John Halligan to vote against motion on Irish Water

Minister of State had initially indicated support for Sinn Féin’s abolition proposal

Independent Minister of State John Halligan will vote with the Government in a Dáil debate calling for the abolition of water charges this week, after initially indicating he would support a Sinn Féin motion on the issue.

The Waterford TD clarified his position after speaking to Simon Coveney, the Minister for Housing, Planning and Local Government, who also has responsibility for water charges and Irish Water.

It is understood that Mr Coveney and Mr Halligan, who is the Minister of State for Training and Skills, discussed a counter-motion to be tabled by the Government.

The counter-motion will be framed along the lines of the water agreement reached between Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil as part of the deal on a minority government.

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Mr Coveney said the agreement on water charges was precisely for dealing with motions such as the one tabled by Sinn Féin.

Mr Halligan’s initial statement that he could back the Sinn Féin motion on abolishing Irish Water and water charges came before he had read the actual motion. Voting against the Government would in effect have meant he would lose his ministerial job.

Initially speaking to Today FM, Mr Halligan said he had made his “position quite clear on water charges and Irish Water”.

‘Not fit for purpose’

“I think I will be voting in favour of it [the Sinn Féin motion] because I don’t think it is fit for purpose. I have to have a look at it first,” he said.

“I haven’t seen it yet to see exactly what the wording of it is and does it clash with what has already been agreed with Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael and the programme for government for this commission to be set up to see if Irish Water is viable.”

The Fianna Fáil-Fine Gael deal commits to a suspension of water charges for nine months and the establishment of an independent commission to examine the future charging regime.

The commission will be followed by an examination of the issue by an Oireachtas committee.

The deal says Irish Water will be retained as an entity “in public ownership responsible for the delivery of water and wastewater services”. It also says the Dáil will eventually decide the future of charges. Most deputies oppose charges.

Cabinet approach

The programme for government says all office holders – both senior and junior Ministers – are bound on the approach of Cabinet to private members’ motions, such as the one tabled on water this week.

Sinn Féin's Eoin Ó Broin said the electorate of Waterford will give their judgment on Mr Halligan's actions. Mr Ó Broin and TDs Paul Murphy, Richard Boyd Barrett and Joan Collins all said Fianna Fáil had a duty to stick to its election promises and support the motion.

Fianna Fáil’s Barry Cowen said his party would table a counter-motion, which also in effect outlined the agreement reached with Fine Gael on the issue.

“Fianna Fáil did the hard negotiating and achieved a path forward on water charges and Irish Water, while others stood on the sidelines and sniped,” Mr Cowen said.

“Legislation will now come forward to stop bills being issued until such times as a majority of deputies in Dáil Éireann vote for their reintroduction.”

Mr Cowen accused Sinn Féin of wasting Dáil time on “meaningless political point- scoring”.