Irish PM defies surveys to stay in race for power

DUBLIN • Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar’s party defied pre-election surveys to stay in contention to keep power, as an exit poll showed the nation’s three biggest political parties in a dead heat, with Sinn Fein on track for a historic breakthrough.

Mr Varadkar’s Fine Gael party won 22.4 per cent of the votes in Saturday’s election, according to the poll, state broadcaster RTE said, confounding surveys that placed the party in third place before the vote.

Sinn Fein won 22.3 per cent, according to the Ipsos/MRBI poll of 5,000 voters, commissioned by RTE and The Irish Times, putting it in line for its best-ever performance. Though the party is in the race to be the biggest party by vote share, it did not run nearly enough candidates to become the dominant force in Ireland’s 160-seat Parliament.

Fianna Fail party, which oversaw the nation’s international bailout in 2010, secured 22.2 per cent in the poll, which has a margin of error of 1.3 percentage points.

Yesterday, as counting began, Fine Gael and Fianna Fail moved to rule out governing with Sinn Fein, the former political wing of the Irish Republican Army terrorist group. Led by Ms Mary Lou McDonald, the party promised to spend more on housing and health, the two issues which dominated the campaign, close corporate tax loopholes and increase taxes on the wealthy.

The election represents a “seismic” shift in Irish politics, Sinn Fein’s housing spokesman Eoin O’Broin tweeted. Fine Gael and Fianna Fail, which are almost ideologically identical, have largely dominated government since the foundation of the state in the 1920s.

The electoral mathematics of a fragmented system means Sinn Fein is unlikely to lead the next government, but its rise speaks to the shifting tectonic plates that are upending traditional power structures across Europe.

“The exit poll suggests a great degree of fragmentation, which will make government formation very difficult,” according to Professor Eoin O’Malley, a politics expert at Dublin City University. “There’ll have to be significant compromise and rowing back from election commitments, or else Ireland will be voting again this year.”

It is clear no party will come close to a majority, meaning Mr Varadkar and Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin will have to seek out coalition partners.

The Greens and Labour Party, with a combined 12.5 per cent, may become kingmakers.

The traditional divide in Irish politics runs between Fine Gael and Fianna Fail, separated by little except where they stood on the division of Ireland in 1921. Both share Brexit policies, broadly agree on economic and fiscal policy, and vow to protect the nation’s 12.5 per cent corporate tax rate.

The policy gap with Sinn Fein is “too wide” to form a coalition, Enterprise Minister Heather Humphreys said in an RTE interview yesterday. Fianna Fail lawmaker Jack Chambers said Mr Martin should stick by his promise to not govern with Sinn Fein, despite some party members suggesting he should keep the option open. “Our word is our bond,” Mr Chambers said in an RTE interview.

The result means Mr Varadkar, 41, still has a fighting chance to stay in power.

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