Latest news with #Prosperous

The Journal
26-06-2025
- Business
- The Journal
'It's a scam': Financial advisor and TV host Eoin McGee warns people about scams using his name
FINANCIAL PLANNER AND host of the RTÉ TV programme How To Be Good With Money Eoin McGee has warned people against being fooled by a spate of fake offers of investment advice that use his name and image. 'It's a scam. Please don't get caught out,' McGee told his followers in a video posted on Instagram , noting that many of the fake offers have been made via Whatsapp. 'There are a whole pile of different fake accounts and scams using my name, trying to trick you, going around over the last three or four days. 'We are aware of them. I'm doing everything I can to try and shut them down.' The offers of financial advice have also appeared on Facebook. One such post impersonates McGee and offers an assessment of the investment potential of chipmaker Nvidia and its competitors, accompanied by a link to 'sing up' for more advice. A scam post on Facebook impersonating Eoin McGee Screenshot Screenshot 'We don't have these magic fixes or tricks about how to get rich,' he said. Advertisement McGee said that neither he nor anyone who works at his financial advice company Prosperous would ever approach people on Whatsapp. 'It's not my style,' he said. McGee thanked the people who had been in touch with him and the company about the situation and reported the ads. 'That's what I want you to do. If you see one of these things, report it and block it.' McGee is the latest target for online scammers, who have used the names and faces of other well-known Irish TV personalities in fake news stories, which have been documented by The Journal FactCheck . Other targets have included comedian Dara Ó Briain and Newstalk radio host Pat Kenny. Ever wondered how disinformation spreads so rapidly – or who is behind it? Check out our FactCheck Knowledge Bank for essential reads and guides to finding good information online. Visit Knowledge Bank Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal


Powys County Times
22-06-2025
- Business
- Powys County Times
Letter: Welsh politics is an worsening expensive shambles
MP David Chadwick's column (County Times June 6) caused me to grieve at the histrionics of young career politicians. I congratulate him on his progress, despite setbacks, to a £93,904 MP's salary in Westminster, from April 2025, plus expenses and generous pension arrangements. His pension, unlike the state pension for the rest of us, is fully funded, so no surprise there. But penning his thoughts on the 'onslaught of pressure' to farmers, was he aware of Powys County Council's predominately Lib Dem Cabinet's decision to sell some of Powys's county-owned farms? This picking of long held 'low hanging fruit' to boost council coffers, bare through weak management across the entire county council, is short-sighted and disgraceful. This year's council tax increase is 8.9% with inflation at 3.5% (CPI). Next year, who knows? So, cost cutting across the board should be top priority. There is no alternative. Any talk of growth being sufficient to pay ever burgeoning county council costs is bunkum. If the MP was aware of the farm evictions, his column is spurious - if he was not aware, he should have been, and perhaps he and Powys's other MP, Steve Witherden, should get their heads together and bring the strongest pressure to bear on the County Council. Alongside, avoiding the political divide, Senedd members for Powys, Russell George and James Evans, should engage too. As opposed to evictions (CT June 13), cash strapped Powys County Council's cabinet members for a Fairer Powys and a More Prosperous Powys seem keen to welcome a possible 'asylum seekers' deal'. This would see the national government or Senedd handing over 'Cash to boost Powys housing stock'. For whose benefit - for displaced tenant farming families - surely not? Welsh politics is an expensive shambles, shortly to become more so, if a further 36 under-qualified lightweights join the Senedd, ready to plunder the public purse in 2026 - with a likely extra cost of £18 million annually, rising remorselessly.


Irish Daily Mirror
14-06-2025
- Sport
- Irish Daily Mirror
Kildare hurlers: The long and winding road to make it back to the Liam MacCarthy
The Kildare hurlers were so close they could feel it. It was 49 years ago yesterday when the Lilywhites got ahead of Wexford in the Leinster SHC semi-final, only to fall by four points thanks to the Model County's late surge. Wexford went on to lift the Liam MacCarthy Cup. Pat Dunney was at the heart of it for Kildare in Athy that day. "I remember with 10 minutes to go we were very close to winning," said the Raheens great. "Then they got a couple of scores and just held on and won - probably because you weren't in that position before, I suppose. "They were used to playing at a different level. The effort that we put in to be that close, we just couldn't sustain it for the full length of the game. "As he was for the county in the previous decade and has been since his playing days ended thanks to the work he has done in administrative roles to foster the sport in the county." No wonder then that last Saturday at Croke Park was a day to celebrate for Dunney, and that he is so looking forward to today's SHC preliminary quarter-final against Dublin. We'll get to that. His former team-mate, Noel Burke, recalled the atmosphere in Athy. "There was a real interest in Kildare hurling at that time," said the Ardclough man who was originally from Galway. "We were there or thereabouts but were good one year and bad the next. It just depended on getting a consistent amount of good lads on the team. "It was three or four clubs that were always just hanging in at the time. But it's a different story now and it's going well. You need that to have a fair chance at senior level." Dunney, a successful dual player for the Lilywhites, won an All-Ireland junior hurling title with the Lilywhites in 1962 and again four years later. All-Ireland intermediate and Division 2 success followed in 1969. "We were quite competitive then in the leagues," recalled the Prosperous man. "We were playing the Waterfords, Clares and Galways." Kildare played in the senior championship for most of the 1970s - taking a break to win the inaugural All-Ireland B competition in '74. They made it to that 1976 provincial semi-final, beating Dublin along the way in Aughrim, and made it back to the semis against Wexford the following summer. But they lost to Offaly in 1979 and returned to the B championship, which they won in 1980 - only to be heavily beaten by Galway in the All-Ireland quarter-finals. The next generation hadn't come through to consolidate the progression made. "All the team had gotten old together," Dunney said. "It ran out of numbers. It can happen, of course. Kildare remained competitive at their own level after that without winning things but then dropped back around the early 2000s. "That's why what is happening now is important. It's like a school team - you have a period where you have a brilliant team for a few years, then a period when you're not as good. "That's what happened in the 70s and the success Kildare are having now, hopefully that continues to grow the game and ensures we have the players - and the coaches - coming through. It's all about the numbers. You need the numbers involved." Kildare returned to the extended Leinster championship from 2001 for four years, but only beat Wicklow in that period. Dunney - who went on to be a selector during Mick O'Dwyer's time with the Lilywhites - was the chairman of Croke Park's hurling development committee when, in 2004, the Christy Ring and Rackard Cups were announced. Kildare have been slowly building blocks since then. Naas' move into the competitive underage ranks in Kilkenny was massive, as has been the club's progress in the Leinster club championship - and the appointment of David Herity as the Lilywhitsenior manager, and more recently Brian Dowley. Colm Nolan, the current county hurling chairman, came on board in 2014. Four years later he headed up an action plan to drive participation in non-traditional hurling areas - over 50 'action agents' were appointed to go to work. "We knew if they could get behind it that their passion, their determination locally would drive others on," said Nolan. The Lilywhites have won the Christy Ring six times, including last year, but the Joe McDonagh Cup became the next level competition to win from 2018 and Kildare's victory over Laois in last Saturday's Croker final has propelled them into the promised land of this All-Ireland SHC preliminary quarter-final and then Division 1B in 2026. The average age of the Kildare hurlers is just over 23. "This is the culmination of what we put in place 15 or 20 years ago at underage level," said Dunney. "I remember those young lads from when they were 12 or 14 playing, so it's terrific. "It's a people-driven thing. It's not about a thing you can put up on a blackboard and say, 'this is what we do'. It's about getting people down to the pitches to help out and getting kids onto the pitch, it's about having people there for every age group to help them be the best they can be. After that, then, you pray for success." Kildare's hurling community may be dizzy with success but, for Colm Nolan, what matters now is building a sustainable future at the top level. "We have to move to make sure that we can achieve the next level," he said. "That's what it's all about. "Our development is all built on the back of making sure we've got good structures, making sure we've got good quality people across the board. "We're very, very fortunate to have a very energetic, passionate hurling family. They look out for each other and share ideas - and that's really going to be even more important now that we grow that family. There's a greater participation level across the whole county and that's going to be absolutely crucial for the next 10 years."


Business News Wales
16-05-2025
- Politics
- Business News Wales
Cllr Jake Berriman Elected New Leader of Powys County Council
Cllr Jake Berriman has been elected as the new Leader of Powys County Council. Cllr Berriman takes over from Cllr James Gibson-Watt, who announced earlier this month that he was to stand down after three years. Having first been elected to the county council as councillor for the Llandrindod North ward in October 2019, Cllr Berriman was appointed Cabinet Member for a Connected Powys in May 2022. 'I'm honoured to be elected the new leader of Powys County Council and I'm deeply aware that this council's strength lies in its diversity and collaboration,' said Cllr Berriman. 'No one group holds all the answers, and every voice and vote matters. I see a chamber united by a shared commitment to serve our communities, and I believe we can build on that to deliver better outcomes together. 'My leadership will be visible, accessible and rooted in listening. We must work together, with mutual respect, to tackle the challenges ahead – especially in education, social care, and the cost of living. 'I'm committed to inclusive decision-making, fair budget planning, and maintaining strong frontline services. Together, we can shape a stronger, fairer, greener Powys. As part of his acceptance speech, Cllr Berriman paid tribute to his predecessor for his work as Leader during challenging times and for championing Powys locally and nationally. Cllr Berriman said: 'I'd like to take this opportunity to thank James for the steady hand he has brought to the role since 2022, and for the support he has shown me as I step forward at this time. He has laid strong foundations both within the council and across Wales through his collaborative approach. 'James has played a major role in the political life of Powys, and his name is synonymous with dedicated public service. He is a hard act to follow, and I am truly grateful for the confidence and support he has given me. 'I am really pleased that James has agreed to continue to play a key role within the council as Cabinet Member for a More Prosperous Powys until the end of September and I look forward to continuing working with him.' Following his election, Cllr Berriman confirmed the membership of his new Cabinet: Cabinet Member Portfolio Cllr Jake Berriman Leader and Cabinet Member for People, Performance and Partnerships Cabinet Business Developing and maintaining partnerships including Corporate Joint Committee and the Public Service Board People Services – Workforce and Member development and support Corporate Health & Safety incl. joint Chair of JCNC Corporate Performance Management Strategic and Local Development Planning Property including County Farms Cllr Matthew Dorrance Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for a Fairer Powys Housing Service, including Gypsies and Travellers Tackling Poverty including Money Advice Service Violence Against Women, Domestic Abuse & Sexual Violence, incl. White Ribbon Pledge Equality & Diversity Armed Forces Partnership and Champion Refugees Cllr James Gibson-Watt (up to 30 September 2025) Cllr Glyn Preston (from 1 October 2025) Cabinet Member for a More Prosperous Powys Developing Strategic Economic Framework for Powys, identifying sustainable growth and regeneration opportunities Securing economic investment opportunities across Powys Localities to support sustainable place making, urban regeneration and rural renaissance Supporting the Mid Wales Growth Deal and Regional Skills Partnership to create and deliver economic and learner opportunities Post-16 Learning and skills development, partnerships with HE, FE, WBL & Community-based providers Cllr David Thomas Cabinet Member for Finance and Corporate Transformation Delivering Sustainable Powys Transformation programme Finance Procurement, Income & Awards & Integrated Business Planning Risk management Cllr Sian Cox Cabinet Member for a Caring Powys Adult Social Care & Commissioning North Powys Wellbeing Programme Integration of Care System with Powys Teaching Health Board Developing Community Engagement to support locality working Cllr Richard Church Cabinet Member for Legal and Regulatory Services Environmental Health and public protection Trading Standards Emergency Planning and Community Safety Development Management and Building Control Services Legal Services Ombudsman, Coroner & Registrar Services Cllr Pete Roberts Cabinet Member for a Learning Powys Education Schools' Transformation Programme Cllr Jackie Charlton Cabinet Member for a Greener Powys Climate Change and decarbonisation Highways and Recycling Transport, including home to school transport Countryside Services Environmental matters Cllr Sandra Davies Cabinet Member for Future Generations Children's Services Youth Justice Youth Services Future Generations Act Welsh Language Cllr Raiff Devlin Cabinet Member for Customers, Digital and Community Services Customer Services & Information Governance Digital Powys Programme Leisure and Culture, including Theatres, Libraries, Museums and Archives Supporting the Sustainable Food Partnership for Powys including Catering & Cleaning


AllAfrica
14-04-2025
- Politics
- AllAfrica
Likely to lead South Korea, Lee holds left's foreign policy views
In the wake of President Yoon Suk-yeol's ouster as president of the Republic of Korea, his former opponent Lee Jae-myung is likely to win the snap presidential election scheduled for June 3. A Gallup poll released in April indicated Lee enjoys a support level of 34 percent, while his highest-rated rival languishes at 9 percent. Yoon was a conservative, while Lee represents the progressive Democratic Party (DP). Ordinarily, a change in South Korea from a conservative to a left-of-center government would have the potential to substantially shake up international relations in Northeast Asia. Progressive governments in Korea tend to be relatively conciliatory toward North Korea and China, which correspondingly engenders tensions with the US. Kim Dae-jung, who was South Korea's president in 1998-2003, opposed the hardline US approach to North Korea, instead implementing the now-infamous 'Sunshine Policy' of offering economic rewards – including a secret payment of $500 million to secure a summit meeting with Kim Jong-il – in an attempt to pacify Pyongyang's hostility toward the ROK. Kim's successor Roh Moo-hyun continued the Sunshine Policy, criticized the US approach of using economic sanctions to pressure North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons program and sought 'equidistance' for the ROK between China and the US. By contrast, although controversial and ultimately a failure at home, the conservative Yoon was unusually supportive of the US agenda. His 'Strategy for a Free, Peaceful, and Prosperous Indo-Pacific Region' closely resembled the Biden Administration's 'Indo-Pacific Strategy' published a few months prior. Yoon was tough on North Korea and spoke without deference about China, consistent with US positions. He promised a foreign policy anchored in the same liberal values Washington was then promoting. The US government especially welcomed Yoon's willingness to increase strategic cooperation with Tokyo despite Korea's historical grievances with Japan remaining unresolved. Accordingly, many observers expect a major shift in South Korea's foreign policy if the presidency shifts from Yoon to Lee. They see the ROK at a 'crossroads,' with some concluding a Lee government would 'send shockwaves through East Asia's delicate balance of power' or even create 'a nightmare scenario.' The transition from Yoon to Lee, however, would likely be a tremor rather than an earthquake. To be sure, Lee's outlook differs from Yoon's. The DP argues that Yoon excessively damaged relations with China and Russia in his effort to please Washington. During the National Assembly elections of March 2024, Lee complained about Yoon needlessly antagonizing China, the country that buys about a quarter of South Korea's exports. 'Chinese people don't buy South Korean products because they don't like South Korea. Why are we bothering [Beijing]?' he asked. 'Why do we care what happens to the Taiwan Strait? Shouldn't we just take care of ourselves?' Why do we care what happens to the Taiwan Strait? Shouldn't we just take care of ourselves? Lee Jae-myung Lee opposed the diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympic Games imposed by the US and other governments. He is also against the deployment of additional US THAAD anti-missile batteries in South Korea. Lee is also less pro-Japan than Yoon. When the Yoon government, seeking improved relations with Tokyo, declined to press the Japanese government to compensate Korean forced laborers, Lee called Yoon 'submissive and subservient.' Lee has endorsed former President Moon Jae-in's approach of seeking rapprochement with North Korea by offering sanctions relief, with the stipulation that sanctions could be reimposed in the absence of reciprocal DPRK concessions. While Yoon said South Korea might provide lethal military assistance to Ukraine as a result of North Korean soldiers fighting on Russia's side, Lee has made clear he would not. Lee is against a trilateral military alliance that includes Japan, saying this could be 'very dangerous' because of the territorial dispute between Korea and Japan over ownership of the Dokdo / Takeshima Islands. In practical terms, however, Lee's proposed policy toward Japan is not dramatically different from Yoon's. Lee said during his speech announcing his candidacy for president that he believes it 'important' to 'strengthen trilateral cooperation with Japan' short of formally allying with Japan. The 'two-track' diplomacy that Lee favors would pursue strategic cooperation while simultaneously and separately seeking justice for Korean victims of Japan's past misdeeds. Lee told The Economist he does not viscerally hate the Japanese. Upon visiting Japan, he said, he 'was shocked by Japanese people's diligence, sincerity and courtesy.' He concluded that the general Korean view of Japan 'has ultimately been distorted by politics.' Lee advocates speeding up giving South Korea operational control over its own armed forces during wartime, but he is not calling for the expulsion of US military bases. Although he once used the phrase 'US occupying forces,' he later explained he was referring to the period immediately after the Second World War. Now, he says, 'This is not an occupying force, but an ally.' Lee wants talks with North Korea to lower tensions, but this does not put him at odds with the new Trump Administration. Trump himself says he wants to re-engage with Kim Jong-un. Lee says he is 'very grateful' for this, and even seems to goad Trump in this direction, saying he might recommend Trump for the Nobel Prize that the US president covets. Then-President Donald J. Trump shakes hands with Chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea Kim Jong Un Sunday, June 30, 2019, as the two leaders meet at the Korean Demilitarized Zone. Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead Lee would return to something like Roh's equidistance policy, attempting to preserve the security relationship with the US while maintaining healthy economic engagement with China. That would prove difficult if the US-China cold war should intensify. But this would not distinguish Lee from his predecessor. Aside from advancing trilateral cooperation including Japan, Yoon's alignment with the US against China was arguably more rhetorical than substantive. For example, Yoon's government refrained from criticizing China by name over its harassment of Philippine vessels near Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea, and Yoon declined to meet with US Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi the day after her visit to Taiwan in 2022. From the standpoint of Korean conservatives and many in the US policy-making community, a left-leaning Korean government is prone to pursuing a North Korea policy that increases the South's vulnerability to DPRK exploitation or aggression. The danger arises when Pyongyang, acting in bad faith, outmaneuvers Seoul during bargaining. That possibility is now much reduced, however, because the North is relatively uninterested in bargaining. Its nuclear and missiles programs are permanent, reunification is off the table, Kim Jong-un is not hankering for a summit meeting and Pyongyang does not seek to re-open the Kaesong Industrial Complex. For the DPRK government, Seoul has mainly been useful only as an intermediary for seeking concessions from the US. But Kim seems to have largely moved on. Badly burned during the 2019 Hanoi summit with Trump, Kim has since entered into a fruitful partnership with Russia. Lee might have little opportunity to show magnanimity to Pyongyang even if he wants to. Finally, Lee would not be more likely than Yoon to go nuclear. According to one recent poll, three out of four South Koreans want nukes. In 2023 Yoon threatened to acquire tactical nuclear weapons in response to the North Korean nuclear buildup, although he backed off after receiving US assurances as part of the Washington Declaration. A nuclear-armed South Korea would indeed send a 'shockwave' through the region. Catastrophic unintentional escalation in a DPRK-ROK conflict would become more likely. The US and South Korean governments would reconsider the necessity of the bilateral alliance. Japan would probably deploy nukes also. The change in leadership from Yoon to Lee, however, would not increase the chances of any of this happening. The Democratic Party no longer considers nuclear weapons a taboo topic, but it currently goes no farther than favoring nuclear latency, not actual deployment. Under a hypothetical Lee presidency, we can easily imagine that ROK-DPRK relations would remain stagnant, while modest South Korea-Japan strategic cooperation would continue. China would try to take advantage of a perceived opportunity to lure the ROK out of the US Bloc, but this campaign would bump up against limits, as South Koreans still value the US alliance. Seoul and Washington would agree in principle on working toward new talks with Pyongyang. Thus, the region would see adjustments of South Korea's foreign relations, but not a major reset. Denny Roy is a senior fellow at the East-West Center in Honolulu.