On energy prices, the CSO said that households’ electricity bills have tripled since the peak of the Celtic Tiger in 2006 ...
Irish lawmakers have voted to make veteran politician Micheál Martin prime minister for a second time, leading a coalition government.
The justices unanimously ruled that the law, passed by an overwhelming bipartisan majority in Congress last year and signed by Democratic President Joe Biden, did not violate the U.S. Constitution's ...
The incoming government is to create three additional minister of state roles, bringing the number to a record high of 23. New laws to allow for the increase are expected to be brought forward in ...
The incoming coalition’s programme for government contains a lot ... has become a major pressure point in the Irish economy with a spate of high-profile restaurants forced to close because ...
A key port connecting Wales and Ireland has partially re-opened a month ... to ensure a "sustainable future for the port". The Welsh government's minister for transport and North Wales, Ken ...
it will still be noted that it was possible to publish a draft programme for government in Dublin yesterday well in advance of the official launch of the incoming Irish administration. The basic ...
Smaller class sizes, gym membership tax credits, a new transport police, cheaper childcare, and the retention of the pension age are among the measures a new government led by Micheál Martin has ...
The new Government will face one problem that has defied the efforts of successive administrations to solve it. The housing and accommodation crisis in Ireland is so multifaceted and piercing now ...
#VoteWithPride, a coalition of 18 Irish LGBTQ+ organisations ... the stakes are too high.” The collective concludes the statement by saying: “We look forward to working with the incoming government to ...
Speaking about the draft Programme for Government this evening, Mícheál Martin, who is likely to return to the Office of Taoiseach in the next government, described the plan as "very ambitious".
The newly formed Irish government will increase funding for the Shared Island Fund by a further €1 billion up to 2035 to further “reconciliation, mutual respect and growth”. Staff in the ...