Labour fear of political annihilation motivates deferral of Water Tax

Labour Leader Eamon Gilmore’s announcement of the deferral of water charges from next January is prompted wholly by the party’s fear of annihilation at the Local and Euro Parliament Elections in 2014. The absence of meters did not prevent the Labour / Fine Gael Coalition from introducing water charges in 1983 nor again their reintroduction in Dublin in 1994.

Labour Leader Eamon Gilmore’s announcement of the deferral of water charges from next January is prompted wholly by the party’s fear of annihilation at the Local and Euro Parliament Elections in 2014. The absence of meters did not prevent the Labour / Fine Gael Coalition from introducing water charges in 1983 nor again their reintroduction in Dublin in 1994.

However if the Government persists with the Property Tax in the teeth of overwhelming opposition and resistance, Labour will face a wipeout anyway. This is more certain to be the case if the Campaign Against Home & Water Taxes mounts a nationwide slate of anti-Property Tax / anti-austerity candidates in the 2014 elections.

Both Labour and Fine Gael should learn from the major campaign of Boycott of water charges when reintroduced in the Dublin County Council areas in 1994, coupled with massive political pressure which saw both parties heavily defeated in the Dublin West Bye election in April 1996. The campaign of boycott, mass resistance  and political pressure forced the then Labour / Fine Gael Government to abolish water charges nationally in December 1996.


Note: Joe Higgins was Chairman of the Federation of Dublin Anti Water Charges Campaigns, 1994 -1997, which led the successful campaign for the abolition of water charges and was the candidate supported by the campaign in the April 1996, Dublin West Bye election, finishing with  11,384 votes to Brian Lenihan Junior, 11,753

 

1996 by-election: Dublin West[13]
Party Candidate 1st Pref % Seat Count
Fianna Fáil Brian Lenihan, Jnr 6,995 24.6 1 11
Independent Joe Higgins[20] 6,743 23.7
Fine Gael Tom Morrissey 3,728 13.1
Workers’ Party Tomás Mac Giolla 2,909 10.2
Green Party Paul Gogarty 1,286 4.5
Sinn Féin John McCann 1,574 5.5
Progressive Democrats Sheila Terry 1,314 4.6
Independent Vincent Jackson 1,131 4.0
Labour Party Michael O’Donovan 1,058 3.7
Christian Solidarity Gerard Casey 768 2.7
Independent Sean Lyons 514 1.8
Independent John O’Halloran 369 1.3
Independent Benny Cooney 21 0.1
Electorate: 62,534 Valid: 28,410 Quota: 14,206 Turnout: 45.4%4

 

 

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Left wins majority on General Council of North’s largest union

Next Article

Margaret Thatcher is dead - Now let's bury her politics

Related Posts
Read More

Net activism: The “Kony 2012” phenomena

Seldom before has an idea spread so quickly across the world. Within days tens of millions watched Invisible Children’s “KONY 2012” video as it went viral across the internet and social media. Shocked at the story of killing, rape and child soldiers, demands multiplied that “something must be done” against Joseph Kony and the brutal Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) he leads in eastern and central Africa.

Read More

The other 9/11 – The Pinochet Coup in Chile 1973

The capitalist media and commentators have given great emphasis to discussing the consequences and lessons of the 9/11 attacks on the Twin Towers in New York a decade ago. Yet this was not the first ‘9/11’. Following the first 9/11, thousands were slaughtered and thousands more tortured and suffered the horrific consequences which followed. This slaughter took place not in the US but in Chile on September 11th 1973. It was planned and executed not from the tribal territories of Afghanistan or Pakistan but in the head-quarters of the CIA and the White House, in collusion with the ruling elite in Chile and its armed forces. This 9/11 should be commemorated, and its lessons studied, by socialists and workers everywhere.