Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin says his party has made “a policy decision” not to enter coalition government with Sinn Fein after Ireland’s general election.
Current polling shows the three largest parties – Fine Gael, Fianna Fail and Sinn Fein – in a three-way tie.
In the third of our leader interviews ahead of Friday’s vote, Mr Martin told Sky News that Sinn Fein’s housing strategy would “crucify first-time buyers”.
He said: “They want to get rid of the help-to-buy scheme and the first home bridge-the-gap scheme.
“If you put them together, they can give up to €80,000 to a first-time buyer.”
“Sinn Fein’s housing policies would mean delay, disruption and higher prices at the end of the day,” he added.
With nearly 15,000 people in emergency accommodation, compared to just over 10,000 in 2020, housing has dominated the campaign.
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Sinn Fein will demand referendum
Asked why the crisis had deepened while his party had been in coalition with Fine Gael over the last four years, he replied: “We need to do more.
“We acknowledge the serious challenges facing us, but we have the better policies.
“125,000 houses were built over the last four years, so Fianna Fail did take the portfolio, we did change momentum on housing,” he added.
Mr Martin, who was taoiseach for the first half of the outgoing coalition’s term, currently serves as tanaiste (deputy prime minister) and foreign affairs minister.
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Irish PM speaks to Sky News
He said he understood the concerns people have about “the very significant increase in those seeking asylum in this country” and vowed to establish a new department of domestic affairs to address it.
He said: “My focus is on uniting people, Protestant, Catholic and dissenter, and that’s always been my creed.
“I put practical flesh on the bones of that when I became taoiseach, when I set up the Shared Island Initiative, the most consequential initiative since the Good Friday Agreement.
“We put €1bn behind that initiative to get a lot of projects done. To me, that’s the pragmatic flesh on the bone.
“Let’s build reconciliation. We’ve had enough of rhetoric and all these calls Sinn Fein go on about.
“We’ve had that for 75 years. It didn’t achieve a whole lot, but it’s about getting behind reconciliation. It’s about people.”
Watch Micheal Martin’s interview in full on Politics Hub with Sophy Ridge. Sky News has also interviewed the Fine Gael and Sinn Fein leaders.
A hostile environment era deportation policy for criminals is being expanded by the Labour government as it continues its migration crackdown.
The government wants to go further in extraditing foreign offenders before they have a chance to appeal by including more countries in the existing scheme.
Offenders that have a human right appeal rejected will get offshored, and further appeals will then get heard from abroad.
It follows the government announcing on Saturday that it wants to deport criminals as soon as they are sentenced.
The “deport now, appeal later” policy was first introduced when Baroness Theresa May was home secretary in 2014 as part of the Conservative government’s hostile environment policy to try and reduce migration.
It saw hundreds of people returned to a handful of countries like Kenya and Jamaica under Section 94B of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002, added in via amendment.
In 2017, a Supreme Court effectively stopped the policy from being used after it was challenged on the grounds that appealing from abroad was not compliant with human rights.
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However, in 2023, then home secretary Suella Braverman announced she was restarting the policy after providing more facilities abroad for people to lodge their appeals.
Now, the current government says it is expanding the partnership from eight countries to 23.
Previously, offenders were being returned to Finland, Nigeria, Estonia, Albania, Belize, Mauritius, Tanzania and Kosovo for remote hearings.
Angola, Australia, Botswana, Brunei, Bulgaria, Canada, Guyana, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Latvia, Lebanon, Malaysia, Uganda and Zambia are the countries being added – with the government wanting to include more.
Image: Theresa May’s hostile environment policy proved controversial. Pic: PA
The Home Office claims this is the “the government’s latest tool in its comprehensive approach to scaling up our ability to remove foreign criminals”, touting 5,200 removals of foreign offenders since July 2024 – an increase of 14% compared with the year before.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: “Those who commit crimes in our country cannot be allowed to manipulate the system, which is why we are restoring control and sending a clear message that our laws must be respected and will be enforced.”
Foreign Secretary David Lammy said: “We are leading diplomatic efforts to increase the number of countries where foreign criminals can be swiftly returned, and if they want to appeal, they can do so safely from their home country.
“Under this scheme, we’re investing in international partnerships that uphold our security and make our streets safer.”
Both ministers opposed the hostile environment policy when in opposition.
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In 2015, Sir Keir Starmer had questioned whether such a policy was workable – saying in-person appeals were the norm for 200 years and had been a “highly effective way of resolving differences”.
He also raised concerns about the impact on children if parents were deported and then returned after a successful appeal.
In today’s announcement, the prime minister’s administration said it wanted to prevent people from “gaming the system” and clamp down on people staying in the UK for “months or years” while appeals are heard.
TRM Labs says the Embargo ransomware group has moved over $34 million in ransom-linked crypto since April, targeting US hospitals and critical infrastructure.