Micheal Martin has been reappointed as the Prime Minister of the Republic of Ireland, marking his second tenure in the role after handing over in 2022.
On Thursday, lawmakers cast their votes, with 95 supporting and 76 opposing the Fianna Fail leader’s nomination. Martin will helm a coalition government comprising the two largest centre-right parties alongside independent representatives.
The nomination process faced a one-day delay following a turbulent session in parliament on Wednesday, where debates over speaking rights for independent lawmakers supporting the coalition led to protests and the suspension of proceedings. Overnight negotiations resolved the stalemate, paving the way for Thursday’s vote.
This coalition marks the second consecutive partnership between long-standing rivals Fine Gael and Fianna Fail, who have jointly dominated Irish governance since 1937. Independent lawmakers will replace the Green Party as junior coalition partners after the Greens suffered significant losses in the elections held last November.
Martin, 64, previously served as prime minister from 2020 to 2022 before handing over the position to Fine Gael under a rotating leadership agreement. According to the coalition pact, Simon Harris, the outgoing prime minister, will return to the role in 2027.
Meanwhile, Harris will assume the position of deputy prime minister and is expected to take on the role of foreign minister. Paschal Donohoe of Fine Gael, who chairs the eurozone finance ministers group, is anticipated to continue as finance minister.
Ireland faces significant economic uncertainty, particularly due to the potential repercussions of US President Donald Trump’s return to power. Trump’s proposal to slash corporate taxes poses a risk to Ireland’s economy, which heavily relies on foreign multinationals.
“For us today, the task is to protect Ireland’s strength at a moment of real threat, while also addressing critical social needs. By any reasonable measure, this is a challenging moment in world history,” an emotional Martin declared in parliament after his re-election.
Central to Martin’s strategy for bolstering Ireland’s economic stability is enhancing “three essential relationships” with Europe, the United States, and the United Kingdom. He emphasized, “We are not naive about the realities of change [in the US], but equally, the Ireland-America relationship is one which benefits us both and it will emerge strongly no matter what.”
The coalition has pledged to utilize a tax surplus generated by Ireland’s concentration of U.S. multinationals to boost public investment, reduce taxes, and expand the country’s sovereign wealth fund.
Martin, a seasoned politician first elected to parliament 36 years ago, was a prominent member of the Fianna Fail administration that negotiated the European Union-IMF bailout in 2010.
This led to a historic electoral defeat for the party in 2011, shortly after Martin assumed its leadership.
However, the former history teacher, who has held key portfolios including health, trade, and education, steered the party to recovery, eventually returning Fianna Fáil to power nine years later.
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