February 21, 2009 4:30 PM

100,000 Protest Irish Gov't Over Recession

(AP)  Around 100,000 people filled the streets of the Irish capital Saturday in protest at the government's handling of the country's economic crisis, police said.

The march through the heart of Dublin - organized by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions - was meant as a warning shot to the government, which wants to cut public sector pay even as it pumps billions of euros into its troubled banks.

The government has argued that wage reductions are needed to keep Ireland's ballooning deficits under control and reassure international markets that Ireland isn't spiraling toward a default.

But the plan - which effectively docks 7 percent from the paychecks of 350,000 Irish workers - comes amid revelations of shady dealings and irresponsible lending at the banks now getting the taxpayers' help.

Anglo Irish Bank, which was nationalized last month after collapsing under the weight of its bad debts, said Friday it expected to lose about ?300 million ($385 million) on loans made to favored investors. Anglo's former chairman, Sean FitzPatrick, was forced out last year after it emerged that he secretly took out ?87 million in personal loans from the bank.

Organizers originally planned the demonstration as a protest at the wage cutbacks, but later called on all Irish workers to turn out in a show of strength. Uniformed members of the Irish Fire Brigade rubbed shoulders with health workers and red flag-waving activists to vent their anger at the government - and the country's financial elite.

"Our generations yet unborn have been mortgaged in order to keep this banking system together," Congress of Trade Unions General Secretary David Begg told cheering crowds at Dublin's Merrion Square.

"Your children and my children and our grandchildren will all have to try to deal with what has been laid upon their shoulders."

Sean Whelan, 45, said he was outraged by the bank bailout.

"You could practically say it's illegal what they are doing," said Whelan, an employee of Dublin's city council. He said the salary reduction would leave him only a few euros a week to live on.

(AP Photo/Peter Morrison)
(Left: A demonstrator holds a placard protesting the government's handling of the economic crisis, in Dublin, Saturday, Feb. 21, 2009.)

The trade unions are hoping the turnout will convince the government that organized labor is ready to strike if its demands are ignored. The Congress, an umbrella group representing about 55 unions in Ireland and Northern Ireland, recently published a wish-list which included, among other things, more support for the unemployed, a moratorium on home repossessions and the nationalization of the country's banking sector.

The Irish government said in a statement Saturday that much of the plan was "entirely consistent" with its own agenda, before warning that the measures it was taking to salvage the country's economy would necessarily have to be "difficult and, in some cases, painful."

Ireland once had one of the fastest-growing economies in Europe, but boom turned to bust last year as shock waves from the subprime lending crisis in the United States spread across the globe.
By Associated Press Writer Raphael G. Satter

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 104 Comments
by niceface19 February 23, 2009 1:13 AM EST
Poor Americans can do the same thing.
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by nibaru February 23, 2009 12:36 AM EST
I guess the the only people without jobs are the uneducated if the shoe fits ware it. The point is we are all in this together and as a race of so called smart people why were we and I say we a sleep at the wheel and let this happen we let this happen because most of the sheep want some one telling them what to do. Take a look at the garbage that is pushed by the media you are told what to ware what to eat & what to drive, get a credit card buy a house no money down. Why wasn't the government and the states and the cities regulating growth and lending practice. They are only focused on how much money they can get out of you. Look into some of the things they are tossing around about taxing some of the things that are not being taxed now.

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by mortal3 February 22, 2009 8:58 PM EST
Jobs at places like McDonalds will never pay enough to buy a $30,000 car. You need to get the skills and education and motivation to get the better paying jobs that allow you to live well. Jobs that require few skills and no education rarely pay well. Those with the better paying jobs know all of this already.

Posted by rhs648 at 02:25 PM : Feb 22, 2009

--- Give me a break! I guess the only people in America without jobs are the uneducated and unskilled.

You need to get your head out of what ever hole it''s in and see that all jobs are being cut and shipped out of this country.
---
Well said. The good paying jobs are the biggest target right now. People don't see it with their own eyes so they think we are just making it up or something. Get your heads out of your *****! It's happening at an alarming rate, and it WILL affect you eventually. It has to stop.
Like the previous poster said, why can't we raise hell like that? It's time for the people to stand together damnit!
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by harp1963 February 22, 2009 6:43 PM EST
Why can't we raise h e l l like this in America?
Reply to this comment
by jediservant February 22, 2009 6:26 PM EST
Jobs at places like McDonalds will never pay enough to buy a $30,000 car. You need to get the skills and education and motivation to get the better paying jobs that allow you to live well. Jobs that require few skills and no education rarely pay well. Those with the better paying jobs know all of this already.

Posted by rhs648 at 02:25 PM : Feb 22, 2009

--- Give me a break! I guess the only people in America without jobs are the uneducated and unskilled.

You need to get your head out of what ever hole it's in and see that all jobs are being cut and shipped out of this country.
Reply to this comment
by rhs648 February 22, 2009 5:30 PM EST
The Irish are regretting the fact that they have been seduced into sleeping with the British empire of ''globalization''.

The U.S. must look at these protests and understand that British style ''free trade'' and ''globalization'' has been discredited.

Instead of our politicians going around the world for silly photo-ops they should be signing long term contracts for goods and services based on the Bretton Woods fixed-exchange-rates.


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Posted by whitemale09

Ireland has been prospering for a number of years. Like everywhere else, Ireland also expereiences economic cycles. It is normal to go through periods of recession and prosperity. All economies expand and contract according to supply and demand. If you make too much of a product, you lay off of terminate people if the demand isn't there. To expect otherwise is to deny reality.
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by rhs648 February 22, 2009 5:25 PM EST
Wake up America the big picture is the elite set this in motion to get more money out of you. In their eyes you and I are nothing more than sheep to be bought and sold. They want you destitute so you have to depend on them that way they can do what ever they want and don''t have to worry about being prosecuted. If you don''t get it maybe this will help they want slaves, that why they took the good paying manufacturing jobs and shipped them to China working at McDonald''s doesn''t pay enough to live on let alone buy a 30 thousand dollar car. So Stop drinking or smoking and take our country and government back from these scumbags.


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Posted by nibaru

Jobs at places like McDonalds will never pay enough to buy a $30,000 car. You need to get the skills and education and motivation to get the better paying jobs that allow you to live well. Jobs that require few skills and no education rarely pay well. Those with the better paying jobs know all of this already.
Reply to this comment
by cbsblogger February 22, 2009 5:05 PM EST
Americans are too soft to get away from their video games and TV to march in the streets.

We should have been marching in the streets when Bush and his Congress changed all the laws to benefit big business and the banks and when the neocons lobbied for war in Iraq for Israel's benefit.
Reply to this comment
by nibaru February 22, 2009 3:16 PM EST
Wake up America the big picture is the elite set this in motion to get more money out of you. In their eyes you and I are nothing more than sheep to be bought and sold. They want you destitute so you have to depend on them that way they can do what ever they want and don't have to worry about being prosecuted. If you don't get it maybe this will help they want slaves, that why they took the good paying manufacturing jobs and shipped them to China working at McDonald's doesn't pay enough to live on let alone buy a 30 thousand dollar car. So Stop drinking or smoking and take our country and government back from these scumbags.
Reply to this comment
by tincup356 February 22, 2009 2:55 PM EST

We are blaming our government too, for lack of oversight, accountability and plain common sense. But I agree with the sign she is holding; "We won''t pay for the greed of the super rich." Maybe we the people should have turned out in the streets too. I am mildly surprised that we haven''t, yet.

Posted by renonv5 at 11:38 AM : Feb 22, 2009..................to do that people would have to admit ..that their beloved party was not the great representative they thought they were,,,they BOTH got us into this mess,,,,,,and everyone cannot claim they voted third party now......we have to live with the facts ,,,both parties caused this no one else,,,they made the laws and they oversaw the country,,,they let wall st. and corporate America call the shots,,,and when it crashed ,,,they gave those same failure people ,,,BILLIONS of our tax dollars...WHY?.....THEY flat robbed us and smiled about it...it is a conspiracy ,,any way you look at it. they are on track to destroy the middle class and when they do ..we will have a revolution
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