Jack Horgan-Jones and Harry McGee join Hugh Linehan to look back on the week in politics:
- This week saw the European Parliament approve a € 90 billion package to support Ukraine in its defensive war against Russia. The loan was approved by a comfortable majority, but among those who voted against it were Sinn Féin’s two MEPs, Lynn Boylan and Kathleen Funchion. The decision to oppose the measure put them in the company of the likes of Germany’s Alternative für Deutschland, Hungary’s Fidesz and France’s Rassemblement National.
- The Government has made a U-turn on the regulation of short-term lets here. After consultation with the tourism industry, Minister for Enterprise Peter Burke decided to change the previous plan to restrict such lets in towns with populations of more than 10,000 to populations of at least 20,000, this move would effectively lift the threat of regulation from potentially thousands of Airbnbs across rural towns here.
- The mood was buoyant at the Social Democrat national conference in Cork with the afterglow of Catherine Connolly’s presidential election win in evidence, along with polls showing the party has begun to put daylight between itself and the Greens and Labour, who occupy the same political space. Are they about to spearhead a united left movement ahead of the next general election?
- Plus, sport and politics collide ahead of the Republic of Ireland’s Nations League fixtures against Israel in the autumn. There have been calls for a boycott, but the FAI confirmed on Thursday that the matches would go ahead as planned.
Plus, the panel picks their favourite Irish Times pieces of the week:
- Jeff Buckley lives on thanks to TikTok and Amy Berg’s upcoming documentary about the late singer, Troy Parrott’s heroics in Budapest could scupper Viktor Orban’s hopes of re-election, and the Taoiseach’s decision to name Stakeknife in the Dáil on Wednesday highlights the absurd position taken by the UK government in not formally identifying him.
























