9 November 2010
Does Labour back Fine Gael plan to slash jobs and lengthen dole queues?
EAMON GILMORE and the Labour Party have been challenged by Sinn Féin Dáil leader Caoimhghín Ó Caoláin to say if Labour will go along with the plan by Fine Gael in government to slash the number of workers in the public service by 30,000.
The Sinn Féin Dáil leader described the Fine Gael policy as “a plan to lengthen the dole queues”. He said:
There is room for huge improvement in the way services are delivered and there is a need to eliminate waste. But to imagine that you can take 30,000 posts out of the public service and at the same time improve delivery to the public is pure fantasy.
For example, Fine Gael’s document talks of having local authority officers respond to problems raised by residents within two days. Already local authorities are under-staffed and working at full stretch. It is ludicrous to suggest that they can be further denuded of staff and expected to provide faster, more efficient services.
Fine Gael wants to hand over the health services to what it calls ‘competing insurance companies’ and sell off semi-state companies such as the ESB.
This is essentially a plan to lengthen the dole queues. It takes no account of the leading role the public services can play in reviving the economy.
The Labour Party should outline its position on this plan from its prospective coalition partner.
Would Labour go along with it?
Follow us on Facebook
An Phoblacht on Twitter
Uncomfortable Conversations
An initiative for dialogue
for reconciliation
— — — — — — —
Contributions from key figures in the churches, academia and wider civic society as well as senior republican figures