The liberal Irish government will face a vote of no-confidence amid the spiralling fuel crisis and the widespread farmer-trucker protests.
Sinn Féin, the largest opposition party in Ireland, announced on Sunday that it will table a vote of no confidence in the Fianna Fáil-Fine Gael coalition government when the Dáil parliament returns to session.
“All reports indicate it will be more of the same half measures from them this evening. This is unacceptable. We need the maximum reductions now, as proposed by Sinn Féin weeks ago.”
While the government has introduced some temporary measures, around half of Irish consumers’ fuel costs go into the state coffers. Amid the burgeoning energy crisis across Europe, the refusal to make deeper tax cuts sparked nationwide protests by farmers and truckers, many of whom have taken to blocking petrol stations and refineries.
The poll found that 46 per cent of the public blamed the government, while 28 per cent pointed to the war in Iran, and 26 per cent said that the protesters were to blame.
Shortly after the announcement from Sinn Féin of its plans to seek to topple the government, the populist Independent Ireland party said that it would join the no-confidence motion.
“The discontent around the country is not solely about fuel prices. It reflects broader concerns — and the ongoing failure to address so many issues affecting communities in both rural and urban Ireland,” the party said.
“Crucially, there has been a continued failure to listen to those communities. People feel ignored and disconnected from decision-making processes that directly impact their daily lives.”
It comes after the government deployed the Garda police to forcibly remove protestors from their tractors in Dublin in the early hours of the morning. A leading protestor, John Dallon, said: “No Irish person should have to stand for this militant style … That’s the way last night was carried out; pure Black and Tans.”
“Who do these people think we are? We are a peaceful protest. We are the farmers. We are the people who feed the country,” he added.
Even if the protest movement subsides, the widespread disruptions are likely to have some lasting impact, with Feuls for Ireland saying on Sunday that it would take up to ten days to restore service to normal.
“It cannot simply be switched back on at full capacity the moment access improves. Stocks have to be rebuilt, delivery schedules reset, routes normalised, and supply patterns across the country rebalanced. That takes time,” chief executive Kevin McPartlan said.
“Reopening infrastructure is a significant step forward, but it does not mean the national fuel distribution system can return to normal immediately.”
Follow Kurt Zindulka on X: Follow @KurtZindulka or e-mail to: kzindulka@breitbart.com
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