Showing posts with label Bernadette Devlin-McAliskey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bernadette Devlin-McAliskey. Show all posts
Tomás Ó Flatharta Who Organised a Belfast Patrick’s Weekend Palestine March – Minus the Original Speakers? Bernadette McAliskey looks for answers

Bernadette McAliskey asks questions:

The Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign (IPSC) should provide answers.

Bernadette McAliskey:

Was this march organised by Belfast ISPC? On what date did the platform change from the three speakers below and become a platform of primarily spokespersons for political parties of the NI Assembly,? On what date were the political parties first invited to speak? Why was the list of political party speakers including Sinn Fein not announced prior to the March and rally itself, allowing those who didn’t want to hear from political parties whose leaders were in the White House, or those doing little or nothing for Palestine to have stayed away? Who made these decisions, the consequences of which must have obvious to them at the time, given the depth of feeling from anger to disappointment? What did they expect from an unsuspecting audience when a Sinn Fein speaker was sprung on them? Did they, through naivety, expect Sinn Fein to decline or was the reaction foreseen and thought to OK?





Without some transparency and explanation of the who, when and why, the organisers have very little credibility left with independent activists who are daily raising awareness; building support for boycott of Israeli goods on the ground; fund raising for medical aid, for children, for food aid in Gaza and helping as best they know how, Palestinians living here to cope with the pain and trauma of their fear for family and friends at home as well their exile.

Either lack of foresight and transparency, intentional deceit, or plain old-fashioned elitism needs to be owned up to, unless the organisers have a better explanation. This is no way to build any principled unity on Palestine, or anything else for that matter.

Vincent Doherty

This is a moment of decision nationally for the IPSC. Sinn Fein would prefer if we all forgot their treachery in fine wining and dining with Biden in the midst of the genocide. Just like a few years ago when they were meeting with Likud despite having signed up to the BDS campaign. It’s the elephant in the room, and one that needs to be addressed.

Keep Up With Tomás Ó Flatharta.

Answers Needed

Bernadette McAliskey writing in Europe Solidaire Sans Frontières


SDLP leader Colum Eastwood’s decision to absent himself and his party from ‘rocking the sham’ in the White House is very welcome.The Irish government parties and Sinn Féin might want to reconsider their positions.

Palestine is more fundamental than party politics. It is the test of conscience, integrity, humanity and courage.

Colum Eastwood made his courageous decision on that basis.

SDLP leaders will, instead, actively give Irish voice to the ethnically diverse and growing campaign within the USA opposing Biden’s genocide policy.

This will not, for now, sit well with the Irish government or the USA but it is morally correct. I trust Palestine supporters will electorally remember that.

Michelle O’Neil is mistaken in thinking her attendance is required within her ‘First Minister for All’ policy.

St. Patrick’s Day celebrations in the White House are not an occasion in which the President formally represents the ethnic diversity of the USA, and his guests likewise that of their own populations. Not at all!

This is a USA internal ‘knees-up’ primarily for the great and the good of Irish-American politics, economic and cultural life.

Irish-Americans as a self-identified ethnic population within the USA Census, numerically second only to those claiming German ancestry.

The political influence of the ‘Hibernian’ vote is second only to that of the Zionist lobby, and less well organised.

The USA Jewish population – not to be confused with Zionism – has traditionally had a much stronger liberal and radical lobby than the Irish.

The latter is not non-existent, but has become weaker since the mid-1990’s as a direct consequence of Sinn Féin officially throwing their lot in with the ‘People with Clout’, as the late Fr. Denis Faul was wont to call them.

The right-wing of Irish-American politics within both the Democratic and Republican parties will predominate among those invited, and seeking invitation to the President’s Paddy’s Day Bash.

Those participating will be US politicians seeking Irish-American votes; people with money being acknowledged for their investment in various ‘Irish’ interests or projects, or to be hustled for their patronage.

Shamrocks, business cards and promises that may not be kept will be lightly exchanged over cocktails before dinner; good wine and food, music, and after-dinner mingling.

Continue reading @ ESSF.

Sharing Thoughts On Northern Ireland Politics And American Policy

An Irish Times piece on Bernadette McAliskey criticising the British government’s new points-based immigration system 

By Freya McClements

The new immigration system, Bernadette McAliskey warned, ‘will be Windrush down the line’.

There will be a “whitening” of immigration into the UK as a result of the country’s points-based application system, the activist and campaigner Bernadette McAliskey has warned.

“The poorer southern hemisphere economies [will] support a smaller percentage of individuals meeting the various thresholds than the European countries with which they are now competing,” she told The Irish Times.

She also said the new measures could also encourage EU nationals and firms to leave Northern Ireland and move across the Border to the Republic.

The economy of Northern Ireland cannot survive without immigrant labour, and this points system will make it extremely difficult.
So where will industry go? The problem for us in the North, sitting here in this town [Dungannon, Co Tyrone], is that if you want to have freedom of movement and be able to do your job you might as well move back to the European Union. You don’t have far to go.
To be able to keep a pool of labour that is legally recruited  … why would industry not follow you?

The UK government announced on Wednesday that a points-based immigration system which will apply to both EU and non-EU citizens will come into force from January 1st, 2021.

EU, EEA and Swiss citizens living in the UK from before December 30th, 2020, must apply to the UK’s EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) to continue to remain after June 30th, 2021.

Under Common Travel Area rules, Irish citizens will continue to be able to live and work in the UK as they do now. 

Continue reading @ The Irish Times

The North’s Economy Cannot Survive Without Immigrant Labour

The second part of a Derry Journal feature where Eamon Sweeney (eamon.sweeney@jpress.co.uk)talks with Bernadette Devlin McAliskey.


Bernadette McAliskey contends people must challenge the status quo

She believes Stormont is facilitating Tory cuts

Welfare cuts will have a drastic effect on people she warns

Bernadette McAliskey: ‘I Am Aware I’m Asking People To Go Up A Hill That I Wouldn’t Go Up Myself’

From The Broken Elbow a speech by Bernadette McAliskey on the 1916 Rising.

As part of thebrokenelbow.com’s occasional coverage of the 1916 centenary here is a speech given by Bernadette McAliskey at a socialist conference in London last weekend which was also attended by film-make Ken Loach and radical writer Geoff Bell.

Bernadette On 1916