Content from our recent National Party event in Galway, October 2017. This meeting was addressed by Party President Justin Barrett, Deputy President James Reynolds and Gerry Kinneavy.
Content from our recent National Party event in Galway, October 2017. This meeting was addressed by Party President Justin Barrett, Deputy President James Reynolds and Gerry Kinneavy.
Content from our recent Cork event is now available online. For more please visit our Youtube Channel.
On the 19th August, 2017, The Irish Times published an article by Fintan O’Toole entitled The State of Us: Ireland’s story doesn’t make sense any more. The subheading: “Globalisation, migration and Catholicism’s decline have undermined stories of ourselves”. https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/state-of-us-ireland-s-story-doesn-t-make-sense-any-more-1.3186301 In summary, he describes the various collective narratives which he feels have defined “modern Catholic” Ireland …
Justin Barrett addressing our event in Belfast. He discusses Brexit, the Unionist / Republican binary, and his vision for Irish unity. August, 2017
Photos from our recent National Party meeting in Belfast, August 2017. This meeting was addressed by Party President Justin Barrett and Deputy President James Reynolds. For more photos of this and previous events follow the National Party on Flickr.
Photos from our recent National Party meeting in Dublin, July 2017. This meeting was addressed by Party President Justin Barrett, Deputy President James Reynolds and Paul Clarke. For more photos of this and previous events follow the National Party on Flickr. Full speech available here.
It seems clear now that Ireland has ceased to be a country and has become rather a poster child for every Liberal crackpot notion and intellectual fashion. Let three recent examples suffice. This week Leo Varadkar is on the cover of Time magazine, looking like the generic leader of…well, take your pick of any country. …
The Family Farm and the Decline of Rural Ireland
There are some things so obviously related that though they exist or occur a thousand miles apart, or a thousand years apart, the relationship is obvious. Then there are things that exist or occur right beside each other at exactly the same time with, quite bizarrely, no causative relation to each other at all. And …
To many Irish people (innocents that they are) it may seem unthinkable that people who voted for Barack Obama would, several years later, vote for Donald Trump. This is not so much a comment on what Obama or Trump have amounted to, as what they seem or seemed to represent. The fact is that many …