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Written Answers — Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade: Departmental Expenditure (12 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: My Department does not incur any costs in assessing means of individual citizens.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: Let me correct one point at the outset. Greece did not receive a write-down of sovereign debt.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: No, it did not. It did not get a write-down of sovereign debt. Members should at least have a factual discussion.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: I agree with one point made by Deputy Halligan.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: I did state repeatedly that what happened in this country was unjust and unfair. Moreover, I still believe that and still think that. I refer to the extent to which the Irish people, working people and Irish taxpayers, have been saddled with the burden of the bad policy decisions that were made-----

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: ---- the greed that was associated with the property boom, the over-lending, the lax regulation and all that went on in that regard.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: It was and is unjust and unfair that the people who are bearing the burden in this regard are those who have lost their jobs, who have had their pay costs, who are finding it harder to pay the mortgage and who are in very difficult circumstances. They are the people who are bearing the burden in this regard and the duty and responsibility of the Government, which it took on two years ago, is...

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: The Government is working its way through that crisis and improving it. The deficit must be reduced and the Government has been doing that. It stated it would renegotiate the terms of the bailout and has done so in several respects. It got a reduction in the interest rate and an improvement on the terms recently at the eurozone and ECOFIN meeting. Moreover, today's agreement constitutes a...

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: It has put an end to Anglo Irish Bank, Irish Nationwide Building Society and IBRC. It has put an end to the payment of the promissory note - that the previous Government saddled on the Irish taxpayers - of €3.1 billion each March for ten years. The Government has exchanged that for a longer-term bond with maturity of 34.5 years. This will have the benefit of reducing Ireland's...

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: In fairness to Deputy Adams, he has a very difficult job to try to construct some way of finding a flaw in what has been negotiated with the ECB.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: By any standards an agreement that reduces our borrowing requirement by €20 billion over the next ten years-----

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: I am answering the question. The Deputy asked where is the benefit to the people. The benefit is that first, there is no longer a requirement to pay €3.1 billion of taxpayers' hard-earned money on 31 March this year and on 31 March every year for the next eight years.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: The second benefit is that the deficit, which is very difficult, is to be reduced by €1 billion. That will have a tangible benefit in terms of the budgetary decisions that we have to make. Third, it will reduce the debt burden on the Irish people and will help this country to recover. Deputy Adams said that we have to tell it straight. There is no way of coming in with a magic...

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: We did not, actually. I am glad that Deputy Adams made that point because we did not say that. I want to correct that point and I am glad that Deputy Adams has given me the opportunity of doing so. From the very beginning of the crisis at the time of the bank debt, we were often asked whether we would default or refuse to pay if we were in government. We always said we cannot default, we...

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: We have renegotiated. We have significantly improved the terms of the promissory note. It does not have to be paid every year. It has been converted into a long-term bond, which will reduce our borrowing requirement by €20 billion and takes €1 billion or 0.6% off our deficit. By any standards that is a good agreement.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: Deputy Halligan referred to the last government and the difference is this - the last government saddled the Irish people with the debts of the banks; this Government is renegotiating and easing the debt burden on the people. As regards going to the people, we did so two years ago in a general election. We went to the country on a commitment that we would renegotiate the terms of the deal....

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: We are making progress along a number of dimensions. First, by any standards, what has been agreed today is hugely significant. The toxic bank that has been at the heart of the crisis - Anglo Irish Bank and Irish Nationwide in the form of the IBRC - is no more. We have liquidated that. The €3.1 billion promissory note that was to be paid every March, no longer has to be paid. On...

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: On 2 February 2011 a press release was issued by Fianna Fáil stating its leader, Micheál Martin, stated the Labour Party must stop pretending Ireland can renegotiate the terms of the IMF-EU rescue deal.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: Now we know.

Leaders' Questions (7 Feb 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: The promissory note is in effect sovereign debt and the State was made responsible for bank debt by a decision made by the previous Government in 2008 which Sinn Féin supported. Sinn Féin's spokesperson in the Dáil that night was Deputy Caoimhghín Ó Caoláin, who described what the Fianna Fáil Government was doing as a courageous response. Deputy Adams's...

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