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Authors: David Kenny

The Trib (3 page)

It was a rare moment of balance in the ongoing deification of Gerry Ryan, from one of the few RTÉ people to behave as though Ryan's death was not about them, but about his wife, children, partner and siblings. Pat Kenny was another. His tribute to Ryan on
The Late Late Show
, in which he described the deceased as one of RTÉ's holy trinity, along with Gay Byrne and Terry Wogan, was as kind and decent as it was wide of the mark. (Byrne definitely, Wogan possibly, Kenny himself maybe, but Gerry Ryan?) Had Fanning and Kenny been in charge of RTÉ for the week, we might have got some sense of proportion on Ryan's death. Instead, all was out-of-control hysteria, which actually did Ryan a huge disservice by completely overplaying his role in broadcasting history.

It wasn't just the media that was to blame, of course. One characteristic of modern living, which some Irish people share with the citizens of the UK and the US, is a heightened sense of entitlement in which every event is judged on the basis of how it affects the individual. When somebody well-known dies, therefore, Johnny or Julie see the tragedy primarily as something which affects them, though they may never have met the deceased. Grieving becomes a competitive sport: ‘He was my radio husband'; ‘I feel like I've lost a friend'. The demand to participate in something that has nothing to do with you, to be publicly validated by your display of grief, is overwhelming.

This democratisation of grief isn't a good thing. The funerals of public figures have generally been a reliable guide to the achievements of the deceased, and to the relative contributions they made to the places and communities in which they lived. The media-driven hysteria over Ryan's death and the frankly stupid coverage of his funeral in papers like the
Irish Daily Mail
and the
Star
makes it more difficult to proportionately and fittingly celebrate achievement in the future. The ante has been upped. And not in a good way.

The journey of the public service employee from unambitious workhorse to shopaholic destroyer of an entire economy has been a sight to behold

29 November 2009

A
s RTÉ viewers and readers of Irish newspapers will know by now, public sector workers are the most evil, self-centred, lazy, opportunistic, stupid, dishonest and vile group of individuals Ireland has ever known. Their thievery knows no bounds and goes back generations. DNA tests on a nurse from Enfield recently discovered she is a direct descendant of a family of cruel kitten killers from the 1890s. Investigations into the background of a teacher in Kilkenny revealed that wealthy ancestors on his mother's
side used to stand outside the homes of starving people during the Famine, munching potato salad sandwiches and feeding the leftovers to the local bird population. What else would he do with that
kind of history but look for a job in the public service?

But of all the insults perpetrated by public sector workers over the years, perhaps the worst was their mass Christmas shopping outing to Newry last Tuesday. Luckily, the media was around to uncover the crime. The day of action, RTÉ confidently reported at lunchtime on Tuesday, had led to an influx of public sector workers who had abandoned their picket lines in search of cheap whiskey (they didn't quite put it like that, but it was clear what they were getting at). It was an arresting image, no doubt, and one backed up by no evidence whatsoever. I tuned into the Six One News later in the day to see if they were able to put any more meat on their story. Sadly, they were not, although that didn't stop them pushing an angle that was too attractive to abandon.

Three witnesses to the madness were interviewed. An Englishman who didn't work in the public sector thought the busier-than-usual shopping day might have had something to do with the work stoppage, although he didn't seem sure. A shopper from Dublin who didn't work in the public sector thought a fellow over there might be in the public sector, although there was no interview with the fellow over there to confirm that suspicion. An elderly woman who didn't work in the public sector was sure she was surrounded by public sector workers, their horns and pointy tails having completely given the game away.

RTÉ at least acknowledged that many of the people who arrived in Newry on Tuesday might have been the parents of children who had the day off (which, of course, was always the most likely explanation for the long queue of southern-registered cars meandering towards the town). Nevertheless the impression created and amplified in the following day's newspapers, was that thousands of strikers had used their day off – taken ostensibly on a point of principle – as an excuse to boost the economy of a foreign nation. The unstated analysis: what would you expect from the people who ruined the country?

The journey of the public service employee from unambitious, unimaginative workhorse to shopaholic destroyer of an entire economy has been a sight to behold. During the boom years, nobody worth their salt would be caught dead working in the public service. Our thrusting, creative, adaptable workforce demanded the freedom and excitement offered by the private sector to express themselves (whatever that means), win attention, secure promotion and earn lots of money. By contrast, the public sector was looked on as a kind of fusty fallback position for Denis and Denise Dullknickers, where they could toil away unrecognised by anybody. Judged by the rules and morality of the Celtic Badger, these people were unambitious, and therefore slightly weird, losers.

Now that the boom is over – wrecked mainly, let us not forget, by the private sector – the public service has been reimagined as the modern equivalent of Nero's Rome. Denis and Denise have been tried and found guilty of excesses likely to lead to a visit by the International Monetary Fund. A country's future depends on them being chastised for reckless behaviour they were never aware of.

To those people in the private sector who insist on the demonisation of public service workers, I would quote the great Roy Keane: ‘Get over it!' If the public sector was the fantastic land of opportunity you say it is now, you could have joined at any point in your working past. But you made a choice to go the private route, as I did, and as did many of my colleagues who now so boldly lead the charge against the public service. Try as I might, I can't think of a single reason why public sector workers should be held responsible for that choice.

T
ERRY
P
RONE
Wham, bam, thank you Obama

Optimism wins votes – now the opposition must peddle a vision of somewhere over the Rainbow.

24 December 2006

W
e constantly hear about political parties, including those on the opposition benches, paying for American pollsters and campaign experts to cross the Atlantic at high prices to tell them how to win the next general election.

We've heard rather less about something of much more immediate relevance to the upcoming general election: the Obama Factor.

The Obama Factor is what's fascinating American political observers at the moment. Illinois Democratic Senator Barack Obama, one handsome lump of African-American charm, is attracting bigger crowds, airtime, column inches and campaign money than any other potential presidential candidate. And he hasn't even declared yet.

It's happening for a number of reasons. He's young, good-looking and carries none of the baggage acquired by more experienced Democrats, who have to explain away problems like voting for the war in Iraq. He's clever and charismatic and possessed of a self-deprecating wit. He's black without any of the threatening rage issues that have crippled the hopes of men like Jesse Jackson.

But the biggest thing he has going for him is his ability to offer American voters something different, something hopeful. He doesn't keep dissecting failed Republican promises, showcasing Republican hate figures and reminding the voters of their responsibility for the creation of a now despised administration.

He may have peaked too soon. He may soon be exposed as all vision, no specifics. But – right now – he has cottoned on to a fundamental principle of election-winning: people vote for candidates who make the voter feel better about the voter.

Floating voters are always in the self-esteem business. They want to believe that they're risktaking idealists. That they can't be bought. That they care about more than back-pocket money and security. That their vote speaks to their faith in a better future and to their rejection of a squalid present.

It's that last consideration that, over the past couple of years, has hobbled the opposition in this country. They've been enthusiastically barking up the wrong tree, convinced that if they prove to the voter that Fianna Fáil is essentially and irrevocably corrupt and that the PDs are heartless fascists, all will be well. They've missed the positive future tense part of the equation.

They haven't been helped by Taoiseach's Questions. The format of this Dáil procedure requires them to put questions to the Taoiseach. Surrounded as the three opposition leaders are by advisers pushing the flawed notion of ‘strong opposition', this has meant that, week in, week out, the three of them get delivered into the nation's sitting rooms, courtesy of TV soundbites, as boring, negative, eternally complaining whingers.

Inevitable? Not at all. Political leadership isn't just about inventing policies and keeping the troops motivated. It's about finding new ways to use – nay, re-invent – old procedures. During the Christmas break, the opposition party leaders would be well advised to figure out how to use the most frequently televised Dáil procedure in a way that doesn't continue to do them damage. It's a weekly opportunity to put the Obama Factor in play, and they'd better get the hang of it, smartish.

The Obama Factor is quintessentially future tense. It assumes people prefer the wide blue yonder of tomorrow to the recycled sock-smell of yesterday. Simple? Obvious? Not to the powers-that-be in some of the opposition parties, one of which, this week, as the rest of us were scissoring ribbons into curly fronds and trying to conceal parcels with giveaway shapes, was demanding time for a Dáil debate on the Moriarty Report Vol I. This is a bit like putting down a motion demanding the right to serve semolina pudding on Christmas Day: why the hell would you want to?

The answer depends on which bit of the non-tree you're barking up. If you're barking up the Duty of the Opposition bit, you believe a report so significant should not be allowed to pass without your TDs hammering home the implications. If you're barking up the Culture of Crookedness bit, you want yet another chance to point out to the plain people of Ireland that ‘Haughey didn't do this all on his own, you know'.

Never mind that the people of Ireland, or at least those represented in opinion polls, are bored rigid by that stuff. Not to mention those for whom the events recorded by the Moriarty Report are distant history, belonging to the bad old days before Ryanair, cappuccinos in cardboard beakers and pre-Christmas shopping in American outlet malls.

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