Advanced search
Show most relevant results first | Most recent results are first | Show use by person

Search only Séamus HealySearch all speeches

Results 2,381-2,400 of 2,967 for speaker:Séamus Healy

Order of Business (10 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: When is it proposed to bring legislation before the House to implement a commitment in the programme for Government to ensure the highest standards of transparency in the operation of NAMA?

Order of Business (5 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: The National Asset Management Agency is a highly secretive organisation and its procedures and processes do not appear to be amenable to this House. Currently, its dismissive attitude to workers and their rights is putting-----

Order of Business (5 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: I will come to that if the Ceann Comhairle allows me to finish.

Order of Business (5 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: I will come to that-----

Order of Business (5 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: This matter is appropriate to the Order of Business. With regard to the dismissive attitude of NAMA to workers' rights, 128 jobs are at risk in viable businesses in counties Tipperary and Kilkenny.

Order of Business (5 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: A commitment in the programme for Government states, "We will insist on the highest standards of transparency in the operation of NAMA". What proposals has the Government to implement that commitment? When will they be brought before the House?

Order of Business (5 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: This is a legislative matter, which is dealt with in the programme for Government.

Order of Business (5 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: The question refers to a commitment in the programme for Government. Will the Tánaiste answer the question?

Order of Business (5 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: Legislation is clearly promised in the programme for Government. Will the Tánaiste not answer the question?

Order of Business (5 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: When will we have transparency?

Residential Mortgage Debt: Motion (Resumed) (4 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: I would like to put forward some case histories. The first relates to a self-employed man with a family living in a modest three-bedroomed house and into the second half of his mortgage. He was doing well but due to an addition to the family needed a modest four-bedroomed house. Thinking he could deal with the mortgage on the new house, he went to his bank and looked for a mortgage on the...

EU-IMF Programme: Statements (4 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: I am sharing my time with Deputy Mick Wallace. We have been told time and again by the Government that it received a strong mandate in the recent general election. It has such a mandate and an overwhelming majority, possibly an unhealthily large one. Surely we should tell the truth in this House, the truth being that the public was sold a pup in the general election. The document we are...

Request to move Adjournment of Dáil under Standing Order 32 (4 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: I request the adjournment of the Dáil under Standing Order 32 to discuss a matter of urgent importance, namely, the need for the Government to intervene with the National Asset Management Agency to save 128 jobs under threat in two viable retail businesses in Counties Tipperary and Kilkenny due to NAMA's dismissive attitude to workers, job protection and job retention. I call on the...

Written Answers — Tax Code: Tax Code (3 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: Question 55: To ask the Minister for Finance his plans to abolish the universal social charge, introduced by the previous Government, in view of its impact on the income of low and middle income families; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [6051/11]

Suicide Prevention: Statements (Resumed) (3 May 2011)

Séamus Healy: I congratulate the Minister of State with responsibility for mental health services on her appointment and wish her well in her new office. I agree with previous speakers about the effects suicide has had on families throughout the country. I sympathise with the families and relatives who have been through this experience. Unfortunately, many families have had experience of suicide over the...

Commission of Inquiry into Banking Sector: Statements (20 Apr 2011)

Séamus Healy: The clear impression given by the Nyberg report and the media in general is that we all lost the run of ourselves and that we were all in it together, but nothing could be further from the truth. We did not all lose the run of ourselves and we were not all in it together. Unfortunately, the report is a whitewash and a cover-up for the Irish Establishment which supported the banking process...

Written Answers — Rural Transport Services: Rural Transport Services (19 Apr 2011)

Séamus Healy: Question 358: To ask the Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport if he will provide funding to extend the ring-a-link rural link transport service; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [8128/11]

Education and Training: Motion (Resumed) (13 Apr 2011)

Séamus Healy: It appears, in effect, that the Government is supporting this Private Members' motion, part of which states Dáil Éireann "believes that education and training will be a central part in economic recovery and job creation in the months and years ahead". I am wondering how this sits with statements made by Labour Party Ministers in the past couple of days. The Minister for Education and...

Communications Regulation (Postal Services) Bill 2010 [Seanad]: Second Stage (Resumed) (13 Apr 2011)

Séamus Healy: I am disappointed but not surprised to see this legislation before the House. The legislation was introduced by the previous Government and it has been taken over hook, line and sinker by the new one. I suppose it is in line with what has happened in other areas. There is has been a seamless transition from opposition to Government. It is disappointing that the new Government has taken...

European Council: Statements (13 Apr 2011)

Séamus Healy: We need to recognise that, in this instance at least, the EU is not a good Samaritan coming to the help of a neighbour in trouble. German, French and British banks gambled recklessly and lost but they are now demanding an each way bet. They want the Irish taxpayer to pay for the losses they incurred. That has been the policy of the previous Government and, sadly, it is now being pursued by...

   Advanced search
Show most relevant results first | Most recent results are first | Show use by person

Search only Séamus HealySearch all speeches