Fine Gael votes in favour of coalition deal
Published: 12:20, 26 June 2020
Updated: 16:32, 26 June 2020
Four fifths of Fine Gael’s electoral college have voted to enter coalition Government with Fianna Fail and the Green Party in Ireland.
Delegates representing different parts of Taoiseach Leo Varadkar’s party backed the proposed programme of government agreed with the leaders of historic rivals Fianna Fail and the Green Party by 80% to 20%.
Members of the parliamentary party and its ruling Executive Council delivered the greatest levels of support compared to 57% of local representatives.
The total vote cast was 674.
Counting of the votes of Fianna Fail and Green Party members is under way.
It has been 134 days since Ireland’s inconclusive general election.
Fianna Fail, Fine Gael and the minority Green Party are attempting to secure grassroots backing for a proposed administration promising radical action on climate change.
The two larger parties need the support of the Greens to have a working majority in the Irish parliament, equating to around 80 seats.
All eyes are on the Green Party as some members have indicated they will vote against the agreement, citing concerns about emissions and housing targets.
It needs the approval of two-thirds of its 2,000 members as opposed to a simple majority for Fianna Fail and Fine Gael.
If the programme is endorsed, it would see Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin, whose party has the most seats, become the next Irish premier.
Outgoing premier Mr Varadkar said on Thursday night that he believed the deal would get over the line.
He said: “My view is the three parties will vote to go into coalition with each other and that the yes vote will be larger than people expect and that we will have a new government on Saturday.”
Any administration will face an uphill task to restore an economy steered into recession by the coronavirus pandemic and government formation talks have been delayed by the emergency.
Sinn Fein won the popular vote in last winter’s general election in what its leader termed a “revolution in the ballot box”.
A shortage of candidates on the ballot paper in the proportional representation vote meant its 37 seats trailed those of rivals in Dublin’s Dail parliament.
Attempts by party president Mary Lou McDonald to secure a coalition of the left have floundered.
Sinn Fein enjoyed a surge in support from young people discontented over lack of affordable housing.
The party’s historic links to the IRA have always hampered its progress among older voters and coloured the decision of Fianna Fail and Fine Gael not to enter government with them.
Those two parties have for decades swapped power between them during change elections and harbour constitutional divisions dating back to the civil war a century ago.
Following months of negotiations, their leaders agreed to enter coalition together in an historic shift.
It would promote a clear ideological divide on the economy with an opposition dominated by left-wing voices, of which Sinn Fein’s would carry the strongest mandate.
Laws enabling the non-jury Special Criminal Court to continue trying suspected gangland criminals and dissident republicans could lapse at the end of this month should the deal to form a government be rejected.
Another general election is also a possibility.
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