Results 1,641-1,660 of 15,491 for speaker:Eamon Gilmore
- Order of Business (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: It is not tokenism.
- Order of Business (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: A range of changes are proposed. We all complain about Question Time, which is a sterile exchange and must be improved. This provides for an improvement and for better interaction between Members of the House and Ministers.
- Order of Business (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: This provides for a range of ways in which debate can be improved in the House. What I suggest-----
- Order of Business (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: This is what is wrong.
- Order of Business (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: What I am suggesting is that we agree these changes today and see how they work during the session and come back and review them in January.
- Order of Business (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: I do not think we can postpone this and keep talking about Dáil reform forever. We must get on with it today and we will get back to it in January and see how it works.
- Order of Business (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: There is no point of order on a time motion.
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: I can show where the jobs are. We are creating 3,000 additional jobs a month. The Deputy can look at the list of job announcements made every month by IDA Ireland and Enterprise Ireland to see the additional jobs being created. We have made provision in the budget to accelerate the number of the jobs that will be created. Many of the measures are targeted at the construction sector, in...
- Order of Business (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: It is proposed to take No. c7, motion re referral to select committee of proposed approval by Dáil Éireann of the terms of the Arms Trade Treaty; No. d7, motion re Standing Orders 19, 20, 21, 23, 27, 27A, 28, 33, 35, 36, 38, 41, 56, 57, 82A, 83, 88, 117, 117A, 121, 123A, 124, 125 and 141A. It is proposed, notwithstanding anything in Standing Orders, that No. c7 shall be decided...
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: First, let us spare a moment to take a look at Sinn Féin policy, because in 2011, after this recession began, its leader said the IMF should go home and take their money with them, and he suggested we should default.
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: In order-----
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: No; take your medicine now. Take your medicine.
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: What that would have resulted in is a deficit of €21 billion, and we would not have been able to borrow.
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: A deficit of €21 billion would have resulted in cuts in the budget of 37%.
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: A 37% cut in the budget-----
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: A 37% cut in the budget------
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: A 37% cut in the budget amounts to a cut of €85 a week in the old age pension. Let us cut out the spoof here.
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: In regard to the issue of jobs for young people-----
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: In regard to young people, this Government is creating 3,000 additional jobs per month.
- Leaders' Questions (17 Oct 2013)
Eamon Gilmore: We want to accelerate that, which is why we have provided an additional €500 million in this year's budget - in order to get more jobs into our economy.