logo
Mick Clifford: Protest without a plan — the worrying void at the heart of Ireland's far-right surge

Mick Clifford: Protest without a plan — the worrying void at the heart of Ireland's far-right surge

Irish Examiner26-04-2025
Anyone for the last few tricolours? The man on O'Connell Street is doing a brisk trade. An odd passer-by takes up the offer and joins the legions either waving or wrapped in the national colours, en route to the Garden of Remembrance.
From there, at just after 2pm, a parade was formed and took off down towards O'Connell Street, with a fleet of Garda public order vans leading the way. This was what was billed as a far-right protest, although many among them take exception to the label.
Various estimates of the size of the crowd have been made, but it took nearly an hour for the marchers to pass the GPO, where they were met with a counter-demonstration.
On one level, the gathering had all the appearance of a family day out, with good-natured greetings, plenty of children, a bagpiper blowing out through the April sunshine, and stray currents carrying the sweet waft of cannabis.
People take part in an anti-immigration protest in Dublin City centre. Picture: Conor O Mearain/PA Wire
On another level, this large gathering was a purveyor of fear. Last Thursday, Tusla sent out a notice to foster parents of minors who have come through the international application process.
The notice said that an anti-immigrant protest was taking place and that 'safety protocols should be agreed for those young people placed in Dublin' as well as a recommendation to instruct those 'placed outside Dublin that no free time to Dublin is permitted this weekend.'
The notice was well placed. As the gathering moved off from Parnell Square, down towards O'Connell Street, one of the recurring chants was 'get them out.'
They are asylum seekers and many of those marching want them out of accommodation, out of the country.
They want this based largely on the disinformation that, according to one marcher who spoke to the Irish Examiner, 'the whole place is being flooded with them and the government is behind it.'
Thousands of people participated in an anti-immigration protest in Dublin city centre on Saturday, after Conor McGregor posted on social media in support of the march. Picture: Conor O Mearain/PA Wire
There were around 15,000 applications for protection in the last twelve months in a state of five million people.
'Get them out,' they chanted over and over. One of the most depressing sights among the marchers was two young girls, maybe nine or ten, swigging from soft drinks and chanting with glee: 'Get them out.'
Malachy Steenson, elected to Dublin City Council, was prominent wearing a green Make Ireland Great Again hat.
Conor McGregor recorded a post from the Garden of Remembrance but was not marching. Usually, such a gathering would have a preponderance of varying posters, but here the vast majority were brandishing the tricolour and little else.
Read what you will into that, including an expression of general dissatisfaction with the state of the country but no coherent policy or direction, or even political philosophy, beyond blaming asylum seekers. There were signs from various locations, claiming to speak for places like Finglas and Coolock, but there is no indication that this was representative of majority sentiment in these enclaves.
Counter protestors gather outside the GPO in Dublin ahead of planned nationalist protests at the Garden of Rememberance. Picture: Dylan O'Neill
At around 2.15, outside the GPO, the Garda operation was in place. There were vans from the public order unit, barriers corralling in the counter-demonstration, a line of grim-faced Gardaí and four horsemen there to ensure there would be no apocalypse.
The counter-demonstration, led by People Before Profit and including a number of civic and anti-racism groups, was completely outnumbered by the marchers. All that really goes to show is it's much easier to get people to gather in the name of anger than empathy these days.
'Blame the government, blame the markets, blame the landlords,' those corralled at the GPO chanted.
A cordon of barriers penned in the counter-demonstrators. As the march passed, the volume reached for the blue skies with opposing chants trying to outdo each other. A professional Garda operation ensured that stray words or missiles would not get out of hand and spark off something dangerous.
Just one bottle, filled with water, was thrust across the Garda line by a marcher. The most notable feature of the meeting of the two sides was the propensity for so many to have their hands raised with phones, filming as if this whole episode should be captured for posterity.
Counter protestors gather outside the GPO in Dublin ahead of planned nationalist protests at the Garden of Rememberance. Picture: Dylan O'Neill
One individual did decide to talk to the Irish Examiner, where others declined, including an angry tall bearded man who just offered a middle finger.
'You can put me down as Hughie from Sheriff Street,' the agreeable man said, mentioning that he took an hour off work just to show his support.
'The main problem is the housing. There are people out there who can't get a place to live. One young woman I know is in a tiny room with three small children. People have had enough of the politicians.'
And what about the constant anti-asylum seeker drone?
'That comes into it, but if the other thing was sorted, you wouldn't have the same opposition to it,' he said.
Among the sea of fluttering tricolours, there was a single banner on housing.
It was around 3.10pm when the last of the marchers passed the hallowed site of the 1916 Rising and the Gardaí began to relax. By then, the waft of cannabis was being smothered by the smell of horseshit, indicating that the four mares had been as nervous as everybody else for the potential for things to turn ugly.
Ironically, the two sides in this Saturday afternoon coming together have one thing in common: they both agree that the direction of the country is excluding large cohorts of the population.
Their respective solutions differ greatly, and the far-right crowd don't appear to have any coherent direction beyond hate, but the event certainly highlights some disturbing undercurrents in society at a time when politics as usual appears to be the approach in Leinster House.
Read More
Thousands participate in Dublin anti-immigration protest and counter demo
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sarah Harte: Proud revolutionary history of the GPO deserves better than shops and offices
Sarah Harte: Proud revolutionary history of the GPO deserves better than shops and offices

Irish Examiner

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Sarah Harte: Proud revolutionary history of the GPO deserves better than shops and offices

Against the backdrop of increased 'Ireland for the Irish' protests, the story of who we are feels more pertinent than ever, which is why developing the GPO to include offices and retail spaces is a crummy idea. It demonstrates a depressing lack of cultural confidence, which isn't a surprise because the British were so adept at separating us from a sense of pride and culture that we ended up a nation of property developers. Nothing wrong with property developers. As someone who is pro-business, I have the utmost respect for visionary businesspeople who take risks and make things happen, but in their lane. If the French had a GPO with a comparable history, would they have partially developed it as shops and offices? They would deem the idea 'sauvage'. Is it too much to ask that the New Ireland be more confident? Last Saturday, Sinn Féin organised a hands-off our rebel history protest against the development of the GPO into office and retail space. Just over nine years ago, around 500,000 people lined the streets of Dublin on Easter Sunday to commemorate the Easter Rising and what some view as the genesis of the modern independent republic. On both days, people who turned up will inevitably have different perspectives on the Easter Rising. This was also true at the time of the rising, with a plethora of different reactions to the five-day event, which subsequently grew either more hostile or more sympathetic from those who had initially viewed it as a 'putsch without popular support.' When WB Yeats wrote his famous political poem 'Easter 1916', Maude Gonne wrote him a tetchy letter from Passy in Paris telling him how much she disliked it, telling him that 'above all it isn't worthy of the subject.' She sternly told him that MacDonagh, Pearse, and Connolly were 'men of genius, with large, comprehensive, speculative and active brains.' Certainly, our history has never been straightforward and cannot be explained by simplified narratives. Yet, the revisionist line that the signatories to the proclamation were a bunch of bloodthirsty psychopathic terrorists without an electoral mandate who set themselves up as a provisional government and should not have been commemorated at all in 2016 is one that is at best reductive, with an inherent, tedious bias that is markedly telling. A view from the kind of people who get excited at the sniff of the word Royal and see us as a kind of empire affiliate, people who would now happily rejoin the Commonwealth (in a poll last year, 40% were persuadable) and think an honours system here would be great. A South Dublin medic once told me that Chelsea was the epicentre of the cultural world. I greatly enjoyed the laugh that this gave me (head thrown back territory actually), but I suppose one man's feast is another woman's famine. We are all prisoners of our past. Myths are how we explain ourselves to ourselves on the level of family, community and country. The past is shaped by who's telling the story, and that story can never be scientific in its accuracy; it shifts like grains of sand and is always personal and ideological As Richard Cohen, author of Making History: The Storytellers Who Shaped the Past, wrote: 'Every man of genius who writes history infuses into it, perhaps unconsciously, the character of his own spirit. His characters ... seem to have only one manner of thinking and feeling, and that is the manner of the author.' A consideration moving forward is not only how we choose to view and celebrate the past, but also how we honour who we are now. These questions are closely connected. An engagement with the past should dictate an investment in the future, but what do we mean when we say 'invest'? Cultural, intellectual, religious and political influences are increasingly more diverse here. This inevitably means an expanding definition of what it means to be Irish. This necessitates guarding against polemical utterances on who is Irish, because we have new mythmakers who peddle hate and sow dissension, who appropriate the Tricolour for their hollow strains of ethno-nationalism. The shattered remains of the General Post Office after the Easter Rising. Picture: Getty Images As it happens, there is already an interpretive centre in the GPO which narrates our past. We could add to this curation and preservation of our history a place of artistic excellence, intellectual exchange and education that would honour the idealism and bravery of previous revolutionaries. And I don't just mean the signatories to the Proclamation. I mean all the men and women who fought for Ireland in 1916, in the War of Independence, in the Civil War, regardless of what side they were on, who made sacrifices, were sometimes forced into brutal acts, but who had a dream of which we are the beneficiaries. A dream that went beyond shops, offices and high-end apartments for pension funds. They are turning in their graves In other words, in a bullet-riddled historic building, we make new history with a range of voices for a new, confident Ireland, in a broadened culture. We support theatre, dance, art, music, poetry, photography, and literature through artist residencies in dedicated spaces because, in a new Ireland, the cultural ideals on which a claim of nationality rests need to develop. Una Mullally in The Irish Times has written repeatedly and persuasively about the opportunity inherent in developing the GPO and O'Connell Street 'that can inspire and facilitate generations to come'. She's on the nose, although the founder of the Little Museum of Dublin, Trevor White, considers the cultural development of the GPO to be a performative virtue-signalling soporific one. His solution involves converting part of the GPO into owner-occupied apartments, with the proceeds then used to develop social and affordable housing in affluent suburbs. On paper, this might sound plausible, except experience tells us that development for a niche market rarely leads to affordable social housing. Ultimately, this is a well-intentioned pipe dream. To paraphrase him, it's gentrification on steroids. It's beyond the word count of this column to analyse the outcomes of the Part V rules, which compel developers to hold back 10% of a development for social housing. They have been in force since 2000, and saying they haven't been a success is an understatement. I don't disagree with White that people should live on O'Connell Street and in the city centre, but which people? Regardless of your perspective on what 1916 signifies, or even if you miss the days when Ireland was run from Dublin Castle and you continue to tug what you view as your metropolitan forelock to Blighty, our colonisation is undeniable as the defining event of who we are. This feels more germane than ever as we witness imperialist adventures in Ukraine and Gaza, which, as historian Professor Jane Ohlmeyer of Trinity College Dublin points out, are 'legacies of empire'. As the Irish Examiner editorial wrote on Monday, 'We can learn well or badly from history ... we have a duty of care, not only to our own descendants but the wider world we'd like to see.' The marked idealism that characterised the run-up to and aftermath of 1916 is in woefully short supply. That 'wider world' or vibrant civic culture will never be achieved by building more shops and offices, or, for that matter, high-end apartments. Spare us.

Anti-immigration movement split over ex-UVF man's speech at Dublin's GPO
Anti-immigration movement split over ex-UVF man's speech at Dublin's GPO

Sunday World

timea day ago

  • Sunday World

Anti-immigration movement split over ex-UVF man's speech at Dublin's GPO

Armed robber Mark Sinclair addressed a rally at Dublin's GPO last weekend Armed robber Mark Sinclair addressed a rally at Dublin's GPO last weekend – the building regarded as a shrine by republicans as it the headquarters of the 1916 Easter Rising – spouting his anti-immigrant views. One woman passer-by who saw him said: 'Pádraig Pearse would be spinning in his grave.' Sinclair – who was jailed for 17 years in Scotland for bank robbing – is the cousin of notorious Shankill Butcher Billy Moore, who was jailed for 11 gruesome sectarian murders. But yesterday one prominent anti-immigration faction warned the top loyalist to keep well away from any future Dublin rallies. Three weeks ago the Sunday World revealed that Sinclair had been broadcasting live on his YouTube channel from a protest in Limerick. A Dublin councillor who is prominent in the campaign for tougher laws on immigration said yesterday that it was a disgrace that Sinclair spoke at the GPO rally. Former UVF man Mark Sinclair who spoke at a far right rally in Dublin outside the GPO Councillor Malachy Steenson told us: 'Former UVF prisoner Mark Sinclair spoke at the rally and he encouraged other loyalists to attend as many rallies as possible. 'Sinclair is a convicted bank robber and a self-confessed former member of the UVF. 'He has a close family connection to the Shankill Butchers gang, who gruesomely murdered Catholics over a period of years. 'Sinclair has attended a number of nationalist rallies in the Republic and I strongly condemn that. 'The organiser of this event was warned by myself and other prominent figures to disassociate from this individual and end her toxic and embarrassing relationship with loyalists.' The Sunday World has learned Sinclair's presence at rallies south of the border has split the anti-immigration movement, with many activists calling to have him banned. However, it is not just a section of anti-immigration campaigners who have said Sinclair is not welcome. Dublin community activist Joe Mooney, a well-known anti-racism campaigner, said: 'I don't want to see anyone with a racist or anti-immigrant profile being welcomed on the streets of Dublin or anywhere else in Ireland. Former UVF man Mark Sinclair 'I mean people like Mark Sinclair belonged to an organisation which bombed the streets of this city. These people should refrain from attending marches on the streets of Dublin. I was only a kid when Dublin was bombed by the UVF, but I remember the terror and the horror of what these people did. 'The UVF knew that those streets would be filled with workers on their way home. 'To think those people set out to kill as many people as they could on the streets of Dublin and Monaghan. And to think that today they would find some sort of status on the streets of Dublin is absolutely reprehensible. 'I'm involved with Dublin Communities Against Racism and I've spent a long time as a community activist and I deal with lots of issues. 'I don't believe its racist to ask questions about immigration. But when you take to the street and march or abuse people with dark-coloured skin that's completely and utterly wrong.' Dublin Communities Against Racism also hit out at Sinclair's presence at the GPO rally, saying it exposed the links between what it called 'Irish racists' and loyalists. It said: 'Dublin Communities Against Racism takes this opportunity to highlight the links between these anti-Irish bigots and the fake 'patriot' racists.' Referring to the UVF attacks on Dublin during the Troubles, it said: 'In 2024 and 2025, loyalists came to Dublin, this time invited and welcomed by racists and anti-immigrant campaigners. 'How times have changed, and shockingly so. 'Irish racists have long worked closely with loyalist terror supporters and extreme unionist and British fascist figures, going as far back as the 1930s. What all of their friends have in common is that they are violently anti-Irish and always have been. Mark Sinclair 'This anti-Irish and sectarian hatred has not gone away, but is conveniently covered up to unite and together target asylum seekers, immigrants and other foreign (and foreign-looking) people. Their anti-Irish hatred is not far beneath the surface. 'In recent weeks, some anti-immigrant and racist right figures have issued statements claiming to 'disassociate' themselves from loyalist figures. 'We do not accept this as genuine. This response is only due to the backlash created by the exposure and highlighting of these links.' Sinclair's cousin Billy was the man who kept the Shankill Butchers' murder machine oiled when 'Master Butcher' Lenny Murphy was taken off the streets and jailed on firearms charges. Jailing Moore for life, Judge Turlough O'Donnell told him: 'You Moore pleaded guilty to 11 murders carried out in a manner so cruel and revolting, as to be beyond the comprehension of any normal human being.' His cousin Mark Sinclair – from Kilburn Street off Belfast's staunchly loyalist Donegall Road – was sent down for 17 years for a series of robberies in Scotland. Sinclair – who now uses the social media title 'Freedom Dad' – carried out the bank heists in Ayrshire and Dumfries & Galloway. And he was scooped by police hiding out in Moore's rented flat in Edinburgh. At his trial at the High Court in Ayr, Sinclair told the judge he had been recruited by MI5 to carry out surveillance on Scottish groups sympathetic to Ulster loyalism in Northern Ireland. Mark Sinclair

Who is the mystery woman Conor McGregor was seen kissing on Florida beach?
Who is the mystery woman Conor McGregor was seen kissing on Florida beach?

Irish Daily Mirror

time2 days ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Who is the mystery woman Conor McGregor was seen kissing on Florida beach?

Conor McGregor made headlines yet again after appearing to kiss a mystery woman on a Florida beach over the weekend. McGregor was caught on camera getting up close and personal with a bikini-clad lady on a Fort Lauderdale beach over the weekend. In the images seen by the Irish Mirror, McGregor put his hand on her thigh, had his arm slung over her shoulder, and seemingly planted a kiss on her lips. Initial reports say McGregor attracted plenty of interest while on the packed beach, but little has surfaced about the mystery woman since the incident. The former MMA fighter continued to make headlines on Monday when he got caught up in a nude pic scandal following posts from Azealia Banks The American rapper leaked unsolicited pictures of Conor McGregor and accused accused the MMA fighter of threatening her. The former UFC champion sent her nudes, which she proceeded to post on social media publicly. She further accused him of threatening her not to tell anybody. Leaking McGregor's pics, she wrote on X: 'How you gonna send a b**ch a some crooked d**k pics then threaten her not to tell. @TheNotoriousMMA n**ga do you know who the f**k I am?' She further mocked the MMA fighter and wrote: 'Honey…… ain't u trying to be the president of Ireland what is it giving fam?" She further shared another screenshot where she claimed that McGregor woke up early and deleted his pictures from her chat. However, she revealed the threat part in the chat, in which McGregor said: 'Don't be a rat cos all rats get caught.' In another tweet, she once again mocked the Dubliner's announcement to run for Irish presidency, sharing, 'Conor McGregor 4 President'. McGregor has spent the bulk of his summer abroad with his family holidaying while also engaging in a number of business ventures. He has not fought in the UFC since July 2021 and it looks increasingly unlikely he will ever fight again.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store