Kildare North Candidates
The arrival of my polling card yesterday indicates that the general election in Ireland on Friday 29th November is approaching rapidly, so I thought I’d give a rundown of the 16 candidates who will appear on the ballot paper for my constituency, Kildare North.
Kildare North will return 5 TDs (Teachta Dála, or Deputies), one more than last time because of the population growth in the area. The current TDs are Réada Cronin (SF; Sinn Féin), Bernard Durkan (FG; Fine Gael), James Lawless (FF; Fianna Fáil) and Catherine Murphy (SD; Social Democrats). The latter is retiring so will not be standing at this election. The current government is a coalition of FG, FF and Green Party TDs.
The Single Transferable Vote system is used, meaning that voters have a single ballot paper on which they rank the candidates in order of preference. The candidate with the lowest number of first-preference votes is eliminated and their second preference votes redistributed. Candidates are thus progressively eliminated until the requisite number of TDs is selected.
There are three FG candidates: Bernard Durkan, Joe Neville and Evie Sammon). They are based in Maynooth, Leixlip and Celbridge respectively so are presumably hoping that local voting will work out in their favour. The idea presumably is that Bernard Durkan would be first choice in Maynooth, etc. However, I’ve already had canvassers arguing that I should put Joe Neville first. I won’t be voting for any of the candidates anyway, but I would be very amused if their decision to put three candidates forward backfired. Incidentally, Bernard Durkan is 79 and has been a TD since 1982. The leaflet I got from him promised “New Energy” for Kildare North. Yeah, right…
There are two FF candidates, James Lawless and Naoise Ó Cearúil; the latter was elected to the County Council this summer. I find FF indistinguishable from FG. Together or separately these two parties have governed the Republic since its creation and a change is long overdue.
The two Sinn Féin candidates are the incumbent Réada Cronin and Caroline Hogan. I haven’t seen any posters for Réada Cronin up in Maynooth, so I assume the campaign team is saving their resources for elsewhere. Maynooth is not traditionally an SF stronghold.
With Catherine Murphy not standing, the Social Democrats ran a process to select a replacement candidate, which was won by Aidan Farrelly (who actually works at Maynooth University) who is the official SD candidate. That doesn’t end the story, however. Former SD member Bill Clear is standing as an Independent because he didn’t get selected. Adding to the fact that Catherine Murphy had a considerable personal following, this looks like a bit of a mess for the Social Democrats whose vote will probaboly be reduced and split. It may be in order to capitalize on this that SF added a candidate; they only fielded one last time round.
Now we’re into the (probable) also-rans. Angela Feeney is standing for Labour. She is an active member of the Council, representing Maynooth, but it’s not clear whether she has reach over the rest of the constituency. Vincent Martin represents the Greens who haven’t previously been strong here. The Green Party in Ireland is nowhere near as left-wing as corresponding parties in the UK and elsewere. It often seems like the bicycle division of Fine Gael. Leah Whelan is standing for People Before Profit – Solidarity, the only really left-wing party standing in Kildare North.
Then we have we have a number of generally disagreeable (to me) fringe party candidates: Una O’Connor is standing for Aontú, a reactionary splinter group of people previously in Sinn Féin and Sean Gill for the Centre Party of Ireland, an ironic name for what is far-right splinter group of FG previously known as Renua. Gerry Waters is standing from the Irish Freedom Party. He was struck off the medical register for refusing to administer vaccines and has unsupportable far-right opinions on other issues. Last and by all means least is Avril Corcoran who is candidate for The Irish People, a far-right nationalist party which is part of the National Alliance of like-minded bigots.
It’s probably obvious which 11 candidates I’m not going to be voting for, but I’ll leave you to guess in what order I will rank the other 5!
P.S. LinkedIn didn’t like this post:

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This entry was posted on November 23, 2024 at 6:42 pm and is filed under Politics with tags Aontú, Centre Party of Ireland, Elections, Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael, General Election 2024, Green Party, ireland, Irish Politics, Labour, People Before Profit - Solidarity, Politics, Sinn Fein, Social Democrats. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
November 24, 2024 at 5:44 pm
Why can I see on the frontpage “1 comment” as having been made prior to this present one of mine, but no such comment when I click to do this?
I reckon Peter will decide the order in real time in the polling booth…
November 24, 2024 at 9:11 pm
That seems to happen all the time. I predict this comment will not show up. WordPress is very buggy.
November 24, 2024 at 9:25 pm
I checked my spam comments folder and found two comments of yours from yesterday in there. I’ve no idea why they got flagged as spam but today’s didn’t!
November 24, 2024 at 9:21 pm
Some time ago I set up the blog as a federated site (part of the “fediverse”). This means that my posts appear in full on other websites including the social media platform Mastodon. Readers can comment on WordPress as usual, or on one of these other sites. If someone comments on WordPress you see the comment here as previously, but if someone comments elsewhere in the fediverse WordPress doesn’t show it, although it adds to the count. This explains why you see only some of the comments. It’s weird, but I’m not sure whether it’s a bug or a feature…
November 24, 2024 at 9:17 pm
Amazingly, my last comment did show up, unlike what I tried to post yesterday:
One feature of STV that far too many fail to appreciate is that it allows you to vote against, not just for candidates. Indeed, there is strictly speaking no such thing as voting for someone: you merely rank the candidates in order from most preferred to most despised. By ensuring you number all your preferences and place the most despised candidate last you are effectively voting against them in any match-up with any other candidate. Conversely, failing to number all your preferences may have the effect of assisting the most despised candiate.
November 25, 2024 at 1:58 pm
There’s a discussion of this here:
https://www.rte.ie/brainstorm/2024/1125/1113370-ireland-elections-ballot-paper-voting-proportional-representation-single-transferable-vote/
November 25, 2024 at 1:24 pm
[…] in censoring posts. The most recent example of this I’ve seen was on Saturday when I wrote a post about the general election candidates for my constituency, Kildare North. As usual when I write an article here it gets posted automatically on a variety of other […]
November 29, 2024 at 10:24 am
[…] system such as Ireland’s that allows a spread of political opinions to be represented. In my constituency there is a spectrum from far left to far right, though those most likely to win are the place […]