Carrie Twomey ✍ For some reason, perhaps a combination of reasons including the malign influence of the Trumpian "hard man" era, Sinn Fein decided a few years ago that to demonstrate they were serious players, being angry and shouty was the way to go.

This decision happened around the time of Mary Lou McDonald's first serious electoral kick-in-the-teeth and was devised as a response to criticisms that their form of opposition was not perceived as strong enough and that was why they lost. So it was decided to turn the volume up and their front bench has followed the leader in shouting at the government ever since, at every turn.

It's been a few years and a few elections since this strategy was deployed. Now it has become their brand and is openly observed in the media. Feedback from voters criticising the approach is consistent - being angry and shouty has worn thin.

First of all, being in opposition does not mean one should always be angry, disappointed, or shouty. Secondly, being on the left also does not mean being the loudest or most aggressive is how to express your views. For some reason, perhaps because of the "hard man" tradition Sinn Fein comes from, it was decided both those things were true - despite the reason for party leader Mary Lou McDonald's previous popularity was her being seen as a nice, relatable middle class mother who bought her prawns at Supervalu. Following the loud and angry opposition model has had her increasingly play against type to the point her softer nature is no longer visible.

Pearse Doherty fares no better. He is like the coach you never know when you're going to get a clattering from, only that you're always going to get one from him.


The awfulness of this strategy, that opposition equates anger, and shouting is how to show you are serious, is evident in Sinn Féin's inability to garner enough votes to enter government. Other aspects of that failure, the disingenuous nature of their politics, the being-all-things-to-all dubiousness of their shifting positions, have been covered elsewhere.

The main reason that this strategy fails is that it is abuse.

The first few times someone yells at the government, it feels good. It feels like, "Yeah, finally! Finally someone is telling it like it is!" and all sorts of guff about speaking truth to power gets trotted out. But when every time the government does anything, the millionth time it is "shameful" and all the other negative shouty words deployed, it crosses the line from standing up against a true injustice into abuse for the sake of abuse. It becomes narcissistic, performative, and more about how the shouter is perceived than the issue at hand: "Look at me being tough on the government".

The problem is, in a democracy, which Ireland still very much is, the 'government' is made up of your neighbours and community. The government represents the country, all of its people, and must act in the best interests of the nation, no matter which political parties are at its helm.

Even a stopped clock is right twice a day, and even Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael can get some things right once in a while, because even they are made up of people who want to make their country function better, just like the people who make up Sinn Fein and all the other parties.

Pantomime politics may play to the galley, but the real work of democracy is in negotiations and working together. Which all parties do, behind the scenes, every day.

In choosing to highlight only the pantomime, democracy gets undermined. The pantomime is the gateway for the far right, who have no nuance whatsoever.

Worse, what is happening is that this shouty type of politics is felt as an abuse of the nation. It is instinctual in a nation that has suffered collectively from decades of historical abuse that are still within living memory. Being yelled at is not new. Never doing anything right, always being a failure, always being shamed - this is a refrain too many Irish people know far too well.

A true oppositional party who cares about the nation would tend to it like a loved child. Praising it when it did good, supporting its best efforts, directing and guiding it into better choices, and deploying anger rarely, only when necessary. Aggression and bullying would not be tactics it deployed.

Aggression, bullying, and abuse are tactics that create damage, and do not shape a healthy nation. It creates a mean nation, a fearful nation, ungenerous to self or others. A nation that does not believe in itself because it has always been shamed, criticised, and repeatedly told it can never do anything right.

Voters hear this abuse, too, and internalise it. It colours not just how they see "the government" but also themselves. Because, after all, the government ultimately represents them.

This is not an argument against criticising government policy, or in defence of Fine Gael or Fianna Fáil. Sinn Fein would be as abusive if the government were headed by Labour and the Social Democrats. Mary Lou and Pearse would bully and hector Ivana and Holly just as they have always done all other Taoiseachs and Tanaistes. It is now their nature and culture.

Being angry, critical, and shouty doesn't translates to votes, however, despite how popular it appears in polls. People like to be able to shout at politicians inbetween elections, to keep the government of the day on its toes. But they vote for those who will take care of the nation, not abuse it. Sinn Féin's approach has no generosity or sense of care, only anger and leaders who can never be pleased.

Carrie Twomey hates Illinois Nazis (just like the Blues Brothers)

The Shouty Politics Of Sinn Fein

Labour Heartlands ☭ Written by Paul Knaggs.

EHRC Code: Why the Toilet Debate Is a Distraction: The campaign to reduce the Supreme Court ruling and the EHRC Code to a debate about lavatories is not confusion. It is strategy. Behind the toilet door lies the systematic dismantling of women’s rights, funded, organised and prosecuted against women who should have been defended years ago.

A conjuring trick requires misdirection. The audience must watch one hand while the other does the work. Keep that principle in mind as you scroll through the endless, repetitive, deliberately narrowed argument about public lavatories, and the entire campaign snaps suddenly into focus.

The toilet is not the argument. The toilet is the frame

It has been chosen with great care, because it achieves three things at once. It makes women’s objections appear mean, petty, almost obsessive. It reduces a broad legal settlement about women’s fundamental rights to a single, intimate, emotionally charged doorway. And it places women permanently on the defensive, forever justifying the existence of the boundary rather than those demanding its removal. The question is always “why are you so obsessed with where people go to the toilet?”, never “why is your campaign not about building new facilities for transgender use, but specifically about access to women’s existing ones?”

That last question answers itself.

Trans Rights 🪶The Conjuring Trick At The Toilet Door

Ukraine Solidarity Group ✊ A Digest of News from Ukrainian Sources ⚔ 22-June-2026.

In this week’s bulletin

⬤ Open Letter to anti-war conference.
⬤ Russian torture.
⬤Ukrainian athletes in captivity.
⬤ Organized crime in occupied Crimea.
⬤ Under Occupation report.
⬤ Russia air defences struggling.

News from the territories occupied by Russia

Oleksandr Sizikov, visually impaired prisoner, moved to hospital (Crimea Human Rights Group, 21 June)

Pensioners and mothers targeted for Russia’s ‘treason trial’ terror in occupied Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, June 19th)

Russia digs up the graves of its victims in Luhansk oblast to claim ‘evidence of Ukrainian aggression’ (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, June 19th)

Tofik Abdulgaziev Reaches His 45th Birthday Behind Bars (Crimea Platform, June 19th)

During the OSCE Security Committee meeting, Ukraine drew attention to a model of organized crime that Russia has developed and tested in occupied Crimea (Crimea Platform, June 18th)

The Mission hosted an event dedicated to civilian women in Russian captivity on the occupied territories of Ukraine (Crimea Platform, June 18th)

Melitopol mother of two sentenced to 14 years for donations to help Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, June 18th)

Weekly update on the situation in occupied Crimea (Crimea Platform, June 17th)

Russia extracts surreal ‘confession’ a year after abducting 59-year-old Maryna Kovalenko (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, June 17th)

“Freedom Has Always Been With Me”: Yevhen Zhukov, a Political Prisoner from Crimea, Has Served His Sentence and Been Released (Crimea Platform, June 17th)

Crimean sentenced to 5.5 years for social media comments in support of Ukraine’s Armed Forces (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, June 15th)

Abducted Melitopol journalist Anastasia Hlukhovska went on hunger strike in notorious Russian prison (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, June 12th)

Being present: a discussion on How Not to Lose People under Occupation (Zmina, June 9th)

Life Under Occupation (Alter Pravo, May 2026)

News from the front

Fraudsters got rich persuading Brazilians to fight for Russia (The Insider, 17 June)

Robots in arms: Ukraine becomes test range for ground drones (The Insider, 15 June)

News from Ukraine

ZMINA held a roundtable discussion on prisoners’ access to justice in Ukraine (Zmina, June 12th)

Statement on threats to freedom of speech in the draft new Civil Code of Ukraine (Zmina, June 8th)

War-related news from Russia

“Loaded them up like convicts”: Russia press-gang in Penza (Mediazona, 19 June)

Why are Moscow’s air defences struggling? And Russia’s oil refineries? (Meduza, 19 June)

FSB detains Putin acquaintance Ilya Traber, St Petersburg criminal mastermind (iStories, 17 June)

Fraudsters got rich persuading Brazilians to fight for Russia (The Insider, 17 June)

Russian military court upholds torture and calls defence of Ukraine ‘terrorism’ (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, June 15th)

Analysis and comment

I can't recall anything like this happening in the last four years (Facebook, June 21st)

We’re back from a humanitarian mission to Kharkiv (Solidarity Collectives, 21 June)

“The voices of those resisting imperialism are absent”: Open Letter to the international anti-war conference in London (Social Movement, 19 June)

The Russian-speaking left in German politics (Posle.Media, 17 June)

Sasha Razor: Who Burns the Lavra? (Russian Reader, June 16th)

The Podcast (Russian Reader, June 9th)

Disinformation front: how the Kremlin targets the Baltics (Eastern Frontier Initiative, 19 May)

Research of human rights abuses

At Least 32 Ukrainian Athletes are Held in Russian Captivity or Missing. Global Awareness Needed (Centre for Civil Liberties, June 19th)

ZMINA, together with a coalition of NGOs coordinated by the Agency for Legislative Initiatives, presented an interim Shadow Report to the European Commission (Zmina, June 5th)

A new web resource

The European Network for Solidarity With Ukraine has launched its new web site, with a bundle of useful links.

Upcoming events

The Green Party And Nato, Tuesday 23 June, 7.0pm – Green Left Open Meeting (Online), with Paul Ingram, Research Affiliate at the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk, University of Cambridge; Gilbert Achcar, Emeritus Professor, SOAS, University of London; Simon Pirani, Honorary Professor, University of Durham; Linda Walker, Green Party of England & Wales.

Ukrainian prisoners of war in Russia: on line event, Wednesday 24 June, 6.0-7.30pm, with Vladyslav Zhuravlev and Artem Tidva. Register here.
  
🔴This bulletin is put together by labour movement activists in solidarity with Ukrainian resistance. More information at Ukraine Information Group.

We are also on twitter. Our aim is to circulate information in English that to the best of our knowledge is reliable. If you have something you think we should include, please send it to 2U022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com.


We are now on Facebook and Substack! Please subscribe and tell friends. Better still, people can email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com, and we’ll send them the bulletin direct every Monday. The full-scale Russian assault on Ukraine is going into its third year: we’ll keep information and analysis coming, for as long as it takes.

The bulletin is also stored on line here.

To receive the bulletin regularly, send your email to:
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To stop it, please reply with the word “STOP” in the subject field.

News From Ukraine 💣 Bulletin 201

Friendly Atheist ★ Tim Barton attributed famous Declaration language to a colonial sermon. There's just one problem: It's nowhere in the text.

The latest lie coming from Christian pseudo-historian David Barton and his equally ignorant son Tim Barton is one that’s easy to fact-check, yet a very gullible religious audience ate it up without question.

A quick refresher: Barton has made a career out of twisting and distorting the words of the Founding Fathers and the Bible in defense of Christian Nationalism, homophobia, and bigotry. He’s such an egregious Christian liar that he claimed to have an earned Ph.D. that was later revealed to be a hoax. And he once wrote a book about Thomas Jefferson that was so full of misinformation that his Christian publishers pulled the book from the shelves, saying, “There were historical details—matters of fact, not matters of opinion, that were not supported at all.” (The book was ironically titled The Jefferson Lies.)

And yet conservative Christians and Republican politicians still cite him as an authoritative source of information to the point that Barton is literally a consultant for the Texas Board of Education. Conservatives all know the sort of people who take them seriously aren’t really interested in honesty.

Continue @ Friendly Atheist

Christian Nationalist "Historian" Caught Citing A Quotation That Doesn't Exist

Right Wing Watch 👀 Written by Kyle Mantyla.

Joel Webbon Tell Christian Nationalist Candidates To Conceal Their True Agenda


Last year, racist antisemitic fascist Christian nationalist theocrats Joel Webbon and Wesley Todd called for the government to literally seize the assets of "wicked" churches who do not share their radical views and redistribute their holdings to "faithful churches" that do.

On the most recent episode of their Right Response Ministries podcast, Webbon and Todd doubled down on this position while urging Christian nationalist political candidates to "hide your power" by never openly advocating for such a position.

I absolutely think that the Texas Department of Public Safety, the Texas National Guard, should go through downtown Austin, find churches flying Pride flags, depose their ministers—that is, defrock them, remove them from the pulpit—take the property, and auction it off to faithful churches - said Todd

"That is what I believe should happen," he continued.

That will not happen in Texas, at least in the next 10 years. Who knows what the Lord does? Practically speaking, though, we're very far away from that. You, if you are a politician running for office, don't say that. We have to live in the real world.

Continue @ RWW.

"Let me pause for a second and make sure that's abundantly clear," Webbon chimed in. "If you are a Texas politician or aspiring, you're campaigning or want to be, don't say that."

"On this particular topic, you've got to hide your power levels," Webbon added. "The people aren't ready for it."

"In principle, that is perfectly permissible," Webbon continued. "Not only was that permissible, it was righteous in the sight of God. So in principle, in theory, the state going into the city of Austin and deposing, seizing the church buildings, property of every Pride flag-flying church and saying, 'I'm sorry, you're losing your property [and] you're going to prison.' 'For what?' 'For peddling blasphemies against the Lord Jesus Christ publicly.' 'So you're going to prison or you're paying some crazy fine that effectively renders you impotent in your role as a minister because you're not a minister, you're a wolf and we're deposing your property and we're going to auction it off to faithful churches.'"

'Hide Your Power'

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of Two Thousand And Sixteen

 

Pastords @ 50

 

A Morning Thought @ 3189

Anthony McIntyre  Soccer has long been described as the beautiful game. 

I love it. I have watched it all my life and played it into my 30s. A season ticket holder with Drogheda United, a member of Drogheda Liverpool Supporters Club, the game courses through my ageing veins. Having experienced the titillation of a Dembele hattrick for the French national team inside thirty minutes in last night's World Cup clash with Norway, the beauty of the sport is as intense as ever, hitting the sweet spot every time. Even now, I am considering finding a walking football club to join where people at my age, 69 today, can put their feet to silky use. Hopefully, an old dog for the hard road, there is life in me yet and hunger for the beauty served up by soccer.

But the beautiful game fails to retain its beauty if it is associated with something so ugly as genocide. The flourishing creativity of soccer and the nihilistic destructiveness of genocide are light years apart, and we who love the sport feel compelled to ensure they remain apart. There is simply no room, no rhyme, no reason for soccer aficionados to allow the genocidal state of Israel to sports wash itself and use the Irish national soccer team as a soapy flannel to wash away its crimes. Ireland should never be a lightening conductor that absorbs and neutralises the shock directed Israel's way. 

Mark O'Farrell in a Facebook post nailed it concisely:

It is unthinkable for Ireland to play Israel at home or away while Israel is engaging in genocide, occupation and apartheid against the Palestinian people. Israel cannot continue to act with impunity. Israel must be sanctioned.


It really is that simple. There should be no shield for Israel to play behind, no justification for them playing and, perhaps of greater longevity, no forgiveness for those who facilitate them. What do six measly points amount to when set alongside sixty thousand and upwards butchered by Israeli savagery?

Only this week we learn of a UN Independent International Commission report stating:

The evidence shows that Palestinian children have been deliberately targeted and killed by the Israeli security forces . . . Even after the October 2025 ceasefire, children continue to be killed and seriously injured, with continued disregard by Israel for the ceasefire and for the protection owed to Palestinian children under international law.

The report itemised some of its more egregious findings:

  • Israel has killed 20,000 children and injured 44,000 more since 7 October 2023
  • Severe physical and mental injuries, mass trauma, orphanhood, separation, disability, repeated displacements, starvation and the collapse of education and healthcare have erased childhood and will continue to affect children in Gaza throughout their lives
  • Palestinian children have been arrested and subjected to torture and other severe forms of mistreatment in Israeli prisons and detention facilities, with no information on their whereabouts
  • Israeli security forces have used sexual violence against children as part of the collective shaming and oppression, entrenched within a prolonged, ethnic, gendered and intergenerational pattern of occupation and hostilities

And yet there are some who want to entertain these beasts on a soccer pitch, at times whining and wheedling that sports should be free from politics.

The same type of argument has been wheeled out by the Irish Writers Union which in the spirit of double standards, found its voice to wax critical of Russian invasion of Ukraine but managed to lose it when Israel commits far worse atrocities in Gaza. Kevin Doyle tore the union apart in a recent article in which he quoted William Wall who had at the recent AGM of the Writers Union seconded the motion for a cultural boycott of Israel.

Wall identified the material self interest that drives such ethics averse logic:

thinking of their sales in America, or a possible contract in America, or a possible book tour in America. Or what will the Indo think of them? Or, God help us, Alan Shatter.

This is a time for leadership that is not driven by such material self-interest. We have it here in Drogheda where our very own TD Joanne Byrne stepped up to the plate when that leadership was called for. She demanded the game be stopped. She is scheduled to be here today to reiterate her demand for the game to be stopped. As a consequence of her principled stand, she was forced out of her position as Chair of Drogheda United Football Club. Yet, no weasel words from her about sport and politics not mixing

For those of us familiar with the anti-fascist phrase from the Spanish civil war, No Pasaran, we have heard it from the lips of Joanna Byrne. Israel shall not pass the ball or the blame. We must stop the game. 

Follow on Bluesky.

No Pasaran

Europe Solidaire Sans Frontières ★ Written by Oleksandr Kyselov and Olena Kalich.

Ukrainian socialists Olena Tkalich and Oleksandr Kyselov confront a Western anticapitalist left whose anti-imperialism has, in their view, become a politics of abandonment. 

Opposition to the West cannot substitute for emancipatory politics. 

European rearmament poses a genuine dilemma the left cannot resolve through reflex opposition alone. Opposing weapons supplies to Ukraine, whatever the justification, functions in practice as pressure on Kyiv to capitulate Class solidarity with Ukrainian workers is both materially possible and politically necessary. In a multipolar world where weakness invites coercion, they argue, the left must learn to build power rather than simply denounce it in others. [AN]

We are not writing to convey the ultimate truth. We are full of doubts ourselves. Our only goal is to share our thoughts and to point to the gaps in the thinking we ourselves once followed. Olena still feels ashamed when she recalls how, a few days before the outbreak of war, left-wing European journalists came to Kyiv and asked her about a possible Russian attack. She confidently dismissed this as a completely unrealistic scenario and suggested talking instead about how poor Ukraine’s social security system is. 

Continue @ ESSF.

No Mercy In A Multipolar World 🪶A Plea for Solidarity-Based Anti-Imperialism

Kevin Doyle ✏ Writing on Substack

Photo of a wall poster hanging in Amsterdam, the home of writer and genocide victim, Anne Frank. [Taken Dec 2025 Kevin Doyle]

The Irish Writers Union (IWU) was founded in the mid-eighties and has campaigned on many issues since: against censorship, for better library loan rates (PLR) for writers, against copyright violations and in recent times for protection for writers from AI theft of their work. In broad terms its role is to “further the professional interests and needs of writers in various media in Ireland”. Affiliated to the trade union SIPTU, the IWU retains full autonomy in running its own affairs. Internationally, it is a member of the European Writers’ Council (EWC), which itself is the largest federation worldwide that solely represents writers. The IWU is also the only nominating body in Ireland for the Nobel Prize for Literature as well the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award. Today it has over four hundred members and undoubtedly constitutes the main representative organisation of Irish writers.

At the union’s AGM this year, a motion[1] was put forward proposing that the IWU join the cultural boycott of Israel. Specifically, the motion asked IWU members to approve joining the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI).[2] PACBI is the cultural and academic arm of the anti-apartheid boycott movement Boycott, Divest, Sanction (BDS) set up to pressurise Israel to meet its obligations under international law regarding the rights of the Palestinian people.[3] A number of Irish trade unions are signatories to BDS and only last year Trinity College, Dublin agreed to abide by the principles of PACBI and join the academic boycott of Israel.

As it turned out, on the day of the AGM, in somewhat chaotic circumstances[4] the motion was narrowly defeated.[5] A number of the union’s Executive and some members opposed the motion, while another cohort, although supportive, felt they couldn’t vote for the proposal at this stage due to concerns about the impact of a boycott on individual Israeli writers. In the end just one vote divided the sides and the motion fell.[6] Later in a letter to the membership the union’s Chairperson conceded that the outcome was not in keeping with the mood of the AGM. He wrote:

It was clear in the discussion of the pros and cons that the majority of those present, in person and online, are very distressed about the situation in Gaza.

Many Irish writers have since expressed surprise and dismay at the outcome of the IWU vote. It is possible that some members who didn’t attend viewed the result as a foregone conclusion considering what has happened in Gaza and indeed in the West Bank in recent times. Currently Israel stands accused of genocide and ethnic cleansing.[7] A week before the IWU vote, Israel enacted a new law – the Death Penalty for Terrorists Law – which has drawn widespread international condemnation for its fundamentally racist basis.[8]

The IWU vote was close, and there are indeed grounds for disputing the veracity of the outcome.[9] However to engage in bickering over how the AGM was conducted only serves to distract from the more serious issues that arose in the course of the debate about the motion. For example, a number of the union’s Executive refused to support the boycott motion and hid behind the frankly surprising view that the IWU is a ‘non-political’ organisation. But this is not how the Executive saw itself a number of years ago when it quickly issued a statement condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Clearly the IWU union was ‘political’ a few years ago but suddenly isn’t now? So what’s going on?

What does ‘non-political’ mean?

Anyone I’ve asked about the concept that a union could be ‘non-political’ has frankly looked at me like I had three heads. How can a union be ‘non-political’? For example, take some of the campaigns the IWU has been involved in. Isn’t tackling the AI industry’s theft of writers’ work political? What about opposing the Far Right’s physical attacks on Irish libraries for stocking LGBTQ+ books? Surely that’s political as well? Yet, at this AGM, the current Chair, Conor McAnally, stated that the IWU is actually ‘non-political’ and this was why it couldn’t sign up to a boycott of Israel. This point tallies with correspondence I had with the former vice-Chair who told me in the lead up to the AGM that:

the (Executive) committee did decide that the IWU is not a political organisation and that this is [to be] used as a compass to advise us regarding campaigns etc.

As a former Chair of the IWU, I have looked everywhere for some record of when this decision was taken – indeed if it ever was. There is no official record anywhere. Nor is there evidence of a motion being proposed and seconded; a record of any vote being taken; or indeed any correspondence between whoever took this decision – the Executive? – to the membership informing the membership that a significant redefinition of the union’s status had occurred. So, while the current Chair and some Executive members may believe that the IWU is ‘non-political’ it is highly doubtful if this belief exists anywhere outside of their own heads.

Leaving aside the issue of democracy for a moment does it even make sense? Here the matter becomes more interesting. What does ‘non-political’ amount to? None other than George Orwell has written about this.[10] Orwell confronted the issue of art and politics many times. He pointed out that the opinion that art should have nothing to do with politics is itself a political attitude. So, while the Chair and some of the Executive claim their motive is to keep politics out of the union, they are in fact conducting a political manoeuvre of their own.

The next and obvious question is, towards what end? Here Orwell offers us further insight. He argues that those who subscribe to being ‘non-political’ are essentially those who benefit from the status quo. He added that most people cannot in fact afford the luxury of being ‘non-political’ at all. Day to day living dictates that. And I guess we could evidence here the desperate situation of those living in Gaza.

To further my understanding of what is going on I decided to ask some veterans of the trade union movement for their views. Gregor Kerr, a longstanding member of the Irish National Teachers’ Organisation has been active inside and outside that organisation for many years. He made this point:


… people who think we shouldn’t be ‘political’ should ask themselves: If I was living in a totalitarian regime, if genocide was being committed against my people, if writers in my country were being imprisoned for what they wrote, if trade unionists in my country were being imprisoned for organising…. where could I turn for help? And if I saw people living in a relatively free and comfortable political environment saying ‘that’s too political for me to say anything about’, how would I feel?


He added:

Everything is political … [People] may try to claim it’s ‘not political’, but by choosing to look away they are in effect choosing a side. Desmond Tutu put it well back in 1984 when he said “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor…

Another activist I asked is Dr Mary Favier. A founder member of Doctors for Choice, she was involved in bringing motions to the Irish Medical Organisation on abortion rights during the difficult years following Savita Halappanavar’s tragic death. She said:

I’ve come across this argument, yes. We brought many motions to our union, the Irish Medical Organisation, asking it to commit to helping with changing the draconian abortion laws that were in Ireland then. We faced a lot of sharp opposition. They often tried to prevent our motions from even being admitted onto the agenda. The argument used was that we were bringing ‘politics’ into the organisation. But how wasn’t reproductive healthcare justice not an issue for the IMO, an organisation of doctors? It clearly was.

She added,

We faced a lot of opposition, but we unpicked their arguments one by one. The claim that a union is ‘non-political’ doesn’t hold up in the end and what we found is that union members accept this when they hear the arguments. Everything a union does is political, and people realised that when they think about it.

Dr Favier also echoed the view that the ‘non-political’ argument is often advocated by people in positions of privilege and who favour the status quo:

[Supporters of this view] are happy with how things are basically. In the IMO in the past there were a lot of doctors who were happy for women to go over to England, unseen and unheard. That was the end of the matter. For them it was like why change anything? If that’s not privilege talking, then what is?

So, to conclude on this point, advocating for the IWU to be ‘non-political’ is really a cloak for supporting the status quo, for advocating for inaction. Which is a shameful position to hold – no? – given that Israel is conducting genocide against the Palestinian people.

What about Ukraine?

I was Chairperson of the IWU from 2021 to 2023 and remained on the union’s executive for a further year after my term. During this time I was never made aware of there being any policy in the organisation to the effect that the union was or should be ‘non-political’. In fact, the opposite seemed to be the case. In 2022, the Irish Writers Union was forthright in publishing its condemnation of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. At the time I helped draft the statement that was issued. My memory is that no one raised any objections to the issuing of the statement. Nor did anyone suggest that a statement on the matter was beyond the remit of organisation or that we were bound by policy to be ‘non-political’.

The statement by the IWU at the time was well received. It is available here. Interestingly, the European Writers Council also issued a statement about the Russian invasion and it is on the record that the Irish Writers Union was one of early signatories to this statement titled “Ukraine: European and International Writers and Translators against War and Violence”. This statement and a list of its signatories can be viewed here. Was anything similar issued by the IWU or indeed the EWC about Gaza and Israel’s brutal attack on its population? Sadly, the answer is no in both cases.[11]

Gaza, Palestine and Israel first came to the attention of the IWU’s Executive in late 2023. A member of the union, Kate Thompson[12] emailed the Executive asking it to consider adding the IWU’s name to a letter urging the Irish government to join in South Africa’s action against Israel at the International Court of Justice. Recall that South African was the first nation to accuse Israel of war crimes and genocide. Kate Thompson’s letter was discussed by email among the Executive and was met with immediate opposition. The letter petitioning the Irish government to add its name to the ICJ case “seems too political”, one Executive committee member said. Another wrote “[we] agreed that we keep a focus on issues relating to Irish writers (and writers in general). Otherwise, we have the potential to get dragged this way and that by the latest global atrocity and/or the political agendas of others”. Other similar comments abounded. At the time a number of committee members including Glenda Cimino and I dissented.

It was clear by late 2023 and early 2024 that Israel was using excessive force in Gaza. Of course, much worse was to come. We are now in the third year of Israel’s war and blockade of Gaza. The intervening period has been a bloodbath. Tens of thousands of Palestinians have been murdered. Gaza lies in ruins. Israel’s war against the Palestinian people has also gathered pace on the West Bank. As I write, Amnesty International has issued a new report documenting Israeli state involvement in ethnic cleansing there.

In hindsight Kate Thompson’s letter was a small ask, a simple request to add the IWU’s name to a letter of petition to the Irish government. And indeed, irony of ironies, the Irish government did later join South Africa’s legal action – as did a host of other countries including Belgium, Turkey, Brazil, Spain and Columbia. Perhaps aware of its double standards around Ukraine and Palestine, the IWU later issued a statement highlighting the plight of writers and journalists in Gaza, many of whom had been murdered by Israeli troops; the statement called for ceasefire. That is the extent of our union’s commentary.

It is clear from the above that this claim about the IWU being ‘non-political’ is a fig leaf to hide behind. Those who articulate this viewpoint are in fact advocating silence in the face of war crimes, genocide and ethnic cleansing. Orwell arrived at his considered evaluation from his experience as a writer and humanitarian. He saw the rise of totalitarianism and recognised that inaction in the face of wrong doing is a form of action.

Elephants in the room

Is this about racism then? In reality it is difficult to know but clearly Gaza and Palestine have not received equal treatment to Ukraine’s. And considering the gravity of the situation in Gaza and the West Bank, and indeed the existential threat to the Palestinian people as a whole, we are well within our rights to ask for an explanation.

There is of course something else. At the recent AGM, one IWU member, Sally Rooney, addressed this when she spoke in favour of the motion to boycott Israel. She outlined what happened when she first made a public stand around the boycott of Israel – back in 2021. Declining to have her third novel Beautiful World, Where Are You? translated into Hebrew, she identified publicly with the BDS movement. PACBI later issued a statement warmly welcoming her stand.

Sally Rooney told the AGM that she was warned many times by people in the book business that she was doing irrevocable damage to her career and her book sales by taking the stand she was taking – supporting the cultural boycott of Israel. However, she refused to be silenced and went ahead. She has of course taken further action since. Sally Rooney informed the AGM that her book sales have not been affected by her action. On the contrary it seems. So, Israel’s reach doesn’t go quite as far as some fear.

Sally Rooney has made this point also and it is worth noting its wisdom. She said:

I would like to ask my fellow writers and artists, if I may, not to dwell too exclusively on what we stand to lose. There is another more important side to the story. To join in something greater than ourselves, to participate in some small way in a struggle for human liberation. To stand for what we know in our hearts is right and try not to be complicit in what we know is wrong.

Her words had impact on the day of the AGM, but it is clear that some, for whatever reason, have chosen, if not, to cosy up to Israel, then certainly not to speak ill of that country — even though it is conducting an ongoing genocide.

It is not edifying to admit to being a coward, far better to stand on some grand principal such as the union is ‘non-political’. Anthony McIntyre in his post about the AGM documented how the Chair of the union introduced the rantings of a known Zionist – not even a member of the union – as a warning to those at the AGM what might happen to the union if it dared to join a boycott of Israel. It was one of a number of ploys used on the day in an attempt to intimidate people about the impact of voting in favour of the boycott. William Wall, who seconded the AGM motion, said about those involved in scaremongering that they may well be:

thinking of their sales in America, or a possible contract in America, or a possible book tour in America. Or what will the Indo think of them? Or, God help us, Alan Shatter.

He may well be correct there.

The Irish Writers Union has a proud history. It was founded to fight for writers’ interests and to protect our freedom of expression. In terms of who it represents and what it stands for, we must defend its reputation. We certainly cannot let it be said that when we were asked what do we understand by ‘Never Again’ that we replied with silence or worse still we looked the other way.

References

[1] The motion was proposed by Kevin Doyle and seconded by William Wall.

[2] PACBI is part of the BDS movement. A full history of PACBI and its role in the BDS movement can be found at this link.

[3] Israel’s obligations under international law include a full withdrawal from the occupied territories, removal of the separation barrier in the West Bank, full equality for Arab Palestinian citizens of Israel, and promotion of “the rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties”.

[4] Attendance at the AGM was in-person or by Zoom link. The online attendance was larger than in-person but the only interface between both groups of attendees was a single laptop. The sound was poor and it was difficult to hear many of the contributions made by online members. This arrangement proved to be less than adequate during the terse debate on the motion.

[5] The vote was initially tied.

[6] PACBI is specifically not a boycott directed at individual artists and writers in Israel. It targets organisations only and in particular organisation complicit in Israel’s effort to sanitise its image abroad. Although this important aspect of PACBI’s work was explained a number of times during the debate on the motion, concerns remained.

[7] In proposing the motion to the AGM I outlined in detail the evidence that now exists that upholds the view that Israel is engaged in genocide in Gaza. See here.

[8] See UN view on this law here.

[9] When the vote was called, it wasn’t clear how many were in attendance and who was voting. A clear number of persons attending didn’t register any response – either a yes, a no or an abstention.

[10] Why I Write, George Orwell, 1946.

[11] It is notable that the EWC has been vociferous about Ukraine and has consistently supported its fight for freedom but has been completely silent about the genocide in Gaza.

[12] Further information about Kate Thompson here. Aside from fiction, Kate Thompson has written the popular Palestine A-Z, a highly readable outline of different aspects of Palestinian history and where we are now.

Kevin Doyle is a political writer and activist.

To Be Brave Or Afraid 🪶 The Irish Writers Union And The Cultural Boycott Of Israel

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of Two Thousand And Fifteen