Solidarity (Ireland)

Solidarity (Irish: Neart le Chéile), formerly known as the Anti-Austerity Alliance[2] (AAA), is a socialist political party in Ireland, launched in 2014.[3][4] It had been registered as a political party to contest local elections,[5] and ran at least forty candidates in the 2014 Irish local elections.[6] All Solidarity's elected representatives are members of the Socialist Party.

Solidarity

Neart le Chéile[1]
LeaderCollective leadership
Founded2014 (2014)
IdeologySocialism
Eco-socialism
Left-wing populism
Feminism
Political positionLeft-wing
National affiliationSolidarity–People Before Profit
Dáil Éireann
1 / 160
Local government in the Republic of Ireland
4 / 949
Website
solidarity.ie
  • Politics of Republic of Ireland
  • Political parties
  • Elections

Views

The party intends to end "Ireland’s status as a tax haven", introduce a financial transactions tax, abolish property tax, increase corporation tax, increase income tax on high earners, and introduce a ‘Millionaire’s Tax’ on net personal wealth in excess of €1 million.[7]

Anti-Austerity Alliance

The group's original branding

The party contested the 2014 local elections on a platform of job creation. On 8 April 2014, it launched a plan to create 150,000 jobs across Ireland by replacing the controversial JobBridge and Gateway initiatives with a "real jobs programme of public works, free education and genuine training schemes".[8]

Paul Murphy was elected to Dáil Éireann for Dublin South-West under the Anti-Austerity Alliance banner at a by-election in October 2014. ln September 2019 he resigned from the party.[9]

Ruth Coppinger was elected for Dublin West as a TD at the 2014 Dublin West by-election. Both were re-elected at the 2016 Irish general election. Coppinger became the first woman to be nominated for the role of Taoiseach.

Mick Barry was elected as TD for the Cork North–Central constituency in 2016. According to the Irish Examiner, Barry has been "a leading figure in the Cork and national campaigns" against household and water charges.

On 7 August 2015, the party was removed from the Register of Political Parties.[10] It held discussions in August 2015 with the People Before Profit about forming a new political grouping.[11] On 17 September 2015, the two parties announced that they had formally registered as a single political party for electoral purposes.[12] The new organisation was called "Anti-Austerity Alliance–People Before Profit" and subsequently renamed as Solidarity–People Before Profit.

Relaunch as Solidarity

An election placard for Solidarity candidate Ruth Coppinger in the 2020 Irish general election, advocating free public transport.

On 10 March 2017, the Anti-Austerity Alliance called a press conference and announced that it would now be relaunched as Solidarity. This name change was made to reflect the "many movements emerging on workplace, economic and social issues" and that while "the AAA has played a key role in campaigns like the water charges and housing", that the organisation under the name of Solidarity "will continue to do so, but the name will now better reflect our campaigning work on Repeal, LGBTQ issues and equality generally."[13]

The electoral alliance and Dáil grouping, Anti-Austerity Alliance–People Before Profit, was renamed Solidarity–People Before Profit.

Cork City Councillor Lil O'Donnell left the party at the time of the rebranding as Solidarity.[14]

Rita Harrold unsuccessfully stood in Dublin at the 2019 European Parliament election.[15]

At the 2020 general election, Coppinger lost her seat, leading Barry as the party's only TD.

Criticism

All Solidarity's elected representatives are members of the Socialist Party, which has led to criticism that Solidarity is a front organisation for the Trotskyist Socialist Party.[16]

Election results

General elections

Election Dáil First Preference Vote Vote % Seats Government
2016 32nd 41,994 1.9%
3 / 158
Fine GaelIndependents
with Fianna Fáil confidence & supply
2020 33rd 12,723 0.6%
1 / 160
Fianna Fáil–Fine Gael–Green Party

Local elections

Election First Preference Vote Vote % Seats
2014 21,097 1.2%
14 / 949
2019 10,911 0.64%
4 / 949

European elections

Election First Preference Vote Vote % Seats
2019 4,967 0.28%
0 / 13

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.