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Social Democrats (Ireland)

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Social Democrats
na Daonlathaithe Sóisialta
AbbreviationSocDems
LeaderHolly Cairns
Deputy leaderCian O'Callaghan
Secretary GeneralSabrina Ryan
ChairpersonColm Byrne
Founders
Founded15 July 2015(2015-07-15)
Headquarters28 South Frederick St,Dublin
Membership(2021)Increase2,000+[1]
IdeologySocial democracy
Pro-Europeanism
Political positionCentre-left
ColoursPurple
Dáil Éireann
6 / 160
Local government
34 / 949
Website
www.socialdemocrats.ie

TheSocial Democrats(Irish:Na Daonlathaithe Sóisialta)[2]are asocial democratic[3]political party in Ireland.[3]Led byHolly Cairnssince March 2023, the party was launched on 15 July 2015 by threeindependentTDs:Catherine Murphy,Róisín Shortall,andStephen Donnelly.It promotes theNordic model[4]andpro-Europeanviews.[5]

History

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2015–2019: Foundation and early elections

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The Social Democrats was established with a co-leadership arrangement between its three founding members.Róisín Shortallis a formerLabour PartyTDand formerMinister of State at the Department of Health.She resigned from the role and from Labour in September 2012, citing lack of support and the lack of an explanation from then-Minister for HealthJames Reillyconcerning his controversial decision to locate a newprimary care centrein his own constituency.[6]Catherine Murphywas successively a member of theWorkers' Party,Democratic Leftand the Labour Party before being elected as an independent TD in 2005.Stephen Donnellyfirst entered politics as an independent TD in the2011 general election,having previously worked as a consultant forMcKinsey and Company.Both Murphy and Donnelly were members of theTechnical Groupin the 31st Dáil, with Murphy having served as itsChief Whip.

The party ran fourteen candidates in the2016 general election,including its three incumbent TDs, former Labour PartySenatorJames Heffernan,and county councillorsGary GannonandCian O'Callaghan.[7]Their three incumbent TDs were re-elected, but none of their other candidates were elected.

In May 2016, the party formed a technical group within the Dáil with theGreen Party.[8][9]

On 5 September 2016, Stephen Donnelly resigned as joint leader and left the party, stating that he was doing so "with great sadness, having vested so much together with my parliamentary colleagues, Catherine and Roisin, a small core team and many volunteers across the country, into the establishment of the Social Democrats over the last 20 months", but referring to his relationship with his fellow leaders, that "some partnerships simply don't work".[10]On 2 February 2017, he joinedFianna Fáil.[11]

2019 local and European elections

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The Social Democrats contested their firstEuropean Parliament electionsin May 2019, with councillorGary Gannonrunning for election in theDublinconstituency.[12]Gannon received 5.6% of the first-preference votes, finishing 6th out of 19 candidates in the first count. He was eliminated on the 14th count. The party did not contest the other Irish constituencies ofMidlands-North-WestorSouthat this election.

The party also contested their first local elections in May 2019. The Social Democrats put forward 58 candidates for seats on local councils. 55% of the candidates were women, making it the second highest percentage of female candidates put forward among all political parties.[13]19 of the 58 candidates were elected, more than trebling the party's representation in local government.[14]Ellie Kisyombe,aMalawi-born asylum seeker running for the Social Democrats in Dublin's North Inner City LEA, was retained after a review of inconsistencies in her account of her asylum history and time indirect provision;following this, three members of the party's National Executive resigned.[15]

2019 by-elections and the 2020 general election

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In November 2019, the party contested 3 of the 4 by-elections caused by the election of Irish TDs to the European Parliament, but did not win any seats, with their candidates all receiving between 2.5% and 4.4% of the vote.

In the2020 general election,the party ran 20 candidates in 20 constituencies, and increased their seats to six, despite a small fall in the number of first preference votes received. Murphy and Shortall were re-elected in their constituencies, and were joined byHolly CairnsinCork South-West,Gary GannoninDublin Central,Cian O'CallaghaninDublin Bay NorthandJennifer WhitmoreinWicklow.The Social Democrats finished level on seats with theLabour Partyand exceeded the seats of other left-leaning partiesSolidarity–People Before ProfitandIndependents 4 Change.[16]

Holly Cairns as leader

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On 22 February 2023, Murphy and Shortall announced that they would step down as co-leaders of the Social Democrats.[17]Holly Cairns was the only candidate to put her name forward for leadership of the party, and she was announced as the new leader on 1 March.[18][19]On becoming leader, Cairns reiterated that the Social Democrats have no interest in merging with the Labour Party, which had been repeatedly suggested but rejected by the Social Democrats' party leadership.[20][21][22][23]She said that housing and Sláintecare would be red line issues for the Social Democrats in any coalition talks with any party.[24]On 4 July 2023 it was announced that Cian O'Callaghan had been appointed to the newly created role of deputy party leader.[25][26]

2024 local and European elections

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In the2024 local elections,the Social Democrats ran 78 candidates in the local elections, with 35 elected. In the process, the Social Democrats took 10 seats onDublin City Council,becoming the second-largest party there.[27]

For the2024 European elections in Ireland,the party ran three candidates, one in each of the three Irishconstituencies.While the Social Democrats' first preference vote share increased to 2.95%, none of their candidates were elected.[28]

Elected representatives

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As of the2020 general election,the Social Democrats have six TDs.[citation needed]

Through 2017 and 2018, the Social Democrats recruited several sitting county councillors, includingJennifer Whitmore(Wicklow County Council), Joe Harris (Cork County Council), Dermot Looney (South Dublin County Council), Paul Mulville (Fingal County Council) and June Murphy (Cork County Council).[29][30][31]In the 2019 local elections they won 19 council seats, but by 2023 they had expanded this to 22 by recruiting three county councillors; Mary Roche (Waterford County Council), Eoin Ó Broin (South Dublin County Council) and Liam Quaide (Cork County Council).[32][33][34]

In 2023,Galway City CouncillorOwen Hanley resigned as a councillor and as a party member, following allegations made against him on social media.[35]

In the2024 local elections,the party won 35 councillor seats, up from the 19 they had previously held.[36]They performed particularly well in theDublin City Council election,doubling their seat share to 10 and becoming the second largest party behindFine Gael.[37]

Ideology and policies

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At the party's launch, its three TDs stated their support for theNordic modelofsocial democracy,backed the repeal of theEighth Amendmentand the Official Secrets Act, and stated their opposition to domesticwater charges.[38][39][40]The party's manifesto for the 2016 general election listed commitments to "three core areas":

  • Policies that support a healthy, inclusive and progressive society
  • Policies that ensure a strong, stable and vibrant economy, and support Ireland'sSMEswith the same vigour that is applied to the multinational sector
  • Policies that make politics and government more transparent and responsive to public, rather than party need[41]

The party iscentre-left[42][43][44]and supports Irish membership of theEuropean Union.The party is also in favour of a directly elected mayor ofDublin.[45]

Health policies

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One of the party's core policies isSláintecare,an Irish national health service.Sláintecareis a fully costed plan for a universal, single-tier public health service that would join up health and social care in the Republic of Ireland and be free at the point of use.[46]Sláintecarewas developed as the result of a cross-Party Oireachtas Committee chaired by the Social Democrats'Róisín Shortall,which sought to examine the issue of healthcare in Ireland. The party'sSláintecarepolicy plan also includes (but is not limited to): a legal entitlement to homecare packages for older people, significantly reducing prescription charges and lowering costs for medicines, providing access to basic procedures at a local level, and improved funding for mental health, including counselling, community programmes, and adult mental health teams.[47]

Housing policies

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The Social Democrats are in favour of universal access to affordable housing.[48][49]In May 2017, the party published the Urban Regeneration and Housing Bill to eliminate loopholes to the vacant site levy and increase penalties for developers engaged in land hoarding.[50]In January 2018 the party called for a nationwide rent freeze.[51]In December 2019 the party proposed a motion of no-confidence in housing minister Eoghan Murphy.[52]

In their 2020 manifesto, the party called for building 100,000 homes over a five-year period to be delivered by a new housing agency, and pledged to end homelessness.[53]

Economic and worker's rights policies

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In their 2020 manifesto, the party said it would ban exploitative work contracts, encourage union membership and protect younger workers.[53]In their October 2023 alternative budget, they advocated for a new tax on assets valued at over 1 millioneuroand an increase of the minimum wage by 2 euro, to €13.30 per hour.[54]

Social policies

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The Social Democrats have published legislation on equal access and non-religious discrimination in schools,[55]extended unpaidparental leave[56]and greater minimum notice periods for residential tenancies.[57]The party called for a yes vote in theReferendum to Repeal the Eighth Amendmenton 25 May 2018.[58]At its 2018 National Conference, the party became one of the few in Ireland – along withPeople Before Profit– to formally adopt a position calling for repeal of anti-sex work legislation, and supportdecriminalisation of sex work,in line with theNew Zealand model.It also supports an end toconversion therapy.[59]

Education policies

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In their 2020 manifesto, the party committed to making primary school education free, reducing third level fees and expanding the SUSI grant system.[53]

Transport and climate policies

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The party's 2020 manifesto vowed to build more cycle lanes, cut public transport fares and introduce a dedicated public transport policing unit. On climate policies, they called for banningfrackingand pledged to meet the targets in theParis Agreement.[53]

Drug policies

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The party supports the decriminalisation of drugs for personal consumption. The Social Democrats instead want to take a health led approach to drugs, such as by tackling the socio-economic and mental health factors that pre-dispose people to substance abuse. It also advocates for better funding for drug treatment and health services, as well as improved public education around drugs.[60]

Anti-corruption

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The party has called for the establishment of an independent anti-corruption agency in Ireland to tackle white-collar crime and corruption in the corporate world and political spheres.[61][62]

Foreign affairs

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In November 2023, the Social Democrats put forward a Dáil motion seeking to expel theIsraeli ambassador to Ireland,Dana Erlich,and to place economic sanctions onIsraelamidst theIsraeli invasion of the Gaza Strip.[63]The motion was voted down by the government.[64]Two months later, the party put forward a motion to backSouth Africa's case against Israelin theInternational Court of Justice;the government put forward a counter-motion, which passed in its place.[65]

Leadership

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Leaders

[edit]
Name Portrait Period Constituency
Catherine Murphy,Róisín ShortallandStephen Donnelly
Social Democrats (Ireland) Leadership, 2016.jpg
2015–2016 Kildare North,Dublin North WestandWicklow
Catherine MurphyandRóisín Shortall
Róisín Shortall TD and Catherine Murphy TD cropped.jpg
2016–2023 Kildare NorthandDublin North West
Holly Cairns
Holly Cairns, April 2023 (headshot).jpg
2023–present Cork South-West

Deputy leader

[edit]
Name Portrait Period Constituency
Cian O'Callaghan
Cian O'Callaghan 2020.jpg
2023–present Dublin Bay North

Election results

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Dáil Éireann

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Election Co-leaders 1st pref
votes
% Seats ± Government
2016 Catherine Murphy
Róisín Shortall
Stephen Donnelly
64,094 3.0 (#7)
3 / 158
Steady Opposition
2020[66] Catherine Murphy
Róisín Shortall
63,397 2.9 (#6)
6 / 160
Increase3 Opposition

Local elections

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Election 1st pref
votes
% Seats +/–
2019 39,644 2.3 (#6)
19 / 949
Steady
2024 63,273 3.4 (#5)
35 / 949
Increase16

European Parliament

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Election Leader 1st pref
Votes
% Seats +/− EP Group
2019 Catherine Murphy
Róisín Shortall
20,331 1.21 (#8)
0 / 13
New
2024 Holly Cairns 51,571 2.95 (#9)
0 / 14
Steady0

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