Is Martin McGuinness the barbarian at the gate? Irish media reaction incredibly hostile to Sinn Fein leader
Posted on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 at 07:35 AM
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I counted no fewer than eight separate attacks on Martin McGuinness in
the pages of the Sunday Independent this week.
The attacks were also quick in coming in The Irish Times and most
other media publications in Ireland.
It seems the decision by the Deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland
to run for the role of Irish president has set the clock back about 20
years.
Back then daily attacks on Republicans were a feature of the Irish
media, intent above all in keeping the Northern troubles off their
radar and fenced off.
The successful peace process softened their cough for a while, but
there are many writers who can never forgive the IRA for going the way
of peaceful resolution, thereby screwing up their weekly target and
making them, in many cases, irrelevant.
Suddenly they feel relevant again, at least for the few weeks of the
Irish presidential campaign.
But they worry that McGuinness might even win the race for president,
thereby presenting them with a barbarian at the gate of Aras an
Uachtarain.
They have much to be worried about. In terms of political ability
McGuinness is head and shoulders above the other candidates in the
race.
Michael D. Higgins is an effective politician, but he never managed to
pull off the near impossible and create a political and working bond
with Ian Paisley as McGuinness did, which cemented the peace process.
The peace process is the outstanding achievement of the past thirty years in ireland, an inspiration to the world. It would not have happened without McGuinness it is as simple as that.
The Fine Gael candidate Gay Mitchell is from the second tier of his
party and has spent his political life in recent years quite
anonymously in Europe.
David Norris is colorful and brash, but the scandal over his gay lover in Israel and letters he wrote on his behalf after he was convicted of child rape will haunt him.
During that time McGuinness has forged peace in Northern Ireland,
become an international figure and a man called on to aid in peace
processes all over the world.
In the debates that will accompany the race, McGuinness will shine. He
is articulate and very comfortable in front of the cameras.
Polls already show that McGuinness is off to a quick start, only a few
percentage points behind the front-runners.
He will find it hard to win because the Irish system of preferences
means that voters vote, not just for a single candidate but all of the
field in order of their preferences.
McGuinness will find it hard to get the second and third preference
votes because his party, Sinn Fein, polarizes opinion.
The questions about his IRA past are legitimate but could have been
asked of many major political figures in Ireland such as former
presidents Eamon De Valera and Sean T O’Ceallaigh, Foreign Minister,
Sean MacBride and Prime Minister Sean Lemass, not to mention Michael
Collins.
The Irish Free State was founded by the gunmen who fought a vicious
War of Independence and later a nasty Civil War to make it happen.
Like the United States it was forged in battle but in Ireland the
attempt to elide that inconvenient truth continues afoot.
Under that scenario McGuinness, having taken the path of so many
others from all Irish political traditions, is somehow illegitimate
for doing so.
If his deeds and accomplishments happened fifty years ago nw doubt
there would be a statue to him as there is to many of his predecessors
in the IRA who made peace.
But because his achievements are in the immediate past and still weigh
heavily on the self-image of many of the Irish powers-that-be they
oppose him tooth and nail.
I think the ordinary people in Ireland will acknowledge his
extraordinary journey, his massive role in bringing peace and his
image on the world stage where he is seen as a peacemaker.
Whether that is enough to win the office remains to be seen –
bookmakers have him at 3/1 so it would be no great surprise.
50 comments
AlunPalmer | Sep 29, 2011, 12:33 AM EDT
He has a right to run according to the constitution, but really he is from another country. That in itself is not the problem, Mary Robinson was from the North. The problem is that he is deeply tied into the politics and history of the North, whereas she was not. I am English and live in the US, although I am descended from Catholics from Cork, so it isn't for me to say. People will either vote for him or they won't. I question his motives, though.
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sirpeter | Sep 28, 2011, 08:47 PM EDT
Georgy Boy.I know all about this Bosnian family and they are getting everything that they are entitled too.I'm not even going to go into details because it makes no difference with you.But the fact they are Bosnian has nothing got to do with it.An Irish family is entitled to the same.Your post is bulls*it and is a lie.Even where you read this bullsh*t made a mistake.Social welfare payments are suppose to be confidential and not for public knowledge.This family is doing nothing wrong.It's not that sweet for them as you think.Bet you are claiming tax back for your KKK costume.
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greensod | Sep 28, 2011, 08:12 PM EDT
The old dog for the hard road, McGuinness is the only choice.Forget the other free-staters,they have done nothing for Ireland,other than to live off the tax payers.
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seanomelbourne | Sep 28, 2011, 06:47 PM EDT
George dillon is steeped in bullsh-t and ignorance. His almost daily tirade of mis-information is boring.He's as Irish as Margaret Thatcher.Your a miserable piece of work with no integrity George.I believe you have lost the plot.
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eiriamach | Sep 28, 2011, 06:42 PM EDT
Another of the informal fallacies of logic is the hasty generalization: it offers a single example or very few examples and then applies this behavior to the entire population. For example, the hasty generalization concludes that all refugees or immigrants are welfare cheaters on the basis of one case of a refugee family of welfare cheaters. Then, there often follows the "smear campaign": since McGuinness supports the rights of immigrants (along with human rights for all populations), he would load Ireland up with immigrants on the dole, "welfare leeches," who would be stealing the money that 'rightfully' belongs to the 'real' Irish. And the American who offers this fallacious argument thinks the Irish are stupid? Groaaannnnning again...
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oaklongan | Sep 28, 2011, 06:36 PM EDT
GeorgeDillon: Thank you for your post. My Grandparents must be turning in their graves. Reading last week or before here..appalling is others from east europe and elsewhere who immediately get on the dole, bleeding Ireland dry.
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MacGiobuinR | Sep 28, 2011, 06:22 PM EDT
Mr. McGuinness would make a fine president. Nobody should panic as it is a purely symbolic position with no real power. Ireland needs to find and support strong leadership when strong leadership is in short supply. His recent work speaks volumes and the past is just that the past. Symbolically speaking Martin is the smart choice to jump start the rest of the government! Slainte
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canadianirish | Sep 28, 2011, 04:51 PM EDT
@GeorgeDillon - a mighty interesting post, as usual.
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GeorgeDillon | Sep 28, 2011, 03:58 PM EDT
The main reason I wouldn't vote for McGuinness is that he and his party support Mass Immigration and welfare leeches. Just this week in Ireland it has emerged that a Donegal-based family of two parents, a few children, a live-in grandma, maybe a dog and a cat, are getting about 90.000 euros a year in welfare. Nobody in the house works, but the household has income of more than $120.000 per year. That's net, it's the equivalent of someone making about $200k pre-tax. These people are Bosnians, citizens of a country which is not in the EU. Why have they been given residency in Ireland? I shouldn't say they don't work, because they do; their "work" is to exist. Ireland pays them because they exist, and because they're in Ireland. They are non-productive, so there is no other reason. And of course Ireland is broke, so Ireland borrows money abroad in order to pay these Bosnians. There are many tens of thousands like them who essentially are paid to live in Ireland. This even while the Irish government facilitates the emigration of young Irish men and women from their ancient homeland. I have been criticized here for offering the opinion that the Irish are stupid, but no other judgment appears valid when you read this sort of stuff. And I've also pointed out, as I do again, that McGuinness and his useless Sinn Fein the Mass Immigration party are cheerleaders for the "rights" of immigrants to an ever-growing slice of the pie in Ireland. Worthless McGuinness and his slimy pals have never done anything to curb the abuses occasioned by the import of massive numbers of foreign migrants into Ireland. McGuinness might make a good president of the Irish-Bosnian Friendship League, but he sure doesn't merit the presidency of Ireland.
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kilkenny999 | Sep 28, 2011, 03:07 PM EDT
one more comment,it is my opinion that most of the irish media south of the border,are west brits and plastic paddies.
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kilkenny999 | Sep 28, 2011, 03:03 PM EDT
i think the irish people should vote enmasse for martin mc,guinness,he is running for president to help all ireland. he is not in it for power or profit,unlike many others.
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tocon1941 | Sep 28, 2011, 01:47 PM EDT
"McGuinness is coming. Oh Jasus Paddy what will the neighbors think? I'll hide the good silverware, you drive the sheep into the woods. Sure the priest will read us out from the alter."
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Sparklet | Sep 28, 2011, 01:42 PM EDT
GeorgeDillon, I daresay there are ignorant people in the south, the north, and everywhere in the world. But it's the people who live on the island who are more in touch with the feelings and wishes of the general population. Sorry if you think that's garbage, but there are a lot of people who live thousands of miles away who have a completely different idea about what the Irish people want, o the Irish themselves, .
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GeorgeDillon | Sep 28, 2011, 12:50 PM EDT
Towngate--McG is a "last-minute nakedly political entrant". Where do you get this garbage, Towngate? McG is last-minute? So what about the three or four candidates who have been nominated SINCE McG declared? And he's "political" So what is that hack from Fine Gael, or the old guy from Labor? I wouldn't vote for McG if I was in Ireland but I hate ignorance and stupidity (Towngate style) more than I hate Sinn Fein.
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