Posted on 28 March 2011. Tags: legal, Media, Politics
It may have cost taxpayers €250m, taken aeons to publish its weighty conclusions and few people believe anyone will ever be prosecuted over its findings, but parsing the implications of the 2,300-page Moriarty report provides copious fodder for the Sunday broadsheets. Read the full story
Posted in News Round up
Posted on 16 February 2011. Tags: General Election 2011, Politics, taxation
Promises, promises … is there no end to them as the February 25 election day draws nearer? At least the electorate is beginning to get a clearer idea of what to expect on the tax front when the new government takes power. And, increasingly, it is looking like Fine Gael’s pronouncements on just about everything are the ones to watch. Read the full story
Posted in News Round up
Posted on 16 February 2011. Tags: economics, General Election 2011, Politics
Many election promises seem destined to be broken at the best of times but in the worst of times, they are likely to gather dust on the shelves of the parties’ headquarters whether there is a will to implement them or not. Read the full story
Posted in News Round up
Posted on 31 January 2011. Tags: Budget 2011, Finance Bill 2011, Politics, taxation
In the latest bizarre political twist, possibly the most important single piece of legislation to be enacted during the term of the last Dáil, was sacrificed quickly on the altar of political expediency. Read the full story
Posted in News Round up
Posted on 17 January 2011. Tags: Politics
The sun may be about to set at last on this particular empire but the Government is making sure its friends and supporters will be well looked after when it eventually leaves office. Read the full story
Posted in News Round up
Posted on 27 October 2010. Tags: Budget 2011, Pensions, Politics
Civil service pensions may be brought in to line with private sector pensions if a proposed Fianna Fail reform goes ahead. Read the full story
Posted in News Round up
Posted on 17 May 2010. Tags: jobs, Politics
A major change to the social welfare system will allow job-seekers to continue to receive full benefits while working in the private sector – if they also carry out community work. The Minister For Social Protection, Eamon O Cuiv, is to roll out a new “hybrid” social welfare scheme where people who do 19.5 hours community work a week will be able to take up jobs. Read the full story
Posted in News Round up
Posted on 04 May 2010. Tags: jobs, Politics
Imagine your chances of keeping your job if you didn’t bother showing up? Yet, just 17 of the country’s 166 TDs turned up for work at Leinster House every day in the first two weeks after a clocking-in system was introduced on March 1. Read the full story
Posted in News Round up