In Ireland’s Election, Sinn Féin Didn’t Shine

Most recent elections around the West have seen voters punish incumbents for rising inflation and the end of pandemic-era support programs. Ireland’s election last Friday was thus something of a relief for ruling parties Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael. Their popular vote (21.9 percent and 20.8, respectively) wasn’t great: indeed, a new historic low, on the poorest turnout in over a century. Added together, these two parties had over 70 percent of the vote share before the financial crisis, but soon suffered a collapse similar to that of once-mass parties in France, Italy, and beyond. Yet on Friday, the Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael vote ticked down just marginally compared to the last contest in 2020. The real losers were elsewhere: the junior party in the ruling coalition, the Greens (losing eleven of twelve seats, collapsing from 7.1 to 3 percent), and, most importantly, opposition party Sinn Féin (falling from 24.5 to 19 percent).

The Greens’ failure was unsurprising. It echoed their previous anemic period in government from 2007 to 2011, when — having enforced brutal austerity alongside Fianna Fáil — they ended up losing all their seats. There was a difference this time: while this “progressive” party’s base was again disillusioned by its non-impact on a center-right government, the generally older, middle-class supporters of Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael turned out more satisfied. In coalition since 2020, the two parties had a “job share,” swapping the role of taoiseach (head of government). In preelection TV debates, their respective leaders, Micheál Martin and Simon Harris, often appeared not as rivals but as a grey double act, issuing doom-laden warnings that Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald’s promises of mass…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: David Broder

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