion can make you say funny things. kudos by the way for the blog…

    Comment by Dave
    3.
    May 26, 2007
    8:29 am

    Yes Mark, Bertie has a real cheek giving out about journalists. What planet is the man living on.
    “In return for good pay and expenses” this is the man who spends thousands of our euros on make-up and what about his Ministerial colleague Martin Cullen.
    The people have voted and they have let themselves down.

    Comment by Brendan Grehan
    4.
    May 26, 2007
    9:59 am

    Was Bertie’s annoyance at the media not based on the fact that someone was drip feeding them leaks from the tribunal? Anr rather than question the ethics and reason of the source (which all good all FF boys would) the media got stuck into what could have been a rather satisfying story. Unfortunately it featured soft furnishings.

    Comment by Con
    5.
    May 26, 2007
    10:32 am

    It’s a great day for democracy. Fianna Fail were clearly the choice of the people. I find the comment by Brendan Grehan an insult to the intelligence of the Irish electorate. It’s democracy Brendan Grehan regardless of what you think. Well done to Bertie and Fianna Fail. I wish them all the best with the next five years. I’ve no doubt that the country will do a lot better having rejected the alternative coalition that was on offer.

    Comment by James Hogan
    6.
    May 26, 2007
    11:35 am

    Does anyone have a thinner skin than journalists ?

    I saw that interview, and had similar sentiments been made by a journalist against Bertie in an opinion piece, no-one would have cared. The man was obviously tired (and I suspect had been down the pub for one or two during the course of it), so he wasn’t as tactful, but this is another case of journalists dishing it out but not being able to take it.

    Comment by Eoin
    7.
    May 26, 2007
    12:11 pm

    Bertie had some cheek giving out about media and calling for “rules” for elections. Does that include banning advertisements which are lies?

    Comment by Brian
    8.
    May 26, 2007
    4:55 pm

    No conspiracy, Mark, just a disconnect. The majority of Irish hacks comprise a smug, liberal consensus, and smug liberals despise FF because the party reminds them too much of what Ireland is really all about. Smug liberals love to pontificate about the glories of the EU and the horrors of the US, but most Irish people are much nearer Boston than Berlin and that’s the way it’s going to stay. So, until Irish journalists accept that Ireland is as it is, Irish politicians will continue to despise them, and the Irish voters will continue to ignore them. And rightly so.

    Comment by Eamonn Fitzgerald
    9.
    May 26, 2007
    6:59 pm

    What now for Sinn Fein and their goals of being in government both sides of the border? the thing that sweetened the deal for many who reluctantly went with the new policing policy has not been delivered. i wonder will this weaken the leaderships position with its electorate.

    Thankfully the 26 counties has a slightly better memory than those in the north. who in only 9 years have forgotten the evils carried out by these men who now see it as their calling to govern the lot of us.

    Comment by Peter Mc Govern
    10.
    May 31, 2007
    7:34 pm

    I would like to hear a journalist voice his own opinions and not just the opinions of his peers. I cannot understand everyone of them having the same views on everything, whats up please let me know

    Comment by morah
    11.
    June 1, 2007
    3:59 am

    Ahern’s comments were low, cheap, and entirely in character.

    Comment by Kevin Hely
    12.
    June 5, 2007
    12:21 pm

    People talking about the media getting it wrong, etc, ignore two main points. The first (and I hope the less important point) is the economic imperative that all news outlets feel. And nothing sells better than a controversy or a fight. This election campaign would have been very boring if not for the excitement of the opinion polls showing a close race and the news about Bertie’s payments. The media, scenting a controversy, were always going to follow the story heavily.

    Secondly, the opinion polls at the start of the race, and the information about Bertie’s house, were newsworthy. There were very important questions regarding a possible change of governing party for the first time in 10 years being raised by the initial opinion polls.

    More importantly, there were vital questions raised regarding the Taoiseach’s honesty and probity. For people to suggest that the media should ignore these matters because there is an election coming up, or because the ‘ordinary citizens of Ireland’ don’t care about it is ignoring the vital role that an independent media should play in society.

    The news media is not there to just tell us about the new Big Brother, the latest on the split between two talentless ‘celebrities’ or to provide baseless transfer speculation from the premiership. It is there to ensure that the decisions that are made in this country, affecting everyone, are examined in public. They are there to ask questions of our elected representatives, to get them to defend their actions and decisions and to monitor the way government is run.

    Comment by Tom O'Sullivan

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