Grudging reform serves nobody

Rosie-the-Riveter (Photo credit: SBT4NOW) This week, Fianna Fáil launched a plan to get more women involved in the party. Senator Averil Power, one of the party’s two female Oireachtas members, launched the plan with party leader Micheál Martin and Niamh Gallagher of Women for Election, a non-partisan training body that is focussed on improving [...]

Hand-wringing and head-shaking

Fianna Fáil Press Office Billy Kelleher TD Spokesperson on Health 13 June 2012 Symphysiotomy victims should not be barred from civil action by statute of limitations – Kelleher Fianna Fáil Health Spokesperson Billy Kelleher has welcomed the publication of the report on Symphysiotomy in Ireland by Professor Oonagh Walsh. Deputy Kelleher said: “This first part of this report gives a very concise history of this procedure in Ireland and across Europe. The report says that the procedure was used in the majority of cases in an emergency and did assist with saving babies lives in particular before caesarean sections became common practice. The report says symphysiotomy "was wrongly used in a number of cases". “In the larger Maternity hospitals such as the Coombe, Rotunda and Holles street it was used very infrequently, 0.36% of cases (7 out of 5,874 births) in the Rotunda. It seems to have been used more frequently in Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Drogheda and the last case was reported in 1984 when most of the other hospitals would have stopped using it in the 1960's. The fact that it was still being used in 1984 should be investigated further as it seems totally unacceptable when alternative life-saving treatments were in common use by then. “Judge Maureen Harding Clarke investigated cases of women in this same hospital who had hysterectomies unnecessarily and this was done in a very swift non-confrontational manner. Minister Reilly should look at this model when the final recommendations are made.” The second part of this report will contain recommendations. Deputy Kelleher concluded that “there is no doubt that that these women should not be prohibited from taking civil cases by the statute of limitations.”

Political doublespeak, waffle, spin... call it what you will. It's incessant.

Politicians moving motions of congratulations, condolence, sympathy, at local authority meetings where nobody cares and they are simply wasting time they should be formulating policy and making decisions.

Politicians making vague statements - see previous post re Enda Kenny talking about "google for trees" when visiting Cork.

And politicians issuing press releases purely to be in on something. The very odd time, they have something useful to add. More often than not they are trying to involve themselves in a story that they have nothing to do with, that they have never contributed to in any meaningful way, and that they never intend to help with, really. But it's 99% perception, isn't it?

I got a press release yesterday from Fianna Fáil health spokesperson (and my local TD, who has never once canvassed my house in 2 years) Billy Kelleher, about the symphysiotomy scandal.

I watched Vincent Browne on Tuesday night along with thousands of other absolutely horrified viewers.

The dignity of the victim on that show was almost unbearable.

And we followed up on it for today's paper, with the story of a Cork woman on the front page. Her husband was justifiably angry about their treatment by politicians, who came and went, always making sure to get their name in the story.

Now.

Saying that someone "should not be statute barred" from pursuing a claim in court, is like saying the sky shouldn't be blue, we should have ink flowing through our veins instead of blood, and eating lots of chocolate shouldn't make you fat.

This is probably the most insulting press release I've ever received.

Reciting the content of the report, indulging in some headshaking, and generally bemoaning the state of the world.

Why on EARTH would I print that, in a story about the brutality suffered by thousands of women for whom justice has never been done?

You tell me.




Spin City

On my way to UCC yesterday to meet Alastair Campbell I had a most interesting chat with the taxi driver who brought me. I was expecting serious political discussion and judgement of the political parties’ electoral prospects at the event, but not before it. But like many of the voters I met on the [...]

2011-02-10T16:54:57+00:00 February 10th, 2011|Categories: Opinion|Tags: , , , , , |

Epitaph

The whole episode was rather a strange one, and politicos, particularly in Cork, have been mesmerised all week. Finally, a bit of interest in a desperately gloomy and miserable Dáil term. We had the Fine Gael heave last year, but Fine Gael has always been subject to this kind of malarky. Fianna Fáil leaders [...]

2011-01-28T09:53:30+00:00 January 28th, 2011|Categories: Opinion|Tags: , , |

What's appropriate, and who decides?

The very sad death of Minister Micheál Martin's young daughter last week has raised a couple of questions for me about the changing nature of media, as well as some older questions about traditional media, what's appropriate, and who decides. Writing this post alone makes me a bit uneasy as I realise that it could be [...]

2010-11-02T17:29:01+00:00 November 2nd, 2010|Categories: Opinion|Tags: , , , |