Results 3,021-3,040 of 4,928 for speaker:Peter Mathews
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: I want to ask this question. I know of a case-----
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: The names will be redacted. I will give the framework of the case.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: I know about that but otherwise we might as well not be here.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: I just want to say the principle of what happened here is that several years after the unhappy experience occurred, and there was a dispute, the matter was shuffled along in a reluctant way and the financial services side was not forthcoming with evidence of what went on. That is not good enough. They eventually say, "No, take your case to the financial ombudsman and you have the right to...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: Has a financial institution the right to say it does not wish a case to go to oral hearing because it wants the case to be dealt with as a file?
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: That is good.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: I have in mind a case in which the complainant is very well prepared for an oral hearing but the response has been a decision to deal with it as a file case. Can the complainant insist on an oral hearing?
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: There is a lottery element to how the case is determined.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: In the realities of life, the ombudsman has to deal with a deluge of cases. It takes time and work to prepare for an oral hearing. It is easier to be able to control the digestion of a case on a file review basis but it may not be the way to get to the kernel of the situation, particularly where it would be interesting and very instructive to hear the evidence, to hear how a David can take...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: I know that in the case I have in mind there is a great deal of experience which is not solely contained on paper. Therefore, it would lead to a better judgment of the case if there were to be an oral hearing. That fact alone would suggest there should be an oral hearing. I refer to the insurance case of which I have knowledge. It was declined by the insurance ombudsman but I am a...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: He saw that if the story was told-----
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: -----to the media-----
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Bi-annual Review 2013: Financial Services Ombudsman (5 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: There are principles at stake.
- Government's Priorities for the Year Ahead: Statements (Resumed) (6 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: I welcome the opportunity to make a statement on the Government's priorities for the year ahead. It would be absurd not to say there has been a degree of stabilisation across areas of national endeavour. However, that stabilisation is based on a plan agreed with and imposed by the troika and the previous Government that found itself in a panic crisis. There are no great marks for taking a...
- Government's Priorities for the Year Ahead: Statements (Resumed) (6 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: It does not matter because our bond yields are cheap and the focus now is on getting people to spend more money, as well as getting property prices to rise again. When Wilbur Ross, Fairfax and Kennedy Wilson came to these shores, the type of green that filled their hearts was not the shamrock we will all be proudly wearing in a few days' time. It was the green with George Washington's...
- Government's Priorities for the Year Ahead: Statements (Resumed) (6 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: The international investors and foreign newspaper writers who backslap the Government for restoring the international credibility of the country, are the same people captured by the financiers who profited in the billions from the taxes of Irish workers. This country will sink as quickly has it has risen from the ashes unless we achieve a write-down on our debt generated by bank losses. I...
- Government's Priorities for the Year Ahead: Statements (Resumed) (6 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: Yet, yet, yet. We have not heard the voices of the Government. Let us get real here. The people had a decade of platitudes and false dawns, which resulted in what the IMF has called the single largest financial crisis in human history. That is quite an accolade of failure that the previous Government oversaw. This Government has stabilised the economy using the plans of others. It has...
- Government's Priorities for the Year Ahead: Statements (Resumed) (6 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: I have only one more sentence. What kind of message would the Irish people be sending to Europe if we sent such representatives to do our bidding? Here is my last sentence.
- Government's Priorities for the Year Ahead: Statements (Resumed) (6 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: The failure of this Government to include a debt write-down of approximately €50 billion from Europe as the overriding priority underpinning all our engagements with our European counterparts is a failure that will cost the Irish taxpayer dearly. We need to get our money back from Europe because if we do not, my children, the Minister's children and our children's children will face...
- Ceisteanna - Questions (Resumed): Political Reform (11 Mar 2014)
Peter Mathews: There was the wonderful proposal to abolish the Seanad, if the Deputy remembers.