by Osc » 08 Feb 2020, 15:10
On a purely personal level, I will never ever vote for Sinn Fein. Our PR system of voting allows you to vote for the person rather than a party....which also goes a long way to explain why we usually have coalition governments, plus the fact that there are not huge differences between the two main parties (unlike the Tories and Labour). People who vote Fianna Fáil this time have short memories, as that is the party that brought us to our knees in 2008 (and the big recession in the 1980s too). I have been encouraged to see younger, fresher people to the fore in recent years - Varadkar, Coveney, McEntee - and would like to think that the old men are gradually being replaced. Yes, we have our problems, show me a country that doesn’t, but change for the sake of it never works. The sad thing about the upsurge in Sinn Fein support is that there is now a generation of young people that does not remember the horrors of Northern Ireland and this generation also chooses to ignore that Sinn Fein is still controlled by a shadowy unelected committee in another country. I sincerely hope (a) that they do not get enough seats to matter and (b) that neither main party reneges on the promise to reject coalition with them.