May 18, 2024
Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar resigns after party suffers defeat in parliamentary vote
The election result was a major blow for Fianna Fail and Fine Gael, which have dominated Irish politics since the country won independence from Britain a century ago.
The election result was a major blow for Fianna Fail and Fine Gael, which have dominated Irish politics since the country won independence from Britain a century ago.

After Ireland’s parliament convened Thursday with no easy route to forming a stable government after an election two weeks ago that left three parties on roughly level pegging, the country’s prime minister has resigned, according to reports.

Fine Gael leader Leo Varadkar, the current Taoiseach, formally resigned as prime minister after the votes but will stay on as caretaker leader until a successor is chosen. He’s due to travel to Washington, D.C., next month for the traditional St. Patrick’s Day visit to the White House by Ireland’s leader.

“The responsibility is now on all of us to provide good government and, indeed good opposition, because that’s what the people have every right to expect,” he said. “The government will continue to carry out its duties until a new government has been appointed. I will likewise continue as Taoiseach until the election of that new government.”

Talks among the parties have failed to make much progress since the Feb. 8 election, which brought a breakthrough for left-wing nationalists Sinn Fein at the expense of the two long-dominant centrist parties, Fianna Fail and Fine Gael.

Fianna Fail and Sinn Fein each hold 37 seats in the 160-seat Dail, parliament’s lower house. Fine Gael has 35.

[…]

See Also:

(1) Gas

(2) Andrew Neil backs WTO total regulatory freedom – ‘EU’s worst nightmare’

(3) ‘Give them a big, fat ZERO!’ Boris urged to give NOTHING away to EU in Brexit trade talks

(4) At least EU like me! Varadkar ‘eyeing up Brussels role’ after Irish election humiliation

(5) EU ‘more divided than ever’ over Brussels budget deadlock – ‘MEPs won’t back plan’

Loading

Visited 34 times, 1 visit(s) today