Host Hugh Linehan is joined by Jack Horgan-Jones and Cormac McQuinn to look back on the week in politics:
· With a general election now likely a matter of weeks away, it is the main opposition party, and not government parties, who continue to dominate the headlines. And they are unwanted headlines relating to former TD Brian Stanley, former senator Niall Ó Donnghaile and former press officer Michael McMonagle.
· And with all those controversies piling up for Sinn Féin, are the Government in danger of overreach should they seek to force a vote on Brian Stanley’s replacement as PAC chair?
· And could former Fine Gael TDs Alan Shatter and Kate O’Connell’s decision to run as independents give their old party cause for concern in Dublin-Rathdown and Dublin Bay South respectively come election time?
Michael Harding: I went to the cinema to see Small Things Like These. By the time I emerged I had concluded the film was crap
‘I’m in my early 30s and recently married - but I cannot imagine spending the rest of my life with her’
Karlin Lillington: Big Tech may not get everything it wants from Trump
Your top stories on Thursday
Plus, the panellists pick their favourite IT reads of the week:
· Newton Emerson on Britain’s anti-obesity jab plan.
· Kathy Sheridan urges us not to write off celebrity candidates.
· Keith Duggan writes about why a small Democratic stronghold in Detroit is deserting Kamala Harris for Donald Trump.
Produced by John Casey with JJ Vernon on sound.
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