The Committee met at 09.00 a.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT:
Deputy Pearse Doherty, | Senator Sean D. Barrett, |
Deputy Joe Higgins, | Senator Michael D’Arcy, |
Deputy Michael McGrath, | Senator Marc MacSharry, |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy, | Senator Susan O’Keeffe. |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell, | |
Deputy John Paul Phelan |
Oireachtas – The Taoiseach, Deputy Enda Kenny, and Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Deputy Richard Bruton
Chairman
The following witnesses were sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
The Taoiseach, Deputy Enda Kenny.
Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Deputy Richard Bruton.
Chairman
The Taoiseach
Chairman
Thank you very much. Minister Bruton. | 38 |
Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation (Deputy Richard Bruton)
Chairman
Thank you very much, Mr. Bruton. So I now begin with questioning, and, in doing so, I’ll invite our first questioner this morning. It’s Deputy Pearse Doherty. Deputy, you have 15 minutes. | 46 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Chairman
I need to move here—– | 49 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Yes. | 51 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
How … would that not have eroded the tax base further? And what policies did your party have at that time to broaden the tax base – if any? | 52 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Sorry, Mr. Kenny, I —– | 55 |
The Taoiseach
So in respect of the—– | 56 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Can I just—– | 57 |
The Taoiseach
In respect of the—– | 58 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Yes. | 60 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
—–have to broaden the tax base to provide—— | 61 |
The Taoiseach
Well—– | 62 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
—–more stable revenues—– | 63 |
The Taoiseach
Yes, as I—– | 64 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
—–for government? | 65 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay—– | 67 |
The Taoiseach
So—– | 68 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Chairman
Okay, Taoiseach—– | 71 |
The Taoiseach
Chairman
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay. | 74 |
The Taoiseach
Chairman
Okay. | 76 |
The Taoiseach
Sorry, Deputy. | 77 |
Chairman
Deputy Doherty, you’ve possession again. | 78 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay, I’m moving on. I’m still no wiser whether you believe that your commitments would have further eroded the tax base—– | 79 |
The Taoiseach
No, I don’t. | 80 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Well, outside of the policy—– | 83 |
The Taoiseach
—-and opposed those increases. | 84 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay. | 87 |
The Taoiseach
But I wouldn’t have been personally, actively seeking out … our decisions, Deputy, would have been made by the Front Bench of the party and the parliamentary party in its entirety on those issues. | 88 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Chairman
What meeting are you talking about there, Deputy, now? | 90 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
This is in relation to July … it’s in relation to just after the guarantee. It’s in the period of opposition. | 91 |
Chairman
Okay. | 92 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Oh, it’s reported at a later stage. | 93 |
Chairman
Is the Taoiseach familiar with the … maybe if—– | 94 |
The Taoiseach
I know the reference he’s making—– | 95 |
Chairman
Okay. | 96 |
The Taoiseach
—–but I don’t have the paper in front of me that you’re talking about. | 97 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Yes, well, I’ll ask the question then—– | 98 |
Chairman
Okay. | 99 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
What timeframe is prior to the crash? Just to—– | 102 |
Chairman
I’ll allow him to answer and I’ll bring you back in, Deputy. | 103 |
The Taoiseach
I don’t have the … I can follow up with the exact date—– | 104 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay. | 105 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay. Was—– | 107 |
The Taoiseach
—–in any event, I had no conversation of any substance with Mr. Moran. | 108 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Was it one call or two calls? The article says it was twice. | 109 |
The Taoiseach
Well, it may have … it may have been two. I can’t—– | 110 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay. | 111 |
The Taoiseach
—–confirm that to you. I may have made a call and … that he wasn’t there or whatever. | 112 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
No, I have no recollection of informing Mr. Moran of anything of substance in so far as either Fine Gael’s propositions or whatever else was going on. | 114 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
No. | 118 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
—–conversations? | 119 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay, can you tell us what you said to Mr. Moran, from the best … your recollection? | 121 |
The Taoiseach
No, all I said was that I was asked to make a call to him, that he had wanted to say something to me, or so I was led to believe. He didn’t say anything to me. | 122 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
He didn’t say anything to you on the phone. | 123 |
The Taoiseach
Of any substance about any banks. And I gave … I would have given no information whatsoever because I wouldn’t be in possession of that information—– | 124 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
But you did not discuss recapitalisation of the banks—– | 127 |
The Taoiseach
I would never discuss Fine Gael policy or Government policy with anybody unless it was appropriate to do so and certainly not with bankers. | 128 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay. So you didn’t discuss the issue of recapitalisation with Anglo Irish Bank on that telephone call? | 129 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Why were Fine Gael pushing for bank recapitalisation at that time, which is late November 2008? | 131 |
The Taoiseach
Gabh mo leithscéal? | 132 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Why were Fine Gael pushing for bank recapitalisation at that time? | 133 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Deputy Richard Bruton
Well I don’t have the detail but from what you describe yourself, it would appear that some project who was very close to the deadline of a relief had a planning arrangement—– | 136 |
Chairman
Deputy Richard Bruton
No, the phone is on airplane mode. | 138 |
Chairman
Okay. And maybe the Taoiseach … it may be the Taoiseach’s. | 139 |
The Taoiseach
Mine is switched off, to be honest with you. | 140 |
Chairman
Okay, all right. It’s just picking up, I’m getting something from broadcast there. My apologies. | 141 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Deputy Richard Bruton
No, this was an issue—– | 147 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Can I just finish the question, sorry. Do you also … do you believe or not that was the same type of argument that was provided by Government in extending the tax reliefs in 2002, 2004 and 2006? | 148 |
Chairman
Thank you, Deputy, now I’ll bring you back in again. Mr. Bruton. | 149 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
No. | 150 |
Chairman
Okay. Thank you. Deputy Kieran O’Donnell. | 151 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
The Taoiseach
Is that for me? | 153 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
For both. | 154 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Specifically, I suppose the question really specifically, Taoiseach, is around growth in the loan portfolios of the banks specifically, is the kernel of the question. Specific. | 156 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
And Minister Bruton? | 158 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Yes, I think like … I obviously have to go back and see, but I see one statement I had at the time, €118 billion increase in Irish indebtedness in two years. This was the start of 2007. | 159 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Where was this made? | 160 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
This was on foot of “the Central Bank’s monthly statistics for last December reveal that in two years alone Irish residents have increased their indebtedness by €118 billion”. | 161 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Was it in the form of a press release from you? Was it? | 162 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
It was on the back of the then report of the Central Bank but I think over the period of, you know, throughout the period, you know, banking, lending, financial regulation was—– | 163 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
That would have been ‘07, prior to ‘07. | 164 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Did you challenge it enough from 2002 onwards? | 166 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
What did you project nominal growth at at the time? | 172 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Then a final, final question—– | 174 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
So we, we said, you know, we … and that was locking first-time buyers out of the market, it was becoming an excessive source of, of, of reliance—– | 175 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
You realise Mr. Bruton, I have, I have limited time—– | 176 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
I beg your pardon, sorry. | 177 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
—–and the Taoiseach, I want to bring in as well. Did ye build contingencies into the budget in terms of fall in taxes from the construction sector? | 178 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Yes we provided in, in, in the policy manifesto for a contingency in, in that respect. | 179 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
At what level? | 180 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
I don’t know what the level, we, we said that in, in budgeting that would have to be an element, I don’t have that detail. | 181 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
So, was … ye were looking at a reduction in current spending over the period? | 182 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
We were looking at bringing down the growth rate … on, on …a, a spending growth rate. | 183 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Spending on a growth, spending on a growth rate? | 184 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Spending growth rate, which had been going in the opposite direction in the years before. | 185 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Okay. | 186 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
The Taoiseach
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
And Taoiseach how was … in the limited time I have, how is the situation different now? Like, you speak about the situation then. How is it different now? How is it improved? | 193 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Thank you. | 195 |
Chairman
There is phone interference there. I can even hear it inside in the room at the moment, folks. Deputy John Paul Phelan. | 196 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
The Taoiseach
Would you repeat that, Deputy? | 200 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
The Taoiseach
I don’t recall that, no. | 204 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Okay. | 205 |
The Taoiseach
I don’t. My only association with Mr. Drumm was a meeting I attended. | 206 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
The Taoiseach
Deputy John Paul Phelan
The Taoiseach
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Do you feel with hindsight that the meeting should have taken place or—– | 213 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy John Paul Phelan
The Taoiseach
Deputy John Paul Phelan
And was the conversation with Minister Bruton prior to the conversation with yourself? | 217 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Okay and that was seven o’clock in the morning of the 30th, on the following morning? | 219 |
The Taoiseach
It was early in the morning and he called me himself. | 220 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Minister Bruton, can you—– | 221 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy John Paul Phelan
The Taoiseach
Chairman
Thank you very much. Senator Michael D’Arcy. Senator, ten minutes. | 227 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Thank you, gentlemen. In 2007, the Fine Gael manifesto also called for tax cuts and additional public expenditure in many areas, for example, the extension of medical cards—– | 228 |
Chairman
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Can you restart the clock, Chairman? | 230 |
Chairman
I’ll restart the clock here, I will indeed. Turn off the phone and I’ll turn on the clock. | 231 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Deputy Richard Bruton
Senator Michael D’Arcy
The Taoiseach
Senator Michael D’Arcy
The Taoiseach
Senator Michael D’Arcy
The Taoiseach
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Just very briefly—– | 240 |
Chairman
Very briefly, now, because you’re over time. | 241 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Chairman
I need to push on, Senator. If it’s relevant—– | 245 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
I am, Chairman, moved … but it’s relevant to the overall point—– | 246 |
Chairman
Just ask the question, please. | 247 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
—–how it moved from a pilot without obvious analysis to a cost to the State of €319 million without then subsequent analysis. | 248 |
Chairman
Okay—– | 249 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
I mean how the business of State is done, doesn’t look great in that circumstance, Taoiseach. | 250 |
Chairman
Deputy Richard Bruton
Chairman
Deputy Joe Higgins. | 253 |
The Taoiseach
Chairman
Deputy Joe Higgins. | 255 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Kenny, when you were leader of a major Opposition party from 2002-07, were you able to meet with staff or officials from the Central Bank or the Financial Regulator? | 256 |
The Taoiseach
I’m sure I was but I didn’t. | 257 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
There was no meetings – structured or informal? | 258 |
The Taoiseach
No. | 259 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
The Taoiseach
Yes, of course. There should be. | 261 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
The Taoiseach
Certainly not. | 263 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
How do you explain this interaction then and what’s the difference between the Galway tent, which you often criticised, and these golf classics? | 264 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Joe Higgins
The Taoiseach
Deputy Joe Higgins
The Taoiseach
Deputy Joe Higgins
The Taoiseach
Well, any contributions to the political party were in accordance with SIPO. We have now ended corporate donations entirely. | 271 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Joe Higgins
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Joe Higgins
Did you take any measures—– | 276 |
Chairman
Final supplementary, Deputy, and then I’m going to call a break. | 277 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Did you take any measures to distinguish what you call an entrepreneur, or a genuine entrepreneur creating wealth, from property speculatory … speculators? | 278 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Absolutely. Our whole … our whole strategy was built around—– | 279 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
What would ye have done in 2007, Minister? | 280 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
—–our whole strategy was built around rebooting the whole enterprise sector—– | 281 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Deputy Richard Bruton
Absolutely, and, I mean, you’re—– | 283 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
But how? | 284 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
—–the proof of the pudding is in the way—– | 285 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
How did you do that when you maintain that—– | 286 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Joe Higgins
Yes, but—– | 288 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
—–as you know had … had been demolished in that period—– | 289 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
But just—– | 290 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
—–we needed to rebuild the manufacturing base and invest and—– | 291 |
Chairman
Deputy Higgins, I do understand what you need to push and I do need to come to a conclusion—– | 292 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
But he—– | 293 |
Chairman
—–so I’m just going to ask you to summarise very precisely—– | 294 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Yes—– | 295 |
Chairman
—–what you want. | 296 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
The question is made. Minister Burton … no, not Minister Burton, my apologies. | 298 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 11.05 a.m. and resumed at 11.15 a.m.
Chairman
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Deputy Richard Bruton
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Deputy Richard Bruton
That’s right, yes. | 305 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
How close could you get? How close did you get, or were you able to, or was it literally if you’re not in government you can’t come in? | 306 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Deputy Richard Bruton
No, I can’t recall such a briefing. | 309 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Deputy Richard Bruton
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Deputy Richard Bruton
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Deputy Richard Bruton
No, there was … no one sought me out. You know, but obviously after Northern Rock there was very much a heightened awareness—– | 315 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Sure. | 316 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
—–of financial vulnerabilities, and it was the subject of a lot of the parliamentary questions that I was submitting to Ministers at the time … to the Minister for Finance at the time. | 317 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Okay. | 318 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
So, you know, there was a heightened awareness of this issue. | 319 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Deputy Richard Bruton
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
The Taoiseach
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
So you do not recall any other—– | 324 |
Chairman
It’s been answered. I’m moving on to another questioner. | 325 |
The Taoiseach
No I do not. I have never been on the trail of developers or contractors. | 326 |
Chairman
Deputy Michael McGrath. | 327 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
The Taoiseach
Deputy Michael McGrath
You are critical in your statement, for example, of the growth in public spending of €23 billion between 2002 and 2007. | 330 |
The Taoiseach
Yes. | 331 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
So apart from benchmarking, which was, I think, in the order of €1.3 billion, specifically what other areas of public spending which were significant did Fine Gael oppose at that time? | 332 |
The Taoiseach
We had a long campaign in the Dáil about the so-called PPARS project. I think I called it PayPal earlier on; my apologies to PayPal, Chairman. | 333 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
PPARS. | 334 |
The Taoiseach
You had PPARS, you know, had the port tunnel, the overruns, you had grossly excessive costs, despite tenders and original estimates. | 335 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Well, in current spending, Taoiseach, in terms of social welfare—– | 336 |
The Taoiseach
Well, the benchmarking process was the one—– | 337 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
—–education, health, that’s €1 billion. But of the other €22 billion—– | 338 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Michael McGrath
The Taoiseach
Deputy Michael McGrath
June 2006. | 342 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Michael McGrath
The Taoiseach
Deputy Michael McGrath
The Taoiseach
Deputy Michael McGrath
We’ll argue that point somewhere else, Taoiseach. | 352 |
The Taoiseach
Indeed. | 353 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Thank you. | 354 |
The Taoiseach
Thank you, Deputy McGrath. | 355 |
Chairman
Thank you very much. Senator Sean Barrett. | 356 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
A Chathaoirligh. Just while you mentioned shredding, Taoiseach, are there any records of the night of the guarantee electronically or otherwise still around in the Taoiseach’s Department? | 357 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Yes. Mr. Dermot McCarthy—– | 359 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Sean D. Barrett
The Taoiseach
Yes, and I’ve sent those on to one … I think … Deputy Martin, I think, asked for that from me in that whatever correspondence is there has been sent on long ago. | 362 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
The Taoiseach
Senator Sean D. Barrett
But the Wright report did draw attention to the … an expertise deficit in the permanent Government, and will this be addressed by the Government economic service? | 367 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Sean D. Barrett
And how would you integrate the Oireachtas into that process, Taoiseach? | 369 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Thank you very much. Tá an t-am thart. Thanks Chair. | 371 |
Chairman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy. | 372 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
So, I mean, you had concerns about the model and you had concerns about their capabilities, so why did you trust their work? | 375 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
But there was no way – excuse me – for the Oireachtas to directly scrutinise their work or hold them to account? | 381 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. Taoiseach, did Fine Gael know about the dangers to the economy going into the ‘07 election? Did it see the risks ahead in terms of the banking sector, or the property sector? | 383 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
The Taoiseach
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
The Taoiseach
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
And just a final—– | 389 |
Chairman
Wrap up, Deputy, because you’re over time. | 390 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
The Taoiseach
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
In ‘08? | 393 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
But were … I mean, did you support the guarantee with those views taken on board by the Government or regardless of whether they were taken on board or not? | 395 |
The Taoiseach
No, we wanted these things put in place that would give far greater scrutiny, far greater authority to the Minister for Finance—– | 396 |
Chairman
Come on now, Deputy Murphy. | 397 |
The Taoiseach
—–and those details would be important, from our point of view. | 398 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. | 399 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Thank you. | 401 |
Chairman
Senator Marc MacSharry. | 402 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Thanks, Cathaoirleach, and just to say, that was 12 minutes. I have five questions that I wish to ask. | 403 |
Chairman
Sure. | 404 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
The Taoiseach
Yes. | 406 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Can you give examples of that for us? | 407 |
The Taoiseach
Yes, we proposed … we’ve done this now, with broadening the tax base in respect of property charges and water charges—– | 408 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
No, no. I’m talking about the relevant period. | 409 |
The Taoiseach
Yes. | 410 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
In the run-in to the election in 2007—– | 411 |
The Taoiseach
We proposed the expend—– | 412 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
—–Taoiseach? | 413 |
The Taoiseach
Yes is the answer. We proposed the expenditure cuts, in particular—– | 414 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
In what? | 415 |
The Taoiseach
In relation to the benchmarking process, in relation to the whole idea of what was coming through—– | 416 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
The Taoiseach
Well, the position was that we accepted the figures for growth from the ESRI and the Department of Finance. | 418 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
You were proposing the reduction of tax to 18%—– | 419 |
Chairman
That’s not enough time for a response, Senator. You—– | 420 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
—–how could that be constituted as an increase in taxation? | 421 |
The Taoiseach
You’re asking me five “Yes” or “No” answers, and you’re making a statement here—– | 422 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
No, but it’s just I’ve watched an element of, you know, political manoeuvring over the last number of questions and I just want to get specifically to the facts. | 423 |
Chairman
Sorry—– | 424 |
The Taoiseach
The first “Yes” or “No” answer, is that, yes, we did propose cuts in public expenditure—– | 425 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
But just not in the manifesto? | 426 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Marc MacSharry
The Taoiseach
I’ve dealt with those questions—– | 429 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
No, “Yes” or “No”? I’d like it again, because I mustn’t have been listening. | 430 |
Chairman
I’ll afford you plenty of time, Senator. There’ll be no difficulty there. Taoiseach? | 431 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Thanks, Chairman. | 432 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Marc MacSharry
Chairman
Okay—– | 435 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
—–to a harder landing? | 436 |
Chairman
Senator—– | 437 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
“Yes” or “No”? | 438 |
The Taoiseach
No. | 439 |
Chairman
Senator, the question is leading—– | 440 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
The Taoiseach
What do you mean by road? You mean getting a lift from somebody? | 442 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
I’ll ask the question again. Did you ever accept hospitality from a developer in the form of transport by road or air? | 443 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy, I’ve travelled so many places by road and air over the years. Tell me what you’re taking about. | 444 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
No. I’m merely asking the question. Have you ever? So it’s a “Yes or “No”, I think. | 445 |
The Taoiseach
Does that mean that if I travel from Dublin to Mullingar with a developer, that I’ve to answer “Yes”? | 446 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
I presume it does. I don’t know. You tell me. Did you travel with developers? Did you travel with developers—– | 447 |
The Taoiseach
I think that—– | 448 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Did they give you lifts? | 449 |
The Taoiseach
I think—– | 450 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Did they bring you on planes? | 451 |
The Taoiseach
I always had my own car. I never had a plane and I never will have one. | 452 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
So is the answer “No” or “Yes”? I mean, it’s a simple question, Chairman? | 453 |
Chairman
The witness … you’re entitled to ask a question and—– | 454 |
The Taoiseach
You must have a basis for your question. | 455 |
Chairman
—–the witness is entitled to answer it. | 456 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
The Taoiseach
Well, can I ask you what you … define what developer—– | 458 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
No, I’m asking the questions, Taoiseach. | 459 |
Chairman
Senator Marc MacSharry
The Taoiseach
Senator Marc MacSharry
Chairman? | 463 |
The Taoiseach
—–tell me directly. | 464 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Chairman? | 465 |
The Taoiseach
Because I mean, I … you know I—– | 466 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
I mean, the question is ridiculous? | 467 |
Chairman
Well, the—– | 468 |
The Taoiseach
I’ve travelled on thousands of occasions—– | 469 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Surely, I can have the protection of the Chair and of the legal advisers to the committee? | 470 |
Chairman
I’ve given my legal advice on this. The question has been made. The witness can respond to it and—– | 471 |
The Taoiseach
I’ll—– | 472 |
Chairman
—–unless we can move into a specific on this, I don’t know. I think we will just be in a circular place on it, okay? | 473 |
The Taoiseach
Chairman, I would assume that the Senator, in asking his question – perfectly entitled to ask the question – that—– | 474 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Thank you. | 475 |
The Taoiseach
Chairman
Senator MacSharry? | 477 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
The Taoiseach
No. | 479 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Okay. Final question. Why did you change the configuration of the original committee when the Government did not secure a majority? | 480 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Marc MacSharry
Did you contact the leader of the Senate from the United States, where you were on a trip at the time, and say to him, “Take MacSharry out”? | 482 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Marc MacSharry
Yes, and just very finally, can I ask, that in that context, did people in Fine Gael and Government parties, other than Senators, prescribe what was to happen in that process—– | 484 |
The Taoiseach
No—– | 485 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
—–such as yourself, for example? | 486 |
The Taoiseach
No, I … we had set out numbers to attend on the committee of inquiry into—– | 487 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Nine, and then you made it 11, yes. Why was that? | 488 |
Chairman
Allow him to answer now, please, Senator. | 489 |
The Taoiseach
Because a decision was taken, I think, in the Senate—– | 490 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
All right. | 491 |
The Taoiseach
—–that changed that intended structure. So I wanted to regularise the position and that was the reason why. | 492 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
To secure a Government majority—– | 493 |
The Taoiseach
But you’ve acted—– | 494 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
—–or not? | 495 |
The Taoiseach
As God is my judge—– | 496 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
I mean, tell me now. If that’s not the reason, it’s not the reason but—– | 497 |
The Taoiseach
As God is my—– | 498 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
—–I’m asking you: was it the reason? | 499 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Marc MacSharry
Now that there’s a majority for the Government, of course. | 501 |
Chairman
Well, there is a majority—– | 502 |
The Taoiseach
But you’re not operating on that basis. I assume—– | 503 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Oh no. | 504 |
The Taoiseach
—–you do your business your own way. | 505 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Everyone leaves their jerseys at the door, Taoiseach. | 506 |
The Taoiseach
Senator Marc MacSharry
Thank you, Chairman. Thank you, Taoiseach. | 508 |
Chairman
Deputy Richard Bruton
Chairman
Deputy Richard Bruton
Chairman
Deputy Richard Bruton
Chairman
But I—– | 515 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
—–addressing our competitiveness”, and that was the focus of our approach. | 516 |
Chairman
Deputy Richard Bruton
Yes, but that would be around, like, finance Bills—– | 518 |
Chairman
Of course, yes. | 519 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
—–you know, individual measures, not around—– | 520 |
Chairman
Okay. | 521 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
—–you know, global economic, sort of, forecasting. | 522 |
Chairman
Deputy Richard Bruton
Chairman
I just … I appreciate all that—– | 525 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
—–delivering—– | 526 |
Chairman
Deputy Richard Bruton
Chairman
Okay. | 529 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
Chairman
Okay. | 531 |
Deputy Richard Bruton
So, you know, I don’t think such … you know, such briefings weren’t being made available. Effectively, counter briefings to what Government was saying was its view of the world wasn’t available. | 532 |
Chairman
All right, I’m going to move to wrap up. Deputy Pearse Doherty. Deputy, you’ve three minutes. | 533 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
The figures speak for themselves but the—– | 537 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay. | 538 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
No, I don’t accept that because we had a very different financial model here. | 541 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay, I’m not talking about the financial model, I’m talking about the numbers. | 542 |
The Taoiseach
But the figures that we set out there—– | 543 |
Chairman
We’ll bring it back in, Deputy. | 544 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
I’ve said that the programme for the manifesto speaks for itself. But I’ve already said to you that Fine—– | 547 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Is that a “Yes” or a “No”, just? | 548 |
Chairman
Give a bit of time, Deputy, to respond. | 549 |
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
The Taoiseach
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Taoiseach, there’s been a lot of—– | 553 |
The Taoiseach
So you have your—– | 554 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Chairman
You’re drifting out of … I’m ready to make an intervention, I don’t want to do that so can I get you to ask your question. | 556 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Yes, I’ll ask the question if you can get the Taoiseach to answer it. | 557 |
Chairman
Fair enough, now one second. I’ll assist both you and the witness. | 558 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Chairman
Okay. Thank you. | 560 |
The Taoiseach
Well, that is not right—– | 561 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Taoiseach. | 562 |
The Taoiseach
Chairman
Okay, thank you. Deputy O’Donnell to wrap up, please. | 564 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
The Taoiseach
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Deputy Richard Bruton
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
And finally, Taoiseach—– | 569 |
Chairman
Quickly now. | 570 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 12.25 p.m. and resumed at 1.12 p.m.