Carlow/Kilkenny By Election- Vote no.1 Conor McLiam

Reject austerity & water charges

By Paddy Delaney

The months of April and May will see every home in the country receive their first bill for water charges from Irish Water. The key to defeating the charges lies in non-payment. However there is also opportunity in this period to ratchet up the pressure in the coming month and a half.

In the midst of the bills dropping, the Carlow-Kilkenny bye-election will take place – most likely on 22 May – to fill the seat vacated by Phil Hogan after he took up his role with the European Commission. This gifts the people of Carlow and Kilkenny with a unique opportunity to deal a double blow to Irish Water and the government by not only building a mass boycott of the bills but to use the election itself to elect a candidate who advocates and organises non-payment.

The Anti Austerity Alliance has selected Socialist Party member Conor MacLiam to contest the bye-election. Conor has a history of organising against unjust home taxes and founded the Kilkenny branch of the Campaign Against Household & Water Taxes in 2011. Unlike Sinn Féin, who do not call for a boycott, Conor has been a consistent and outspoken advocate for non-payment as the key to defeating the water charges and his bye-election challenge has received the endorsement of the local ‘We Won’t Pay’ campaign in which he is active.

In a crowded field where many candidates will claim opposition to water charges, the people of Carlow and Kilkenny should elect Conor MacLiam as the clear non-payment candidate and send another loud message of opposition to water charges, austerity and this hated government.

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

The assault on public services continues

Next Article

A rage in Baltimore: The aftermath of Freddie Gray's death

Related Posts
Read More

Varadkar please vamoose!

“I know one or two women... who probably don’t make very much money at all from working but they do it to keep their position on the career ladder, if you like. That’s a legitimate thing to do but if you can’t pay your mortgage as a result or you can’t buy your groceries as a result well then that’s something that needs to be taken into account in any insolvency arrangement.” This is the backward position of Minister Leo Varadkar commenting on upcoming insolvency legislation.

Read More

Property Tax imposed

Bitter resentment is the over-riding feeling of the majority of people who have felt compelled to pay the property tax.  Successive polls have shown mass opposition to this home tax. Unfortunately, people clearly lacked confidence about refusing to pay as their form of protest.