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Eoin Hayes has suspension from SocDems lifted, eight months after controversy over IDF-linked shares

Eoin Hayes has suspension from SocDems lifted, eight months after controversy over IDF-linked shares

The Journal25-07-2025
THE SUSPENSION OF TD Eoin Hayes from the Social Democrats' parliamentary party has been lifted.
A party spokesperson said the decision was made by acting leader Cian O'Callaghan, in line with the party's constitution.
Hayes lost the whip on 10 December, 2024,
when he provided incorrect information to the media about the sale of shares in Palantir Technologies, his former employer.
Palantir provides militaries, including the Israeli Defence Forces, with artificial intelligence models used in battlegrounds to help identify targets.
Its software has been used by Israel to identify targets in Gaza.
In February of this year, a review carried out by the national executive of the Social Democrats endorsed the decision to
suspend Hayes 'indefinitely' from the parliamentary party.
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However, in a statement this evening, O'Callaghan remarked that Hayes has been suspended from the parliamentary party for close to eight months and that he 'should be given a second chance'.
'Eoin has a lot to offer as a Social Democrats TD and I look forward to working with him,' added O'Callaghan.
Meanwhile, Hayes offered a 'full and unequivocal apology for giving the incorrect information to the media about when I divested from Palantir'.
'I also want to be clear that I should not have held the shares for as long as I did,' he added.
Hayes said he has donated $51,000 to three humanitarian organisations active in Gaza – split between, UNRWA, Unicef and Doctors without Borders.
'This figure represents the uplift in share price, less applicable taxes, from 7 October, 2023 to 26 July, 2024, when I sold the shares.
'I know I have let people down and I am determined to work hard and earn back people's trust.'
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Which TDs and Senators live in rented homes? Why so few? Does it matter?
Which TDs and Senators live in rented homes? Why so few? Does it matter?

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  • Irish Times

Which TDs and Senators live in rented homes? Why so few? Does it matter?

With as few as eight of Ireland's national politicians living in private rental accommodation, the proportion of TDs and Senators who are renting is significantly lower than among the population as a whole. The plight of renters in Ireland is one of the issues at the forefront of the debate over the housing crisis . The opposition has attacked successive governments for not stemming spiralling rents, which have exceeded an average of €2,000 per month around the country for the first time in 2025. The current Coalition has announced reforms aimed at boosting private investment to build more housing in the hope that this will bring down rents. READ MORE At the same time it is seeking to strengthen tenant protections with a new national system of rent controls and better security of tenure. Just five TDs and three Senators confirmed they are renters in response to a survey carried out by The Irish Times in recent weeks. 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The remainder of the 234 Oireachtas members did not answer the survey, so the precise proportion of renters in Leinster House has not necessarily been revealed. The eight confirmed renters represents just 3 per cent of the overall number of TDs and Senators. Whether the true proportion of renters in Leinster House is closer to 11 per cent or 3 per cent, it is still well below the rate of people living in rental accommodation in Ireland. The proportion of tenants in the private rental sector in the population generally is about one in five or 20 per cent. So, what are the reasons for the low number of renters in Leinster House? For one thing, the age profile in Leinster House tends to be older than the general population – by about 10 years at the start of the last Dáil, when the average age of TDs was 48.5. Ó Broin says younger people are more likely to rent. 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  • Agriland

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