Results 25,561-25,580 of 50,683 for speaker:Micheál Martin
- Ceisteanna - Questions: Seanad Reform (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: On a point of order, we are on Question No. 7.
- Ceisteanna - Questions: Seanad Reform (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: It is not the first time the Taoiseach forgot about Seanad reform.
- Ceisteanna - Questions: Seanad Reform (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: It is fair to say that the Seanad reform issue has been extraordinary and somewhat of a debacle. I wrote back on 2 December with our three nominees. Yet, we received a reply last week saying that there was still ongoing contact with the parties on the nominees for this implementation group.
- Ceisteanna - Questions: Seanad Reform (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: Which political party has not sent in its names? Could the Taoiseach identify who has not responded to his request? We wrote back on 2 December with three names. Has the Fine Gael party finalised its nominees? There has been a kind of silence for the last couple of months. I note from previous meetings that we had during the last Government that the Taoiseach was, to be fair, decidedly...
- Ceisteanna - Questions: Seanad Reform (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: Simon should have been-----
- Ceisteanna - Questions: National Security Committee (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: The most important matter is the narrative for how we describe acts of terrorism. There can never be any justification - I do not quite agree with Deputy Mick Wallace's perspective - for slaughtering innocents and civilians in the manner in which they were slaughtered in Manchester. We have had experience of this in the past. The IRA campaign of bombing civilians was no different from what...
- Ceisteanna - Questions: National Security Committee (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: 5. To ask the Taoiseach the details of the meeting he held on 25 May 2017 on national security. [25942/17]
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: There is a commitment in the programme for Government that Ireland will play a part in promoting fundamental human rights, the rule of law and religious freedom across the globe through the European Union and the United Nations. We all agree with that commitment and, by and large, our diplomats have been very effective in promoting these objectives. However, every Deputy is equally clear...
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: We do not usually get involved in these matters.
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: I have only ever once questioned the Business Committee and that was over taking two weeks of holidays. That was attacked from all sides of the House. I have stayed silent since on the weekly recommendations of the Business Committee.
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: Could I make the point? This is habitual, every week now. The Business Committee makes a decision and it is habitual to have two or three reservations about it two or three days later.
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: There is an argument for consistency of membership of a particular committee on an issue as complex as this.
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: I did not interrupt anybody, Deputy Boyd Barrett.
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: Please accept the basic parameters of a parliamentary democracy that when people stand up to speak, they are allowed to. I did not interfere with anybody or interrupt anybody on that side of the House when they spoke. I agree with the order of the Business Committee. There must be some degree of certainty and solidity about our work. If a recommendation comes from the Business Committee...
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: If somebody really falls under a bus, the power is there for such a member to come off a committee and for someone to go on it.
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: We are not talking about that type of scenario.
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: What is really going on here is different. We were very quick to nominate our membership of the Business Committee; we had no difficulty at all in nominating Members.
- Order of Business (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: We should proceed with voting on the proposal.
- Leaders' Questions (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: The Taoiseach's last line, that Tusla does not instruct An Garda to keep anybody in a Garda station and that it is a matter for the Garda, sums it up. It sums up the pathetic nature of buck-passing and is trying to mask the reality of the findings of the report which states the initial de factoplace of safety for children is the Garda station. There is no point in dressing it up or trying...
- Leaders' Questions (30 May 2017)
Micheál Martin: I have consistently raised with the Taoiseach the disconnect between rhetoric and reality and between aspiration and delivery. Nowhere are they to be seen more than in the damning report issued yesterday by Professor Geoffrey Shannon, special rapporteur to the Government on child protection. It is a report that calls into question the commitment of the Government to fulfil its...