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Public Accounts Committee: 2017 Financial Statements of the HSE
2016 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 38 - Department of Health
(5 Jul 2018)

Kate O'Connell: My question is has this been factored into the analysis? I know it is not as quantifiable as money but is there an actuarial sum that is taken into account such that we can compare apples with apples?

Public Accounts Committee: Enet (14 Feb 2019)

Kate O'Connell: BT's apples and Enet's apples are-----

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: Business of Joint Committee
Matters Relating to the Banking Sector: Permanent TSB
(9 Apr 2019)

Mr. Jeremy Masding: I am not sure the Deputy is comparing apples with apples, although he will, of course, argue that he is because it is a bank versus a bank. The difference is that during the course of 2017-----

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Communications, Climate Action and Environment: Data Collection by Digital Assistants: Discussion (Resumed) (3 Dec 2019) See 2 other results from this debate

Hildegarde Naughton: When users go to privacyapple.com,will they be able to see everything that Apple knows about them, that is, all data? They can see it is completely transparent. If I am using Apple devices I can go onto this site and I will know all the data-----

Public Accounts Committee: 2019 Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 18 - National Shared Services Office
Chapter 5 – Implementation of Financial Management Shared Services
(16 Feb 2021)

Jennifer Carroll MacNeill: It does and I thank Ms Murphy-Fagan. Is there anything Ms Murphy-Fagan wants to expand on? She said comparing the systems as they evolved really does not compare apples with apples. Is there anything on which she wants to elaborate or is she happy?

Public Accounts Committee: Strategic Banking Corporation of Ireland: Financial Statements 2019 (9 Mar 2021)

Mr. Ian Black: It is difficult to say. One must compare apples with apples. They received the market salary for that role. If one does not pay------

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Challenges Facing the Fruit and Vegetable Industry: Discussion (11 Oct 2023)

Eugene Murphy: Would they agree that the flavour of an Irish apple can be far better than that of many of the apples that come in from abroad?

Seanad: Nithe i dtosach suíonna - Commencement Matters: Domestic, Sexual and Gender-based Violence (30 Apr 2024)

Lynn Boylan: ...to my attention by the Irish actor and producer, Áine O'Neill. It is about her experience in Las Vegas in November 2022. Late one night, her phone pinged and she was notified that she was visible to an Apple AirTag. The latter was able to see where she worked, where she parked her car and everywhere she had been that evening. After investigating if she had happened to pick up...

Ceisteanna - Questions - Priority Questions: Foreign Direct Investment (23 Nov 2017) See 1 other result from this debate

Frances Fitzgerald: We continue to work with Apple. I would not put it the way the Deputy has put it, that it is lost. We must continue to work with Apple. What is important is that we deal with infrastructure planning, as the Deputy rightly says, and data centres. The Taoiseach and I brought a memo to Government in order that we could fast-track data centres. This is very important because, as the Deputy...

Seanad: Order of Business. (2 Jun 2005)

Shane Ross: ...Brian Hayes used the word "systemic". As it is convenient, we have for a long time been happy to dismiss the difficulties, brutalities and wrongdoing of some members of the Garda Síochána as bad apples in a good force. The questions that must now be asked are, how many bad apples are there to be rooted out, how systemic this is, whether there really is a kind of disease within the Garda...

Written Answers — Department of Finance: State Aid Investigations (29 Sep 2015)

Pearse Doherty: 136. To ask the Minister for Finance if he will seek the repayment of tax owed if the European Union Commission finds that Ireland and Apple were engaged in arrangements that amount to State aid or in a scheme to lower the tax liability for Apple in contravention of European Union rules. [32859/15]

Other Questions: Tax Residency (29 Sep 2016)

Michael Noonan: They share information with the Department of Finance all the time. Therefore, they would also have been aware after the Apple inquiry. Going back to 1991 we need to look at how corporation tax evolved in Ireland. When Revenue gave its opinion on Apple originally, coming into the 1990s no tax was payable on exports of exporting companies. It evolved into a 10% tax payable. Following a...

Written Answers — Department of Finance: Departmental Correspondence (29 Nov 2017)

Paschal Donohoe: On 30 August 2016, it was announced that the Commission had issued a negative decision in the Apple State Aid case. This concluded the investigation that had been on-going formally since June 2014. Ireland has never accepted the Commission’s analysis in the Apple State aid Decision. However, we have always been clear that the Government is fully committed to ensuring...

Ceisteanna ó Cheannairí - Leaders' Questions (27 Feb 2019)

Noel Grealish: ...have good projects supported by the majority of people being endlessly bogged down in the complexities of our current planning system. It is costing us jobs and money. We all know by now how Apple announced plans for a data centre in Denmark around the same time it announced plans for one in Athenry. The Danish one is up and running while a second Apple centre in Denmark is due to...

Public Accounts Committee: 2011 Annual Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General and Appropriation Accounts
Vote 10 - Office of Public Works
(23 May 2013)

Paschal Donohoe: No, Mr. McCarthy may have given me thunder. We will see how the next question goes before I make my mind up or others do. To enable us to compare apples with apples because the Comptroller and Auditor General is correct, if I accept the €1.4 billion spend, to what do I compare it?

Written Answers — Department of Finance: State Aid Investigations (30 Nov 2017)

Paschal Donohoe: I am assuming the Deputy is referring to the recovery of the alleged Apple State aid. Ireland has never accepted the Commission’s analysis in the Apple State aid Decision. However, we have always been clear that the Government is fully committed to ensuring that recovery of the alleged Apple State aid takes place without delay and has committed significant resources to ensuring this...

Ceisteanna - Questions: Cabinet Committee Meetings (1 Feb 2017)

Richard Boyd Barrett: Has the Cabinet Committee on European Affairs discussed the issue of the European Commission ruling on Apple's tax affairs in this country? Does the Taoiseach intend having further discussions about the Government's highly reprehensible decision to refuse the €13 billion that the European Commission believes is owed to the Exchequer in Apple taxes after the Commissioner Vestager's...

Seanad: Order of Business (4 Oct 2017)

Fintan Warfield: When the interests of corporations are taken to such an extent as the Apple tax scandal, those interests come before workers' rights, the environment, investment in public services and the interest of weaker states. Today, in the past hour, it has been reported that the European Commission has moved to refer Ireland to the European Court of Justice for failing to recover from Apple up to...

Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Statement: Irish Fiscal Advisory Council (13 Sep 2016)

Stephen Donnelly: ..., but because of confidentiality we cannot talk about them. I was taken by, and agreed with, Dr. Conefrey's analysis. When one runs the numbers, it is hard not to conclude that the corporate is Apple. It is Apple, not being able to pay tax anywhere anymore, re-domiciling its IP or whatever and its non-domiciled headquarters here. It is not really to do with inversions and it is not...

Seanad: Order of Business (10 May 2018)

Jerry Buttimer: It is disappointing in terms of people leaving our country but also in terms of investment coming in, and the Senator is correct in that regard. I wish to make it clear, in the context of Apple and Galway, that the Government and the IDA did everything possible to encourage and entice Apple to invest. I think two people objected-----

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