Sharp exchanges follow Alan Shatter's comparison of occupied territories trade ban with 1930s Germany
Alan Shatter
has claimed that the proposed ban on trade with the
occupied Palestinian territories
is a 'boycott Jews Bill' reminiscent of policies from
1930s Germany
.
There were appeals for respect at the
Oireachtas foreign affairs committee
on Tuesday amid terse exchanges between politicians and Mr Shatter, who compared the Bill to something from
Father Ted
.
The proposed legislation, which has become known as the Occupied Territories Bill, would prohibit trade in goods with Israeli companies operating in the illegally occupied Palestinian territories. Mr Shatter told TDs and Senators that the Irish Government was producing legislation that was 'anti-Semitic'.
Could Mary Lou McDonald be about to enter the presidential race?
Listen |
41:13
'It is the first boycott Jews Bill published by any European government since 1945. And it replicates the type of legislation that was initiated in 1930s Germany,' said Mr Shatter, who was appearing before the committee in his capacity as a board member of the
Israel Council on Foreign Relations
.
READ MORE
Foreign affairs committee chairman John Lahart said it was 'hurtful', 'offensive and slanderous' for it to be suggested that the motivation behind the Bill was anti-Semitism.
Mr Shatter also claimed that the legislation, which focused on limited imports of 'olives and avocados', resembled the 'Father Ted-like provisions' of a 1980 family planning law that sought to license the importation of condoms.
Mr Shatter was challenged by
Fine Gael TD Brian Brennan
, who told the committee that he had travelled to Cairo in a personal capacity last weekend and met injured and orphaned Palestinian children.
'I held the hand of a two-year-old child who had bullet holes because of what's happening in Gaza. So when you say to me, and you say to this committee, that is a 'token gesture, this is fantasy politics, this is performance politics', I totally reject [that],' said Mr Brennan.
'How dare you come in here and make such statements? A 'Father Ted Bill'! You speak to the people on the ground that matter, listen to what they've got to say about this Bill ... I just think the humanity coming from yourself, with all due respect, is just simply lax.'
[
More than 300 sportspeople sign letter urging Central Bank to change stance on approving Israel bonds
Opens in new window
]
In terse exchanges, Mr Shatter said: 'I don't think a single visit, deputy, to Egypt is the be-all and end-all to resolving the conflict. And this Bill certainly won't resolve the conflict.'
In response to Mr Brennan's remarks, Natasha Hausdorff of the
Ireland Israel Alliance
said that he had spoken 'very powerfully' about Palestinian suffering.
'But it is important that the cause of that suffering is correctly identified, and that is not as a result of Israel's policy here, that is squarely on the shoulders of Hamas and other Palestinian terrorist groups who continue to abuse and subjugate and terrorise their own civilians,' she said.
All of the Israeli and Jewish witnesses appearing before the committee declined to agree that the occupied territories in the West Bank were illegally occupied land. Mr Shatter said he 'does not accept' that the Israeli-occupied territories in the West Bank are illegally occupied land. Ms Hausdorff said that 'one cannot occupy what is one's own sovereign territory'.
Maurice Cohen, chairman of the Jewish Representative Council of Ireland, said that anti-Semitism would be the result of the Bill. 'I'm not necessarily certain that that is the motivation behind it,' he said.
In a separate session shortly afterwards, the same committee heard from the
Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign
and Sadaka - the Ireland Palestine Alliance, who support the Bill.
Sadaka chairman Éamonn Meehan said the same arguments against the Bill had been made against the anti-apartheid campaign in the 1980s and 1990s, but that legislation had been 'highly effective'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Irish Times
24 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Government ‘feckless' with public money, Social Democrats claim in budget row
The Government has been 'reckless and feckless' with public money and is following a 'cynical giveaway budget ' last year by now 'moralising' on fiscal responsibility, a Social Democrats TD has claimed. Tánaiste Simon Harris however accused Jennifer Whitmore of 'hypocrisy' and asked which one-off payment from Budget 2025 the Social Democrats would have cut from double child benefit payments, carer's allowance or fuel allowance. But Ms Whitmore said her party had called for 'targeted' supports last year and would not have spent €100 million on energy credits for holiday homes as she accused the Government of being 'epic wasters'. During testy exchanges on the last day of the Dáil before the summer recess, the budget and the cost of living dominated Leaders' Questions for the third day this week. READ MORE Sinn Féin finance spokesman Pearse Doherty insisted there had to be a cost-of-living package as he pointed to a 63,000 increase in the past four months in the number of people in arrears on their electricity bills. The energy regulator issued figures showing more than 300,000 people are behind on their electricity and a further 175,000 are in arrears on their gas bill. Irish consumers are paying 'far and above' what other European Union countries are paying for energy. Families 'simply can't absorb this type of shock to their finances' and the Government plan is to 'cancel the energy credits they so desperately need and relied on', Mr Doherty said, accusing the Government of having 'all the wrong priorities'. The Tánaiste insisted the Government is helping households 'in the here and now', retaining the 9 per cent VAT rate on gas and electricity, expanding the fuel allowance to thousands more people, reducing childcare costs, providing free school meals, books and footwear allowances and increasing public-sector pay. [ Irish Times poll: Support for Government parties holds steady as Sinn Féin slumps Opens in new window ] He also claimed there had been an 'air of unreality' to Sinn Féin's contributions. Mr Harris said Mr Doherty spent a lot of time saying to the Government ''You don't understand. You're out of touch'' but he said he knows 'who owns SuperValu ' and it was not an American multinational. He was referring to comments Mr Doherty made during a cost-of-living debate when he said the supermarket chain was owned by a US company United Foods. Mr Harris said: 'You'd have to go back a very long time to find a summer recess in which we have seen a moment of greater economic uncertainty.' He claimed Sinn Féin did not want to talk about trade or tariffs or the '48,000 people who work in pharma in this country' and global uncertainty. 'You've never seen something you don't want to spend more money on. But we have to be honest with the Irish people. We can't just keep saying 'spend, spend, spend'.' Mr Doherty said the cost-of-living crisis had widened significantly and 'prices across the board are pushing households to the brink'. He added 'it's not lost' on families 'being hammered by rip-off prices' that the energy companies are recording bumper profits, with the ESB recording profits of more than €1 billion in 2023 and 2024, while SSE Airtricity made 'hundreds of millions' in the past two years. Ms Whitmore told the Tánaiste that 'having splashed the cash in an attempt to buy votes last year, your message suddenly changed. Now that an election is no longer on the cards, one-off payments are a bad idea.' But Mr Harris said the one-off measures served a purpose 'at a time of extraordinarily high inflation'.

Irish Times
24 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Ibec head labels Occupied Territories Bill ‘symbolism and moral positioning'
The Republic's stand against Israel over Gaza and its failure to spend properly on defence are damaging its interests in the United States and with other EU member states, the head of Irish employers' association Ibec has warned. The Government's plan to pass legislation banning 'tiny' sums of trade with the Occupied Territories Bill is 'hypocritical', said Danny McCoy, the director general of Ibec . Last year, the State bought just €240,000 worth of goods from the Occupied Territories, he told the Patrick MacGill Summer School in Glenties, Co Donegal. 'We're not talking about millions here,' he said, adding: 'This is not about actually helping in any material way. It's symbolism and moral positioning, and so on. However, with moral positions, you can also reveal hypocrisy.' His comments follow a series of criticisms of the Bill by at least 10 members of the US Congress. The US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, accused Ireland of suffering from 'diplomatic intoxication' in progressing something as 'stupid' as this Bill. READ MORE Taoiseach Micheál Martin yesterday rejected the ambassador's comments and outlined the 'very serious' situation in Gaza. [ Taoiseach rejects US politicians' claims that Occupied Territories Bill is 'diplomatic intoxication' Opens in new window ] However, he said legislation to boycott, divest or sanction activity against Israel could 'inadvertently' affect companies. It would be 'counterproductive' for Irish companies to be punished, he said, adding that the Government will consider and take a legal opinion on this. The proposed Bill is expected to go before the Dáil in the autumn. The legislation would prohibit trading with companies operating in illegal settlements in the West Bank and other occupied territories. At the summer school on Thursday, Mr McCoy said the State's stand on Israel is 'well-intentioned' but 'causing us significant damage'. The consequences are not just from the United States and the Israeli position, he said. 'We've been completely insensitive to our other European colleagues who've also had really significant issues.' All of them have had struggles with anti-Semitism and Islamophobia in their societies in recent years: 'They have to go sensitively through that, and particularly in Europe as well. But we seem to be insensitive to that kind of dynamic.' He said he has personally experienced the Republic's fall in standing among fellow EU member states over the issues. Meanwhile, Irish attitudes to its own defence spending, but also to the defence spending of others, is losing the Republic support among EU states. 'We don't have many supporters,' Mr McCoy said. 'In terms of the business and economics, our goodwill is eroding significantly and substantially.' Also speaking at the summer school, Prof Brigid Laffan, chancellor of Limerick University, said Ireland should be 'more hard-nosed' and not endanger its diplomatic capital by passing the Occupied Territories Bill. 'We're a small state. We've limited influence. We must use our influence cleverly,' she said. 'Symbolic politics might make us feel good about the world. But unless it changes people's lives on the ground, you should not expend hard-earned diplomatic capacity.' . She added: 'In a world of such utter uncertainty, drawing attention to yourself in Washington might not be smart.' Often people in Ireland want to 'assure ourselves that we're good people', but we need to be 'a bit more hard-nosed', she said. 'I know the reaction saying things like this in this country gets, but I think we have to be able to have those conversations.'


Irish Post
an hour ago
- Irish Post
US ambassador to Israel tells Ireland to ‘sober up'
A DIPLOMATIC rift has emerged between the US and Ireland following remarks by US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, who said the Irish should 'sober up.' He went on to criticise Ireland's proposed Occupied Territories Bill (OTB)—legislation that would ban trade with Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories. The bill, introduced by Independent Senator Frances Black and under scrutiny in the Oireachtas since 2018, has gained new momentum amid Israel's ongoing war in Gaza. If passed, it would make Ireland the first EU member state to prohibit trade with goods produced in Israeli settlements deemed illegal under international law. Mike Huckabee, an avowed Christian Zionist and former Arkansas governor, took to social media this week to criticise the bill, calling it 'so stupid' and accusing Ireland of 'diplomatic intoxication.' In a post on X, Huckabee wrote: 'Did the Irish fall into a vat of Guinness and propose something so stupid that it would be attributed to an act of diplomatic intoxication? It will harm Arabs as much as Israelis. Sober up Ireland!' The remarks have drawn immediate backlash for their stereotypical reference to Irish drinking culture. Taoiseach Micheál Martin condemned the ambassador's comments as not only offensive but also dangerously dismissive of the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza. 'I reject the comments made by the ambassador,' Martin said in a press conference. 'This kind of row is ridiculous, given the enormity of the killing and destruction that's happening in Gaza. The slaughter of children must stop. The time for this war to end has long passed.' The Occupied Territories Bill, officially titled the Israeli Settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (Prohibition of Importation of Goods) Bill 2025, aims to prohibit the import of goods and services produced in illegal settlements in the West Bank. The Irish Government has cited international law, including findings by the International Court of Justice (ICJ), which state that Israel's settlement activities and exploitation of Palestinian land are violations of international humanitarian law. TD Duncan Smith highlighted that Israel's actions are not uniquely targeted by Irish foreign policy. He pointed out that Ireland previously passed a similar ban in 2014 regarding trade with Russian-occupied regions in Ukraine. Independent TD Catherine Connolly called on the government to fully implement all aspects of the bill: 'The violation of international law puts an obligation on us to do all we can in the face of genocide and slaughter.' Ireland has a long history of solidarity with the Palestinian people. This was reaffirmed in May 2024 when Ireland formally recognised the State of Palestine. In response, Israel closed its embassy in Dublin and called Ireland's policies 'extremely anti-Israel.' Opposition to the bill has not only come from the US envoy and Israeli officials but also from some figures within Ireland itself. Former Minister for Justice Alan Shatter described the bill as reminiscent of Nazi-era laws, calling it 'the first Boycott Jews bill by a European government since 1945.' However, Committee Chair John Lahart rebuked this accusation, calling it 'hugely hurtful and slanderous.' Irish lawmakers insist that the bill is aimed not at Israel or Jewish people, but rather at illegal settlement's that violate international law. Maurice Cohen, chair of the Jewish Representative Council of Ireland, criticised the bill as a 'performance of misguided effort' that could alienate Jewish communities within Ireland. While largely symbolic, as Taoiseach Martin noted, the bill's passage could strain Ireland's diplomatic relationships, particularly with the US. For many in Ireland, the legislation is a moral imperative in the face of what they see as war crimes and humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. Nearly 60,000 people have reportedly been killed in Gaza since October 2023. Martin reiterated Ireland's commitment to peace and international law: 'Ireland stands for peace and a political pathway forward… Israel needs to focus on ending the war that is slaughtering innocent civilians.'