Inconceivable
That Taoiseach Did Not Know About Rampant Fianna Fail Corruption
Joe Higgins
TD, Socialist Party
During
today's Statements on the Mahon Tribunal, Joe Higgins called for a full
dail debate on corruption, and for the Taoiseach to stop hiding behind
the tribunals to avoid answering questions about his knowledge of corruption
in the Fianna Fail party.
Joe
Higgins: It is clear that obvious corruption should be debated
in Dáil Éireann today. When these issues arise in the future,
the Taoiseach must not again reach for the tribunals, as he usually does,
as a handy prophylactic to protect himself from legitimate questions which
should be put in the House. Corruption went to the heart of the leadership
of the Fianna Fáil Party in the 1980s and early 1990s. It is obvious
there is corruption in Fianna Fáil when a property developer who
survived the bruising world of the Murphys and the McAlpines in London
left a meeting of senior Fianna Fáil Ministers in 1989, thinking
he had been to see the more dysfunctional wing of the Corleone clan. While
Mr. Gilmartin may not have had his legs crushed on the way out, he was
certainly arm-twisted for lots of cash.
When I became a member of Dublin County Council in 1991, everyone knew
that planning corruption was rife. I and others shouted "Stop",
while no one in Fianna Fáil did so. The Taoiseach was a treasurer,
Chief Whip and senior Minister of Fianna Fáil, and became the party
leader. He found his way around the Fianna Fáil Party as easily
as a worn wheel around a greasy axle.
It beggars belief that the Taoiseach did not know about the blatant greed
that his senior Cabinet colleagues and county council colleagues were
guilty of. Senior members of Fianna Fáil were not shocked by the
corruption of the 1980s because there was no dividing line in Fianna Fáil
between the greed of senior Ministers and the businessmen who paid them
off on the one hand, and the management of the affairs of State on the
other. How could it be otherwise in a party which hired out the plushest
Dublin hotel suites, where party fundraisers officially accepted the fat
envelopes, referred to as political donations, from tycoons and financiers?
This was legalised bribery whereby the rich and powerful bought from Fianna
Fáil the influence to become richer and more powerful.
Substantial elements in the political and business establishment in the
Ireland of the 1980s and 1990s were swimming in a sea of sleaze and corruption.
They made fortunes from corruption and saved fortunes in tax evasion,
but there were victims - the struggling working class communities floundering
in misplanned housing estates without facilities and sometimes as a result
without hope, as well as the poor, the old and the sick, whose hospital
beds were virtually snatched from beneath them. Those who thrived in that
morass of sleaze, some of whom remain as Cabinet Ministers today, should
join those who have been found out, and resign. If they do not, the people
should deal a crushing indictment on 11 June to all elements of the political
establishment who have cheated them, and should also take down the hapless
Progressive Democrats, who have no more bark or bite and who now seem
eternally locked in the inseparable but deadly embrace of Fianna Fáil.
For
further information, contact Joe Higgins T.D. at (01) 6183038
Email: joe.higgins@oireachtas.irlgov.ie
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