Monthly Archives: January 2013

The Launch of The Kenmare “Gangs of New York” Gathering this Friday 6pm in The Central Bar 109 East 9th Street, Manhattan, New York with special guests Niall O’Dowd and Tony award winning actor Brian Dennehy

Kenmare Gangs of New York Gathering

Throughout 2013, Ireland will open its arms to hundreds of thousands, of friends and family from all over the world, calling them home to gatherings in villages, towns and cities. The Gathering Ireland 2013 provides the perfect excuse to reach out to those who have moved away, their relatives, friends and descendants.
My home-town of Kenmare, Co. Kerry will be hosting the:

Kenmare ‘Gangs of New York’ Gathering, “Triumph over Adversity”

The Central Bar in 109 East 9th Street, Manhattan, New York on the

Friday the 18th of January at 6pm New York, January 18th 2013.

The event will commemorate the forced emigration of five thousand tenants from the Lansdowne estate in Kenmare shortly after the Great Famine of the 1845- 1850. Many of the emigrants settled in the Five Points area on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, as depicted in Martin Scorcese’s “Gangs of New York”. Here they encountered much hardship, but persevered to triumph adversity and integrate into Irish American life, helping build the nation as it stands today.

We will particularly be celebrating the life and legacy of Senator “Big” Tim O’Sullivan, whose mother, was a Lansdowne tenant, and after whom he named a Manhattan street, Kenmare Street.

I would personally like to invite you to join us in New York on the 18th of January for the event which will be held in Kenmare man Giles Cooper’s bar, The Central Bar in 109 East 9th Street, Manhattan, New York on the Friday the 18th of January at 6pm it is sure to be an enjoyable evening of remembrance and celebration of the history of Irish emigration globally.

Please let us know if you are able to attend the event. Brian Dennehy and Niall O’Dowd, both great friends of Kenmare, will be in attendance. If there is anyone you would like to invite, please feel free to let me know.
Finally, as part of The Gathering, a ‘Gangs of New York’ festival will be held in Kenmare, the provisional date being August 31st 2013. It would be wonderful if you were able to make the trip and join us in Kenmare for the celebrations.
For a more in-depth history of the life of Big Tim O’Sullivan, please find below a link to a radio documentary on Kenmare Street, aired on RTÉ Radio One on December 1st 2012.

http://www.rte.ie/radio1/doconone/documentary-podcast-kenmare-street-lansdown-estate-kenmare-big-tim-sullivan.html

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Give emigrants right to vote

Our citizens abroad deserve to have their say, says Senator Mark Daly

By Senator Mark Daly

Monday, January 14, 2013

http://www.irishexaminer.com/analysis/give-emigrants-right-to-vote-219478.html

IRELAND has now assumed the presidency of the EU so it should come as no surprise that we find ourselves ready and willing to talk about jobs and economic growth but not a word will be said about Ireland’s dismal record when it comes to voting rights for her own citizens. Ireland does not allow the 800,000 Irish citizens living overseas or in Northern Ireland the right to vote. The real scandal is that we accept as a given this peculiar system of citizenship that distorts the very meaning of the Republic.

Ireland is not only bankrupted economically but we are a Third World nation when it comes to sustaining democracy. It is more than ironic that former president Mary McAleese, whose allegiance to Ireland is unquestionable, was denied the right to vote for so many years because she was born and lived in Belfast.

It is also ironic that 184 years after Daniel O’Connell, the Great Emancipator, secured the right to vote for Catholics, 95 years after the franchise was extended to women and over 45 years after nationalists marched in Derry for ‘One Man One Vote’ that Ireland continues to disenfranchise 2.6m people who are entitled to be citizens. This number includes those 1.8m living in Northern Ireland and those who are Irish passport holders living overseas (800,000). This figure constitutes 36% of all those who are entitled to be citizens of the Republic.

Consider the facts. Only four out of the 33 members in the Council of Europe do not afford their citizens living abroad the right to participate in elections at home. In contrast, over 115 of the 196 nations in the world have enfranchised their citizens living abroad. Many nations that deny the vote are either military dictatorships or nations where elections are neither free nor fair.

The record shows that for every two people born in Ireland one emigrated. Compared to the domestic population of 4.6m in the Republic, Ireland has the largest diaspora in the world relative to its domestic population, standing at 70m people of Irish heritage of which 800,000 hold Irish passports — a number that is just below the combined total of those living in the cities of Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick and Waterford.

By virtue of Articles 2 and 3 of the Constitution anyone of the 1.8m people born in the North is entitled to Irish citizenship. But can they vote? Surely not because they live in Newry, Derry and Belfast and their votes might actually change the political landscape for the better?

The Constitutional Convention which will soon be debating the extension of the right to vote to citizens outside the State in presidential elections is taking a step in the right direction. However, allowing a third of our citizens the right to vote only once every seven years (or five years depending on the outcome of the deliberations of the conventions) is too small a step.

In other countries, citizens living abroad are generally less directly or continuously concerned with or affected by the day-to-day problems of a country. This is not the case in Ireland where the 46,500 citizens who emigrated in 2012 would argue that they had to leave because the economic and political system failed them. Yet we deny them the most basic form of democratic engagement.

The reality is that we are perfectly accepting of a one-sided relationship with the diaspora. Gabriel Byrne was making this point very recently — we want the remittances, the investments and all the tourist dollars we can get from The Gathering, but we are unwilling to give much in return. A vote, surely not!

WE are at a point in time when Ireland must mature and fulfil the democratic aspirations of all of our citizens. As a first step we must allow all Irish citizens the right to vote in our presidential elections including Irish citizens in Northern Ireland. Second, we should follow the example of our European colleagues and allow citizens living abroad some form of parliamentary representation. Portugal, for example, where 20% of the electorate live overseas, allows its citizens living abroad to vote in the Assembly of the Republic elections. However, these voters are confined to voting for just 4 of the 230 seats.

Tourism minister Leo Varadkar made a proposal to extend the franchise to the Irish overseas, but we need many more leaders to step forward to speak on their behalf. However the political establishment is unlikely to allow those 2.6m people living outside the State to decide the outcome of Dáil seats and thus the Government.

In the French Senate there are 12 senators elected to represent French nationals living abroad.

In an Irish context a reformed Irish Senate is one possible and practicable option that would ensure that Irish citizens who live abroad and in Northern Ireland have a voice in Leinster House.

The new proposal ‘Open it Don’t Close it’ by Michael McDowell, Joe O’Toole, Noel Wheelan and Senators Zappone and Quinn suggest measures to transform Seanad Éireann without the need for constitutional amendment. This proposal states that “electors not resident in the state and/or specially those resident in Northern Ireland to be entitled to vote for some or all of the seats on some or all of the panels”.

Ireland is economically bankrupt, but we also have a democratic deficit as well that we must address. We also need to acknowledge the bankruptcy of our democracy. If we are to strengthen our Republic for the long term we must couple economic reform with voting rights reform.

* Senator Mark Daly is the first spokesperson for the Irish overseas and the diaspora

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Kerry families begin to feel the pain of Budget cuts – Daly

Families across Co Kerry will soon begin to feel the pain of a range of cutbacks and new taxes in Budget 2013, Fianna Fáil Senator Mark Daly has warned.

According to Senator Daly, it is lower and middle income families, and particularly those with young children, who will bear the brunt of the cuts that begin to take effect from this month.

“The reality of a budget that was riddled with broken promises and deeply unfair cuts will hit home in households across Co Kerry in the coming weeks,” said Senator Daly.

“I have spoken to many people here over the Christmas period who already feel they have been squeezed from every angle and they are genuinely worried about how they will cope with more cuts in their household budgets this year.  The bottom line is that the package of measures in Budget 2013 amounted to an attack on lower and middle income families who are already struggling to keep their heads above water.

“While the well-off are protected, it is young families across the country who will pay the most. They will soon see their child benefit cut, the clothing and footwear allowance cut and maternity benefit taxed. And as if this wasn’t enough, they will be expected to pay hundreds of euro a year in property taxes on a home they cannot afford as it is.

“More than a quarter of all mortgage holders are now in difficulty and this Government has not lifted a finger to help them.  There was not a single measure in the budget to help people who are struggling with their mortgage. Instead, the Government is slapping a tax on the family home at the worst possible time. I have been contacted by many householders over the past weeks and months who cannot pay their basic bills as it is and they just can’t understand how the Government expects them to pay taxes on their family home on top of everything else.

“It is not any one of these measures in isolation – it is the combination of new cuts and taxes this year that will push many families into severe difficulty. People here understand that tough decisions had to be made in this budget. What they cannot understand is why ordinary families, lower income workers and carers were targeted for the brunt of the pain while Fine Gael looks after big earners.”

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The Government is masterminding another shambles: as Revenue Commissioners say they will issue “indicative value” and home owners will also be able to self assess says Senator Mark Daly

The Government is masterminding another shambles: as Revenue Commissioners says they will issue “indicative value”  and also says home owners will be able to self assess according to Fianna Fail Senator and former auctioneer Mark Daly

It is not credible or feasible that the Revenue Commissioners can accurately give an ‘indicative value’ of every house in the country within a matter of weeks. This will lead to wide spread variations of values especially in rural areas.

“There will be houses which will be valued too low and too high by the Revenue” said the Kerry Senator.

The owners who feel the “indicative value” issued to them by Revenue is too high will still be able to self assess, and put in an alternative value. However those who deviate from the provided estimates face the prospect of checks, inspections and challenges from the Revenue.

“The Government is presiding over another shambles, what they are doing is putting an indicative value on homes without any professional valuation being done. There is no way this property tax will be accurate or credible. The indicative value issued by Revenue will not be able to accurately take into account the condition of the house and the advantages or disadvantages of particular locations”.

A homeowner whose house should be in the lowest valuation band (under €100,000 ) but is placed by Revenue in the €100,000 to €150,000 will be paying nearly €500 too much in property tax for the first few years of the new tax’.

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Best of luck to Notre Dame University in their Championship game against Alabama

Coach Kelly of Notre Dame was presented with a Certificate of Irish Heritage by Senator Mark Daly. Coach Kelly was the 3rd ever person to receive the Certificate of Irish Heritage.

Senator Daly with Coach Kelly

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