Less than half of Ireland's eligible voters turned out to vote but Ireland’s backing for Europe's fiscal pact was warmly welcomed in Brussels yesterday, with eurocrats calling it a silver lining amid the economic gloom.
An Irish No would not have derailed the new pact since only 12 out of 17 of the eurozone countries need to ratify it, but it would have been seen as Ireland thumbing its nose at the EU and it would have bolstered all eurosceptics.
'A No vote was the last thing anyone needed at this time,' an EU official told the Irish Examiner before adding: 'However, let’s be clear, a No would have directly affected Ireland.'
The vote followed the decision by twenty-five of the EU's 27 member states to sign a landmark treaty that will co-ordinate their budget policies and impose penalties on all rule-breakers, the so called 'fiscal compact.'
Rejecting the pact, which also sets debt and deficit reduction targets with penalties for breaches, would have blocked Ireland from any further emergency EU funding following its $105 billion bailout from the EU and IMF.
As Brussels welcomed the Republic's 'sensible' vote, the UK Independence Party MEP and deputy leader Paul Nuttall who was in Dublin Castle for the count said: 'A very sad day for the Irish people, deluded by Yes side promises of investment and cowered by economic threats. It is cumulative Yes votes to EU treaties which have led Ireland to its current dire economic circumstances.
Today’s result cements its status as an economic vassal state. I hope in a few years, Irish people who love freedom and want prosperity for their country will remember the Yes campaign’s promises of jobs and investment with contempt, then once again seek their self-governance from their new masters in Berlin and Brussels.'
Ireland North West Fianna Fail MEP Pat Gallagher told the Examiner: 'The Treaty (fiscal pact) will ensure that Ireland has access to the European Stability Mechanism (emergency bail-out money), if required. This brings a degree of certainty to our public finances as the Irish State will be able to apply for assistance, at sustainable interest rates, if needed.
'The ESM is an important safety net for Ireland and the eurozone. I have consistently maintained during the referendum campaign that stability and growth are two sides of the same coin, and the housekeeping rules contained in the pact can help to pave the way for future growth by ensuring a positive climate, conducive for investment and job creation.'
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Switch to the desktop site to post a comment.timbobdennehy | Jun 03, 2012, 02:26 AM EDT
i voted NO,the rest of the:apocalypse is coming:crowd voted yes, and in doing so,have f**K*D up the country even more than it was.
Murph46 | Jun 02, 2012, 09:04 PM EDT
Absurdity is not a name -you can look it up!
LoyalCitizen | Jun 02, 2012, 05:39 PM EDT
@Murph46: You don't even read what you write....................A Quote from you below "Even make you look good LoyalCitizen ,in all your absurdity!".............The key words "in all your absurdity!" .............Is this not name calling, you dimwit.
aloistmartin | Jun 02, 2012, 05:01 PM EDT
How far would Dublin go to enforce It`s Bipartisan Bourgeois Treaty. And will Pentagon Drones Seek the Heat, o`er Islands Green Hills @?
Murph46 | Jun 02, 2012, 04:10 PM EDT
As stated b4 Loyal-I ain't the one calling names ,keep lowering yourself!
LoyalCitizen | Jun 02, 2012, 03:45 PM EDT
@Murph46: Go and argue with Amoeba's who are your better.
WoundedKnee | Jun 02, 2012, 02:58 PM EDT
I agree with that guy--the Irish were cowering from threats. They're lily-livered cowards. They don't deserve to have an independent country. Now that I think of it, they DON'T have an independent country.
Murph46 | Jun 02, 2012, 12:42 PM EDT
Even make you look good LoyalCitizen ,in all your absurdity!
LoyalCitizen | Jun 02, 2012, 09:32 AM EDT
These corrupt greedy European Politicians will say and do anything to justify their existence.............They are lower life forms making Hitler look like a saint.