Tuesday, 30 June 2015

Beyond Protest, a new deal.


I am writing this on the day Syrizia in Greece reaffirmed their commitment to democracy by putting the question of a bailout to their own people by means of a referendum. For better or for worse, they have handed the power and the responsibility to the people. That is precisely what a democratic government should do.

Jean Claude Junker, President of the European Commission called it “a betrayal”.



There has been a funny shift in the way governments are run in the West over the last four decades, a shift away from respecting the voter as rational humans and thinking of them pretty much as sheep; much like the previous rulers of Ireland the Catholic hierarchy thought of people; their flock.



No matter what the situation, once the Oireachtas is sealed, that’s it for the next five years. The party/parties with the majority will cling to power no matter what and to hell with the bigger picture of how the State and the people fare. In previous decades, it was possible for a government to collapse under the strain of no confidence rebellions from the opposition but those days of men and women of vision and conviction has been largely watered down by the extraordinary deal of winning a lifetime pension for all members of the Dáil and Seanad if an Oireachtas goes the full term.




Who is going to turn that down?

Is there an issue ongoing right now where even one sitting TD would stand up and declare no confidence in a Government budget knowing that they will have threatened the monies due to his/her colleagues as agree and voted upon in EVERY Oireachtas budget since the 1970’s?


Surely the sick situation of people waiting days and dying on trolleys in our overstretched and understaffed A&E departments; the ridiculous planning cartels in our councils and government whereby families are being thrown out onto the street simply because TDs are themselves massive landlords; the ongoing joke of party affiliates and supporters being employed at enormous expense on the public purse in quango positions where the task used to be the responsibility of elected officials; surely the insanity of more austerity heaped on top of a population barely able to meet their basic needs - surely that’s the issue that would cause a public representative to walk from his or her seat in the chamber and leave the Dáil in disgust.

Nope.

The cost of the banking crisis has been put on the people as a whole but also, the government has deployed all of its publicity and media budget to the task of convincing the public of Ireland that the crisis was somehow the Irish people’s fault in general and not the fault of a small cabal of well connected party investors (don’t call them donors, they expect a return on their investments).




By ‘the Government’ I mean the Fianna Fáil/Fine Gael axis which, despite all outbursts and verbal exchanges on Dáil TV do not differ from one another one jot when it comes to how to govern and who is ‘in charge’. It is NOT the electrorate!

This has, understandably led to the people feeling powerless, undermined and patronised. The response to a government who don’t allow the people a say in matters which will dominate their lives for many years to come is to stage a protest.

Now, we’ve seen many protests over the last five years and I imagine we’ll be seeing many more protests at local and national level. The government isn’t for turning on the issue of Austerity.


We’re coming into an election year, despite the ‘silly season’ opinion columns and guesstimates that we are reading in our newspapers. Whichever government is going to put their representatives on that stand opposite the portico of the GPO next Easter; they will want a mandate and not to be still
canvassing for votes. For all four ‘Civil War’ parties the centenary celebrations for the Rising in 1916 will be nothing more than a worldwide coronation for their successful election campaign.

You read that right: There is definitely an air of ‘coronation’ to this election. Whoever wins will enter the imaginations of observers all over the world as the ‘natural’ and ‘rightful’ government of Ireland. Both civil war parties know this and are determined to gain the magical number of seats.

There will be protests, marches, sit-ins, occupations and civil disobedience events.

There will be political arrests and vexatious charges brought through the courts.

There will be even more craven betrayals of the ideals of Bunreacht na hÉireann.

There will be slanders and character assassinations of good people who have had enough of misrule.

There will be a steady stream of monies denuded from our state to tax avoiding people who have no rights over these moneys but they know how to threaten, bribe and bully.

but

There will be no vision of how Ireland can move forward and thrive in the 21st Century.


So, beyond the protests and the demands for the truth as to what deals were made and who benefits from the monies brought in through bonds and promissory notes, allow me to introduce you to my party’s Strategy for Change and my personal vision how Ireland can ensure an open and transparent democracy for its people for another one hundred years.





The Irish Democratic Party’s Strategy for Change has fifteen points of direct action which we have all had the opportunity to vote on; here they are:


1 - The introduction and implementation of ‘Participatory Democracy’ into Irish politics where the elected official must consult with his/her electorate before decisions are made and vote in accordance with their wishes.

This is something my party is already doing now. We don’t ask anyone’s permission to make Participatory Democracy reality. We acknowledge that we have to implement Participatory Democracy first if its power of recall can be given to the Irish people. So we have done just that. Every IDP representative will negotiate with his or her constituency party and be subject to recall as of right now.

If an Irish Democratic Party representative doesn’t do as our party members have voted, he or she may be recalled by the party membership by means of a petition. Now wouldn’t that have come in useful over the last few years?





2 - An immediate stop to all repossessions and evictions from family homes until a fair and sustainable solution is achieved for every homeowner and an immediate repeal of the Land and Conveyancing Law Reform Bill 2013 that enables banks to fast track repossession of family homes.

And isn’t the wisdom of this item perfectly apparent in courtrooms up and down the country right now. Our legal and justice system has become top heavy with overeager registrars/sheriffs who really should reconsider their own legal position before enabling a resource grab on behalf of plaintiffs who clearly won’t cover them when the appeals process happens in earnest. And it will....that is a guarantee.





3 - A full independent banking inquiry with sanctions imposed for fraudulent or reckless behaviour of banks and legal action taken against anyone found to have broken any laws.

Let the punishment fit the crime. Wrong has been done, crimes have been committed, and billion dollar frauds have been enacted and enshrined in both the bank guarantee and the bailout. The main actors in this mess are still feeding on the public purse.

The spirit and the matter of our constitution has been violated by both civil war parties and we will call time on the privilege of members of the Oireachtas. Standing down is not punishment enough for vandalism against our constitutional rights.


4 - A write off of the odious debt that has been imposed on the Irish people and a repeal of the promissory note put forward as collateral by the Government.

Let’s get this one clear: nobody received a mandate to impoverish the country in favour of any banks, ministers, developers, magnates, or European Commissioners. Nobody, dead or alive, enjoyed the legal or political authority to go against the letter of the constitution when it comes to how the nation finances itself.



Odious debt is not enforceable by law as it represents a contract taken under duress.


5 - The rescinding and renegotiation of the contracts signed by previous Governments which grossly undervalued our natural resources to the detriment of the Irish economy!

Well, there have been a few doozys haven’t there? 420 Billion euro of offshore gas and oil resources literally handed over to the state oil company of Norway and Royal Dutch Shell. Land that is Irish now lies in European and private hands to the point that Irish people cannot make use of it under ‘environmental concerns’, and most awful of all, the overt racist and anti-patriotic attitude of NAMA and NTMA where it comes to selling off Ireland’s distressed housing stock. All are unconstitutional when one reads Article 11 regarding revenues and royalties of Irish resources.





6 - Total reform of civil and public service with the emphasis on full accountability to the Irish people, with provision for ‘Recall’ for anyone paid from public funds.

In our hospitals, people who spend more than a week in wards are called ‘bed blockers’ – mostly these people are old and vulnerable and have no safe place to live due to their families not having the means to support them or having already emigrated to seek a better life.

The true ‘bed blockers’ are the senior civil servants and consultants to each department who look to continue on a gravy train many years after their effectiveness has waned. They are the ‘career blockers’ to younger, brighter, and more relevantly educated civil servants who leave public service en masse, frustrated at the lack of opportunity or ability to change a creaking, listing ship; though they know how to.



We never had colonies or an empire so we cannot afford a class of Sir Humphreys, nor will we. A cut off point for public servants at the top level should be ten years in senior positions or 55 years of age across the board.


7 -Total reform of Local Government with more powers allocated to councillors and directly elected ‘Provincial Administrators’ to replace politically appointed City and County Managers.

This is so long overdue! How often have Irish people shaken their heads in disbelief when they see that a person who has a history of throwing public money at unwanted and unnecessary ‘White Elephant’ investments getting yet another plum appointment on yet another acronym quango? No accountability = no plum job. Both civil war parties have their ‘golden circles’ of cronies and party investors.



The architecture of a republic demands a hierarchy of budget and accountability to ensure that the money coming into central coffers is wisely and honestly distributed. Your tax income is not the minister’s ‘gift’ to dispense to his/her pals and local constituency. 

The time for Charlie McCreevy style ‘largesse’ is long past.


8 - Reform of Central Government where the Government is not only accountable to the Dail but also to the public through the system of ‘Recall’ whereby the Taoiseach, any Minister or TD is singularly responsible. This removes the protection afforded to the Government under collective responsibility.

Following on from the review of public service and local government, what is the point of one chamber of the country’s legislature standing outside of the standards of accountability and responsibility expected of all other public monies using bodies?

Clearly, in a state which actually has an executive council not provisioned for under the constitution, we need to make sure that the Dáil only does what it was elected to do and that is to draw up and present legislation to the senate and that’s all.




We cannot adequately serve the competing and myriad demands of a modern state comprising of over four million people and with pressing issues of international importance in the few sittings of the Dáil (when our TDs can be bothered to show up)


9 - An end to Government appointment of the Judiciary as this contravenes the doctrine of separation of powers.

Decades after the Kerry babies’ scandal; after the Donegal murders; after the Black Widow trial; after so many unsafe convictions and contradictions between circuit, district, high, and supreme courts, does this really need to be debated?

Ministers and Taoisigh have no business attempting to influence how the law works in Ireland. It is already becoming apparent that there is one law for the rich and another law for the poor. Before all confidence in the criminal justice system and basic respect for the law evaporates forever this NEEDS to happen. 

We want constitutional referendum to insert an amendment to create a constitutional separation of powers article which would safeguard the judiciary, the Gardaí, and benefit the people as a whole. We are the only party calling for this.


10 - An end to political appointment of all senior Gardai whose positions must not be seen to be compromised and to ensure public confidence.

Policing in modern Ireland is no game and certainly not a political game. Looking at the last three years; respect for the Gardaí Síochana has plummeted to a dangerous level. The Gardaí are the protectors of the people’s rights they should never, ever become the militia of any government. Even being seen to be thus places many lives at risk and NO economic policy is worth one citizen’s life.


Gardaí are citizens too.

The Gardaí should never be placed in the position that they must ‘bend’ the law to ensure a government’s wishes. Individual Gardaí walk in daily danger for us and to force them into an antagonistic position against citizens exercising their constitutional right to assembly and protest is a crime and my party will fully pursue any senior Garda commissioner, civil servant or minister for justice who endangers Irish lives.




11 - The removal of Hydroflourocillic acid from our water as it is an unwanted and unnecessary toxin.


The arguments for flouridated water are easily outweighed by scientific opinion, economic necessity and basic common sense. Pure water is what the Irish people have paid for through their road tax, rates and USC; pure water is what they deserve.

If any party wants Irish people to drink water treated with the by-product of the aluminium extraction industry, then they should PAY the Irish people to do so.



12 - A commission be set up to determine the benefits or otherwise of alternative energy and to examine safer technologies with emphasis on their long term health implications.

Would you like to know how to kick start Ireland’s economy and ensure that we, as a nation enjoy a quality of life beyond our present dreams? Here’s how. Alternative energy isn’t wind farms in beauty spots or wave farms at river mouths. Alternative energy includes: Kinetic engines run by human beings’ activities, solar power generating roads, zero point energy that is unlimited and safe, geothermal energy, smart homes acting not just as energy gatherers but also as wealth stores. 


Ours is the only party that is seriously looking at energy as a resource and also as a possible future currency.


Think about it. Energy is everywhere.


13 -The abolition of the ‘Property Tax’, the ‘Household Charge’ and the ‘Water charge’.

Clearly taxation needs to pay for what it was raised to pay for. None of the above fulfils this obvious function. Abolish punitive taxes and simplify the tax code so that tax compliance increases and the tax burden on the ordinary people lessens.

Economics 101.


14 - An open discussion on the question of our citizens abroad being allowed to vote in Irish elections – many of whom were forced to leave Ireland.

There is a lot of debate out there about people living abroad having a say in what our government decides. Many are for it and many are against. The question, however, misses a very great point and one that is uniquely Irish. We have emigrants literally everywhere! If there was a base founded on the moon the first facility built there would be an Irish Bar.



Our party would open the debate on having TDs representing our emigrant Irish based on constituencies such as Europe, North America, South America, Middle East, etc. Imagine the input we would receive into our decision making process as well as the influence we would wield internationally with this simple solution.


15 - A referendum to be held on EU membership and the Euro pending the results of a full and open public debate on the pros and cons of our membership and a feasibility study.

Now what other party in Ireland is prepared to commission a professionally led, internationally recognised feasibility study which provides without fear or favour the benefits and the drawbacks of our membership of both the EU and the Euro currency (if there still is one after this weekend)?



Only the Irish Democratic Party will trust the Irish electorate to make up their minds on truly historical questions given the full facts and a significant period of debate.


Which brings me back to where I began this blog.



Only the Irish Democratic Party believes enough in democracy to freely return its powers into the hands of the Irish people where it should have been since the foundation of the state.


If you think your favourite party would do the same, pick whichever strategy or combination of strategies that appeal to you and ask your representatives about them when they come knocking on your door this summer.



This is your new deal.

Wednesday, 17 June 2015

Democracy: The Last Stand.



Definition of DEMOCRACY

: a form of government in which people choose leaders by voting

: a country ruled by democracy

: an organization or situation in which everyone is treated equally and has equal rights



Full Definition of DEMOCRACY

1
a : government by the people; especially : rule of the majority

b : a government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them directly or indirectly through a system of representation usually involving periodically held free elections

2 : a political unit that has a democratic government

3 : the principles and policies of the Democratic party in the United States

4 : the common people especially when constituting the source of political authority

5 : the absence of hereditary or arbitrary class distinctions or privileges



Definition of REPUBLIC

: a country that is governed by elected representatives and by an elected leader (such as a president) rather than by a king or queen

Full Definition of REPUBLIC

1
a (1) : a government having a chief of state who is not a monarch and who in modern times is usually a president (2) : a political unit (as a nation) having such a form of government

b (1) : a government in which supreme power resides in a body of citizens entitled to vote and is exercised by elected officers and representatives responsible to them and governing according to law

(2) : a political unit (as a nation) having such a form of government

c : a usually specified republican government of a political unit <the French Fourth Republic>

2 : a body of persons freely engaged in a specified activity <the republic of letters>

3 : a constituent political and territorial unit of the former nations of Czechoslovakia, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, or Yugoslavia

"Democracy." “Republic” Merriam-Webster.com. Merriam-Webster, n.d. Web. 17 June 2015. <http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/democracy>.


I felt it was important to remind ourselves what it is that the Irish Democratic Party is defending and why we believe that it needs defending in the first place.  Given the definition from Merriam-Webster above we can see that Democracy is the political system where the people hold the supreme power, are recognised as and are treated equally under the law and that no hereditary or arbitrary class distinctions or privileges may exist.  

In short:  The people are the client of the State. 

Republic only partially agrees with democracy in placing supreme power into the hands of a body of people who are entitled to vote; which is not quite the same thing.  A Republic can exist with a hierarchy of privileged citizens looking down on ordinary working civilians who enjoy less representation all supported by powerless serfs with no representation.  This distinction is important.  It means that the Irish Republic could easily and quite legally slip away from being a democratically robust Republic unless we constantly police our government and its connections.  

In short: The State can end up being the client of the people.

Let’s look critically at the Republic of Ireland, which constituted as a Republic and operates under democratic principles.  Nothing in our constitution guarantees inalienable equality of rights and duties upon all of its citizens. What we enjoy as our rights are more the result of tradition and ambient culture than constituted for by the founders of our nation.  

We simply do not have guaranteed equal rights in the Republic of Ireland. 

The guarantee of equality such as it is in Article 40.1 of the Constitution is undermined by its own text. This is the first of our constitutional fudges against democracy as planned all along by the founders of Ireland who didn’t fancy sacrificing their new found status at the top.

All citizens shall, as human persons, be held equal before the law.
This shall not be held to mean that the State shall not in its enactments have due regard to differences of capacity, physical and moral, and of social function.

Which reminds me of George Orwell’s Animal Farm:
“All animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others.”


The guarantee of equal status is in competition with an equal guarantee of individual freedoms. This tension between the two competing guarantees forms the loophole through which much of what is wrong with Irish political life has mouldered, festered and spored over the last forty years.  See a much more qualified legal opinion than my own here:


It gets worse for the little guy the more one looks into Articles 40-44 (Fundamental Rights) and your mind will be blown by reading Article 45 (Directive Principles of Social Policy)

Our constitution provides legal fudge after legal fudge to ensure that people or a companies with the cash to employ clever barristers can and usually do ignore the fundamental rights and equalities of fellow citizens in favour of their individual rights.

Article 45 (Directive Principles of Social Policy) however couldn’t have been more fully ignored by the last two governments. It is abundantly clear that most of what has happened in Ireland since the bailout is simply anti-constitutional (which is legal) but not necessarily unconstitutional (which would be illegal). 

You read that right: our Fianna Fáil / Green Party government and our Fine Gael / Labour government have done the polar opposite to what is written in the Constitution without the slightest hint of complaint emanating from our legal profession, the opposition, our expensive civil service or even our so-quick-to-take-umbrage-over-other-people’s-failings, seething money pit, national broadcaster. 


Why is this?

Because of the preamble to Article 45 contains the following über-fudge:

The principles of social policy set forth in this Article are intended for the general guidance of the Oireachtas. The application of those principles in the making of laws shall be the care of the Oireachtas exclusively, and shall not be cognisable by any Court under any of the provisions of this Constitution.

So we have what is essentially a ‘wish list’ of principles which are not enforceable by the courts. When push comes to shove, Article 45 amounts to nothing more than empty words.  But just look at these empty words and gape in wonder at how they have been specifically betrayed.

1
The State shall strive to promote the welfare of the whole people by securing and protecting as effectively as it may a social order in which justice and charity shall inform all the institutions of the national life.

2
The State shall, in particular, direct its policy towards securing:–

i ) That the citizens (all of whom, men and women equally, have the right to an adequate means of livelihood) may through their occupations find the means of making reasonable provision for their domestic needs.

ii) That the ownership and control of the material resources of the community may be so distributed amongst private individuals and the various classes as best to subserve the common good.

iii) That, especially, the operation of free competition shall not be allowed so to develop as to result in the concentration of the ownership or control of essential commodities in a few individuals to the common detriment.
iv) That in what pertains to the control of credit the constant and predominant aim shall be the welfare of the people as a whole.

v) That there may be established on the land in economic security as many families as in the circumstances shall be practicable.

3
 1° The State shall favour and, where necessary, supplement private initiative in industry and commerce.

2° The State shall endeavour to secure that private enterprise shall be so conducted as to ensure reasonable efficiency in the production and distribution of goods and as to protect the public against unjust exploitation.

4
1° The State pledges itself to safeguard with especial care the economic interests of the weaker sections of the community, and, where necessary, to contribute to the support of the infirm, the widow, the orphan, and the aged.

2° The State shall endeavour to ensure that the strength and health of workers, men and women, and the tender age of children shall not be abused and that citizens shall not be forced by economic necessity to enter avocations unsuited to their sex, age or strength.

Try to imagine the Ireland that would exist if these social policies were cognisable and enforceable in law. It looks much different, doesn’t it?  Imagine if even just Section 2 (iii) and 2 (iv) were enforceable by law. Just imagine what that would have meant to the 50,000 families threatened with eviction, the currently homeless, and the Clerys workers just this week.

As Johnny Rotten famously said on stage in San Francisco on the breakup of The Sex Pistols:

So the social contract underpinning our country, our democracy and our peace has been completely torn up and a new contract (that we never demanded nor did we ever get to read) has replaced it. 

In short: The people are no longer the client of the State. private investments and free markets have become the client of the State despite the fact that this is explicitly refuted in the constitution.  These attacks on the fabric of Ireland's society happened over the last eight years at the behest of parties and agendas who do not live in or pay taxes to Ireland.  So, why is our political class so accommodating?

You do not live under a democracy; you live under an undeclared emergency power regime.

Does that sound extreme?  Does that sound like leftie-rhetoric?  OK, let’s test my claim.

What we pay taxes into and provide labour for is a state which treats the people as its sole or principal client.  We concede this wealth and effort in exchange for an agreed standard of living which may fluctuate with income but places emphasis upon the best interests of the Irish people over all other considerations.  That’s what the Name of the Most Holy Trinity, was originally invoked in our Constitution’s preamble to watch over. This is how the people of Éire humbly acknowledged all their obligations to the Divine Lord Jesus Christ....etc. etc.

And seeking to promote the common good, with due observance of Prudence, Justice and Charity, so that the dignity and freedom of the individual may be assured, true social order attained, the unity of our country restored, and concord established with other nations,
Do hereby adopt, enact, and give to ourselves this Constitution.

So there it is....A constitution that promises much but, just like the governments and senates empowered by it, delivers not much at all.  The major thrust of our current Constitution is:

We, the Irish People, invoking God and Jesus, hereby award ourselves the right to do lots of good things for ourselves and our people if the mood happens to take us. If, however, we choose to line our own pockets and punish our people for demanding their rights well, that’s fine by us too. Nothing in this constitution should be able to stop us from being complete dicks, it just should seem like it is there to stop us.

You see, there is a provision within the constitution where the government reserves the right to throw out all the provisions, directives and safeguards within all of its articles and lay claim to Emergency Powers Article (28 The Government section 3.3)


Using these Emergency Powers, the government can short circuit the usual human rights and natural justice enshrined in the constitution and just get on with running the state the way they want it to be run. The only snag is these powers are only available to a Taoiseach in the event of an armed insurrection, a world war, or an invasion by a foreign power. Since none of these things have happened over the last eight years the governments of Fianna Fáil / Green Party and Fine Gael / Labour had no recourse to declaring a national emergency. 

No national emergency has been declared in the last twenty five years.

So, since neither government declared an emergency, they do not enjoy emergency powers. This arguably renders every single piece of legislation they voted on over the last eight years null and void.  Neither government acted in the interests of the Irish people and, in fact, have actively taken rights away from the Irish people. Only an emergency powers regime can action such a thing as to take away the guarantees to individual freedoms and equality enshrined in the constitution. Neither Fianna Fáil/Green Party nor Fine Gael/Labour Party declared an emergency and therefore they had no powers or mandate to act as they have over the last eight years.

This renders their mandate under the constitution.....Null and Void.
This also renders their cumulative Austerity agendas unconstitutional thus, Null and Void.

The Banking guarantee: Null and Void.
Irish Water and the Universal Services Charge: Null and Void.
The sale of Irish coastal resources to Royal Dutch Shell: Null and Void.
The Land and Conveyancing Law Reform Bill 2013: Null and Void.
The payments to the unsecured tertiary bond holders: Null and Void.
The sale of state assets to pay foreign interests: Null and Void
(Doubly if one considers Article 11 of the Constitution)


Everything that has happened over the last eight years was explicitly against the spirit and written matter of the Irish Constitution for no better reason than the banking sector and an overstretched “Buy to Let” sector would have suffered a skinning and they had close ties and ‘connections’ with TDs.  What that means is that TDs, Councillors, Senators and even Judges have been making things easier for those who bankrupted our country and made it harder for us to take our homes, our resources and our country back.

I hereby recommend that the Irish Democratic Party declares no confidence in the Government and prosecutes a constitutional challenge to the entire Austerity agenda from 2008 onward to today. This is Democracy’s last stand because all over Europe we are seeing the interests of the society being supplanted by the interests of money and the free market regime of Neo Liberalism.  

What is happening to Greece will very shortly happen to Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Italy and even France eventually.  We will all end up paying for a class of international client who has no interest in the society of Europe and the value of being in a European Union will disappear. 

The point to this article is to remind you and myself just what we're fighting for: Democracy.

We have the good fortune to have been born into a time and circumstance where we enjoy the protection of a constitution but now it is our turn to protect the constitution. Without our constitution having the power and the authority to stay the hand of a corrupt government, we will not have any authority in our own hands.  Governments will always be a little corrupt and selfish, it's the nature of politics.  However what is being played out against us is nothing short of a secretive and small group of insiders stealing the liberty, wealth, and the future of the Irish people just because they can.

Europe formed a common market and a political union to ensure peace and stability for its people after the most terrible conflict in human history.  That particular vision has now been lost among the claims and counterclaims of the IMF, the ECB and the European Commission. The European Commission should certainly carry the burden of the guilt as it was supposed to ensure that the mission of lasting peace and fair concord between European nations was upheld. Is this ideal really so very necessary?



How soon we forget.

We have inherited this living document which politicians love to claim to respect and honour but, as shown above, have no hesitation to ignore and even defy if it suits their benefactors. If they are going to use the constitution as a golden carrot to get us voting, let's use it as a stick to beat them with. 



I recommend that the Irish Democratic Party pushes for the a referendum on Article 45 of the Constitution whereby the provisions are cognisable in the courts and the Oireachtas can be challenged legally and members of the government sued for acting directly against the Principles of Social Policy.



Let's use this immense document which very few politicians appear to understand to take back our supremacy and sovereignty over our land, our laws, our inherited natural world, and our democracy.