Léargas by Gerry Adams
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
This week Sinn Féin introduced into the Dáil an Equality
Proofing Bill. The purpose of the Bill was to amend existing legislation and to
provide equality proofing of government policy and budget and public bodies
through impact assessments. If passed into law the Bill would have ensured that
both government and public bodies in exercising their functions would so
in a way that would reduce the inequalities of outcome which result from
socio-economic disadvantage.
As it was the Labour party voted with Fine Gael against the Bill.
Government Minister and Labour TD Kathleen Lynch spoke against equality and
ultimately against Labour party policy which supports equality proofing.
Essentially the Minister said that we cannot afford equality!
From a Fine Gael Minister this would have been understandable – Fine Gael
doesn’t believe in equality.
But Labour’s stated policy is for the equality proofing. By
opposing this equality proofing Bill Labour TDs are voting against their party’s
own policy position!
What is the value of Labour in government if its only role is to
bolster the conservative economic and social politics of Fine Gael?
Labour’s founding father James Connolly is accepted as the
principal author of that part of the Proclamation which guarantees religious
and civil liberty, equal rights and equal
opportunities to all its citizens. It contains a commitment to cherish all the
children of the nation equally.
Sadly, equality does not exist in this society. It is a republic
in name only and the policies of this government and of successive governments
are contributing directly to a growing inequality – particularly between the
rich and the poor.
I’m an Irish republican. I believe in a republican system of
governance. A real republic in which the people are sovereign and equal, and
have all–encompassing rights, including economic rights, the right to a home;
to a job; to access to education; to a health service from the cradle to the
grave; the right to a safe and clean environment; and to civil and religious
liberties.
This is what republicanism is about. It is what genuine
democracy is about. It’s about embedding equality into the daily life and
experience of citizens.
The imposition of equality duties, and the equality proofing of
government policies and budgets, and of public bodies through impact
assessments, are a means of achieving this and of dictating outcomes. Without
this equality will remain little more than a pipe dream.
It is a fact that inequality is all around us in this part of
the island. It exists also in the north but there it has the added dimension of
generational sectarian and political discrimination.
Interestingly the other parties in the Dáil reference the
continued existence of inequalities in the north as a pretext for attacking
Sinn Féin. There is no logic to this position. Or truth. Or rational. They
quote poverty levels in west Belfast for example to justify their own position.
They refuse to acknowledge that the citizens of west Belfast in
common with other communities in the north are tackling these issues on a daily
basis and succeeding against the odds.
And because they took a stand – and they would be waiting a long
time for Fianna Fáil or Fine Gael or Labour to help them – because these citizens
took a stand generational sectarianism and political discrimination is being
tackled.
There are now equality duties and the equality proofing of
government policies and budgets, and of public bodies. If this is good enough
for the north why can’t citizens here have these rights?
Equality is cited 21 times in the Good Friday Agreement,
including in the Pledge of Office for Ministers. It has a complete section
given over to it and is included in legislation designed to ensure equality in
employment. We are living in post Good Friday Agreement Ireland. That is
obvious in the north.
So it is catch-up time in this state and legislating for
equality here must be a key part of this. This should include the Charter of Rights
which the Irish government signed up to 15 years ago. Apart from being
ethically wrong – no person or community should be treated as second class or
as non-citizens.
The refusal to recognise the Traveller community as an ethnic
group is unacceptable.
Inequality is also expensive and uneconomic for society. A
healthy, more equal, prosperous society is in everyone’s interest.
Sinn Féin’s Equality Bill is about achieving this. And the need for
this approach is all the more obvious if we consider the record of the current
Government. Budget 2012 was found by the ESRI to have had a disproportionate
impact on the least well off in society. Budget 2013 repeated this.
Everyday sees the removal of citizen’s rights and the reinforcement
of privilege for the elites in society. Sinn Féin’s Equality Bill would require
an equality impact assessment to prevent the implementation of such blatantly
unfair policies.
That is why the government voted against this Bill.
Sinn Féin is for a
new Republic – an all island Republic – a real republic which will deliver the
highest standards of services and protections to all citizens equally,
guaranteeing parity of esteem and equality of treatment, opportunity and
outcome.
This also means
equality for the Irish language and for rural Ireland.
While Labour abandoned Connolly and sided with Fine Gael and the
elites in voting down the Sinn Féin Equality Bill the Equality Budgeting
campaign which represents over 30 civil society organisations welcomed the
Bill. While this round was lost the campaign to achieve equality will continue.
Sinn Féin Mountmellick-Serving The Community
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