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Dáil Éireann díospóireacht -
Thursday, 21 Sep 2023

Vol. 1042 No. 4

Gnó na Dála - Business of Dáil

Before going to the sos, I want to make a brief comment about yesterday. It is a matter that has been discussed this morning at the Business Committee. The service has had early-morning discussions, with our new Superintendent and with An Garda Síochána, about the events that took place outside the House yesterday. Events outside the House do not fall within our direct responsibility and it is a matter for the management of An Garda Síochána. However, what happened yesterday was without precedent. It was a fundamental attack on democracy. The people out there appear to me have had nothing to offer, only the promotion of hate. We talk about attacks on politicians but 1,200 people work here and 220 of us are politicians. The people who suffered abuse yesterday came from all walks of life: civil servants, political staff, political advisers, journalists, and the whole spectrum. What happened was particularly vile and vicious. The people who were involved in that offer nothing of any benefit to any cause they might espouse, however worthwhile or questionable, and the cause they serve is more likely to be questionable.

The service has already engaged this morning with An Garda Síochána and I am meeting the assistant commissioner this afternoon. In May of last year the Cathaoirleach of the Seanad and I, having consulted many Members, predominantly female Members, established a task force under the superb chairmanship of the former Garda Commissioner, Nóirín O'Sullivan, to look at safe participation in public life. It has been meeting assiduously since last May and it is meeting today. It will come up with a set of - I hope - implementable proposals by the end of December. We can never see again happen what happened outside yesterday because it is an attack on democracy and if unchallenged and allowed to proceed it will bring us to a point that we saw in the United States in the aftermath of the last presidential election. It cannot be allowed to continue.

I also want to advise the House also that, conscious of what has been happening and of the pressure that Members have been under, Members know that we have introduced the security allowance to help Members in their constituency and to help them provide for the safety of their staff. There has been little uptake on that, incidentally. Also, in the immediate aftermath of the recess I had a lengthy meeting the Garda Commissioner, Drew Harris, to draw his attention to the pressure that Members are under and to the concern that Members have for their staff and families, none of whom has signed up to take the abuse they are getting.

I believe the Minister wants to make a comment.

On behalf of the Government I want to thank An Ceann Comhairle for those remarks and I wholeheartedly agree with him. I thank him for the swift action he has taken. There is not a word he has said that I do not agree with but I want to thank the staff here, the ushers and An Garda Síochána for the work they did so professionally yesterday. They went above and beyond; let us be straight about it. While you will see this morning that we will not always agree on everything in this House, I will always defend the right of someone to have their say, and this is the democratic Chamber and these are the people elected by the people. To have a situation whereby people are hindered from going into the Houses of the Oireachtas, where people are going about their parliamentary business, is an attack on democracy. Yesterday was not a protest; that was thuggish behaviour. Protests are welcome here. We have all gone out and met protestors at various different things, raising points on behalf of people, families and their communities, but what we saw yesterday was unprecedented. On behalf of the Government I want to thank An Ceann Comhairle for his swift action and I want to thank An Garda Síochána and our staff here as well. An Ceann Comhairle can be assured of any support we need to give to support him in those endeavours.

On a separate matter completely, which I wanted to mention at the start of my contribution, and I hope An Ceann Comhairle will indulge me, a good friend and colleague who worked in Leinster House, Councillor Damien O'Reilly, unfortunately died very suddenly. We all knew Damien. I know this would not usually be the case but Damien worked here as a parliamentary assistant to Senator Davitt. He was such a pleasant, honest and hardworking guy. He was a young family man and he was taken far too soon. His funeral is happening as we are in the Dáil and hence many of us cannot attend but I want to pass on my personal sympathies and the sympathies of my party and Government colleagues to his family, his fiancée, his young daughter and his extended family and the community in County Meath, who have lost a magnificent councillor and a dedicated public representative.

I thank the Minister and I am sure we all agree with that.

Cuireadh an Dáil ar fionraí ar 1.19 p.m. agus cuireadh tús leis arís ar 2 p.m.
Sitting suspended at 1.19 p.m. and resumed at 2 p.m.
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