Showing posts with label press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label press. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 October 2010

Irish Daily Mail article

Aiden Corkery, a journalist from the Irish Daily Mail picked up a tweet I posted regarding a hate site targeting Senator David Norris two days ago and published an article in today's paper. It's not available online so I've typed out the piece below.

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Norris targeted by hate-filled anti-gay site

A WEBSITE containing homophobic remarks has been created to attack the presidential bid of gay rights campaigner David Norris.

Despite appearing under the apparently pro-Norris name of davidnorris4president.com, the website repeatedly refers to Mr Norris' homosexuality.

It claims that homosexuality is a 'lifestyle which is often associated with sexual promiscuity' and that there is 'no genetic evidence' to support being gay.

'David has embraced a lifestyle which is blatantly out of line with traditional biblical morality,' it states. The slickly-designed site encourages fans to visit campaignforconscience.org, which contains even stronger attacks on the gay community.

And it describes homosexuality as a 'self-destructive lifestyle' as well as criticising the recent Civil Partnership legislation that allows homosexual couples to have their relationships legally recognised for the first time.

Both websites appear to have been created by conservative Christians Seán and Martina Burke who have a family of ten children in Castlebar, Co Mayo. They held a series of protests outside the Dáil in the run-up to the Civil Partnership legislation.

Last night, family spokesman Enoch Burke declined to comment when contacted by the Irish Daily Mail. The existence of the website was highlighted by Labour councillor Dermot Looney.

Mr Looney - who is supporting Labour's Michael D Higgins for the presidency - said he was sickened by the site. 'It reminds me a lot of the attack-style campaigning by the Republican party in the US,' he said.

Tuesday, 21 April 2009

The Hidden Interview

I was recently contacted by a local 'paper and asked the following questions. In the end, I had to cut my answers to about a third of what is here, but I thought I'd share my full answers with the readers of this blog. I think it gives a reasonable articulation of my campaign for election here in Tallaght Central.

I'll make sure to upload the final article to see how our campaign compares with other candidates'.

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Why did you decide to run for election? I am involved in politics because I want a radical change for my local community, my country and the world. As a socialist, I believe that the political balance at all levels needs to be shifted away from big business and the powerful, and back to working people and those excluded from society. I believe I can best represent that political viewpoint - and the values to which it aspires - by representing local people at Council level, where so many of the crucial decisions that affect our lives are made.

What is your political history? I have been politically active for more than a decade across local, national and international campaigns. I played an active part in the movement against the war in Iraq and have been particularly involved in human rights campaigns for Palestine and Colombia. I have been active in national campaigns against racism and defending our natural resources from multinational control. Most recently, as a primary school teacher, I have led a campaign entitled "Putting Kids First" which has involved schools and parents in fighting against class size increases and special needs cutbacks. Locally, I am leading the campaign for appropriate development at the McHugh's site in Greenhills and successfully worked with local residents to fend off speculative landgrabs in Greenpark. I joined the Labour Party aged 20 in 2003, and was Chair of the UCD Labour Party and National Communications Office of Labour Youth before joining the Greenhills/Willie Cremins Branch. At 26, this the first time I have stood for election - a point I believe is positive, given the fresh ideas and young person's perspective I bring to this election.

What changes do you plan on making? I am acutely aware of the limited powers of local Councillors, as well as the need to work with other elected representatives and council officials to enact real changes. Politicians are famous for drawing up wishlists they could never possibly enact. My ideas are fiercely ambitious but grounded in reality. I'm also mindful that much of my immediate priorities will be geared towards defending existing services - fighting cutbacks in local schools, Tallaght Hospital, Dublin Bus and other public services. I want to change the Council's housing policy so that more social homes are built, affordable houses are made truly affordable, and a new "Rent to Buy" scheme is adopted by the Council, under which single people or couples can rent a home from the Council with the option of buying it later on, with that same rent money going to pay off the deposit. I also want the Council to be at the heart of a new jobs policy for our community - making sure existing jobs are kept here, and creating new, sustainable employment for local people. Many of these can be delivered under some of the schemes the Labour Party have outlined such as our "Earn and Learn Scheme," where a person can work 3 days a week and is supported in college for two.

Why should people vote for you? Local people are fed up of Fianna Fáil and their disastrous politics. But rather than a change from Fianna Fáil to Fine Gael - from Podge to Rodge - I offer a real alternative. I bring both passion and principle as a young candidate, as well as huge experience in the kind of political campaigns we will need in the time ahead - defending public services, fighting cutbacks and developing communities. There is a fairer, better way to beat the recession, save and create sustainable jobs, and re-energise our local area with community spirit and solidarity - and I want to be at the heart of that as a local Councillor.

Tuesday, 30 September 2008

"Enough is Enough" Campaign hits the front page of the Southside People

Carrying on from the post below, I know it isn't possible to read the Southside People article - the paper's simply too big for my scanner!

So you can read it here, in this different scan - or you can see it online at http://www.dublinpeople.com/content/view/1064/57/ .

It appeared on the front page of the 24th September issue under the headline "Council given deadline on derelict site." For coverage in the Tallaght Voice, see the post immediately before this.