Dublin Central and Galway West byelections enter final stretch, with cost of living ‘key issue’ on doorsteps

Taoiseach confronted by Burkes while canvassing in Galway as byelection campaigning continues

The team from An Coimisiún Toghcháin, Ireland’s independent electoral commission, were out in Dublin on the last day of the Dublin Central and Galway West byelection campaign. Photograph Nick Bradshaw/The Irish Times
The team from An Coimisiún Toghcháin, Ireland’s independent electoral commission, were out in Dublin on the last day of the Dublin Central and Galway West byelection campaign. Photograph Nick Bradshaw/The Irish Times

Main Points

  • We are in the final day of the Dublin Central and Galway West byelection campaigns
  • Voting takes place from 7am to 10pm on Friday
  • The margins between success and failure could be wafer thin, so expect a frantic final few days on the ground, says Pat Leahy
  • Counting starts on Saturday morning with results expected by early evening
  • Ahead of tomorrow’s votes, all Irish Times polling coverage and data, including the most pressing issues for voters, can be accessed here

Key Reads


Glen Murphy - 3 hours ago

That concludes Thursday’s live coverage as the final day of byelection campaigning nears its end.

Candidate posters or campaigning for a candidate or party is not permitted within 50m of a polling station on the voting day.

Polling stations will be open in both Dublin Central and Galway West from 7am on Friday.

Once we reach tomorrow’s polling day, candidates will have seven to remove their election posters. After that, leaving them up will constitute an offence and local authorities can issue on the spot fines of up to €150 per poster.

Stick with irishtimes.com over the weekend for the latest breaking news and analysis on the byelections.


Glen Murphy - 3 hours ago

In Galway West, Social Democrats candidate Míde Nic Fhionnlaoich has offered a rebuttal to the Government’s stance on the housing crisis, one of the byelection’s key issues, as gaeilge.


Glen Murphy - 4 hours ago

Former mayor Mike Cubbard offers hyperlocal ‘Galway first’ policy

Two neighbours in Corrib Park in Galway come out to their gardens to say hello to Mike Cubbard. One of them, Eileen, was one of the first residents of this large local authority estate in the Westside built in 1972.

Recalling the house move half a century ago, Eileen says it was at the edge of city back them.

“When I came out here my friends called me a country hawk,” says Eileen. “There were no houses or nothing built around here.”

Her neighbour, standing outside his door, nods his head. “Lean times in them years, I can tell ya,” he says.

Today, Corrib Park, with its solid three-bedroom houses, is an inner suburb of the city and its houses command high prices. Within 500 metres are shopping centres, a large library, the St Michael’s GAA pitch, a running track and soccer pitches.

As we walk around, Cubbard points out the different facilities and amenities (a basketball court, an astro, a landscaped green area) in which he has had a direct input.

This, of course, is his bailiwick. He’s from nearby Camillaun Park.

Read Harry McGee’s full report from Galway.

Independent Councillor Mike Cubbard canvassing in Galway on Thursday. Photograph: Enda O'Dowd
Independent Councillor Mike Cubbard canvassing in Galway on Thursday. Photograph: Enda O'Dowd

Glen Murphy - 4 hours ago

Here are a few images of President Catherine Connolly’s sister and the other Global Sumud Flotilla detainees in Istanbul after their deportation from Israel earlier today.

Dr Margaret Connolly (left), sister of President Catherine Connolly and a fellow activist from the Gaza-bound Global Sumud Flotilla, disembark a plane upon arrival at Istanbul Airport, on Thursday. Photograph: Murad Sezer/Reuters
Dr Margaret Connolly (left), sister of President Catherine Connolly and a fellow activist from the Gaza-bound Global Sumud Flotilla, disembark a plane upon arrival at Istanbul Airport, on Thursday. Photograph: Murad Sezer/Reuters
An injured member of the flotilla speaks to the media in Istanbul. Photograph: Ozan Kose/AFP via Getty
An injured member of the flotilla speaks to the media in Istanbul. Photograph: Ozan Kose/AFP via Getty
A flotilla members gestures upon arrival in Istanbul airport. Photograph: Burak Kara/Getty
A flotilla members gestures upon arrival in Istanbul airport. Photograph: Burak Kara/Getty
A member of the flotilla with injuries to his face in Istanbul on Thursday. Photograph: Ozan Kose/AFP via Getty
A member of the flotilla with injuries to his face in Istanbul on Thursday. Photograph: Ozan Kose/AFP via Getty

Glen Murphy - 5 hours ago

Gaza flotilla activists detained by Israel arrive in Turkey

Gaza flotilla activists who were detained by Israel and later pinned to the ground to the taunts of Israel’s far-right national security minister ‌have arrived in Turkey.

The Israeli foreign ministry confirmed all the activists had been deported. Footage of them arriving in Turkey was shared by the Global Sumud Flotilla on social media on Thursday afternoon.

Fourteen Irish citizens, including Dr Margaret Connolly, sister of President Catherine Connolly, are among the more than 400 people deported from Israel.

Minister for Foreign Affairs Helen McEntee earlier said the 14 Irish people had arrived by bus at Ramon airport in Israel to be flown to Istanbul in Turkey, before flying back to Ireland.

Speaking in the Dáil on Thursday McEntee said they will be met by Clare Brosnan, Ireland’s Ambassador to Turkey.

Read the update in full.


Glen Murphy - 5 hours ago

Electoral commission takes to the streets

Members of An Coimisiún Toghcháin's team speak to flower seller Paul Stanley and other members of the public on Dublin's O'Connell Street on Thursday. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw
Members of An Coimisiún Toghcháin's team speak to flower seller Paul Stanley and other members of the public on Dublin's O'Connell Street on Thursday. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw

Jack Brady writes: An Coimisiún Toghcháin, the Republic’s independent elections watchdog, took to the streets in Dublin city centre on Thursday to remind voters to cast their ballot in Friday’s Dublin Central and Galway West byelections.

Wearing bright yellow T-shirts, members of the Electoral Commission’s team shared information with potential voters and handed out leaflets on O’Connell Street the day before polling.

Art O’Leary, the commission’s chief executive, said that while the stakes for a byelection aren’t as high as a general election, it is important that constituents “look at all the candidates there and find someone you would like to represent you”.

He said 900 new voters have registered during the commission’s campaign in Dublin Central, and stressed for voters, new and old, the importance of sticking to the numbers on the paper to avoid spoiling their vote.

Read the piece in full.

Elections watchdog says get out to vote – and don’t write ‘Up the Dubs’ on ballot paperOpens in new window ]


Glen Murphy - 6 hours ago

Taoiseach Micheál Martin was welcomed to Paris by French president Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace earlier on Thursday.

Macron welcomes Martin at the palace. Photograph: Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty
Macron welcomes Martin at the palace. Photograph: Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty

Glen Murphy - 6 hours ago

Thursday afternoon recap

Ireland’s independent electoral commission were out on Dublin's O’Connell Street and Henry Street on the last day of the byelection campaign to remind people to vote in the Dublin Central and Galway City constituencies. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw
Ireland’s independent electoral commission were out on Dublin's O’Connell Street and Henry Street on the last day of the byelection campaign to remind people to vote in the Dublin Central and Galway City constituencies. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw
Today is the final day of canvassing for the Dublin Central and Galway West constituency byelections.
Sinn Féin’s Dublin Central candidate Janice Boylan has accused the Government of “inexplicably cutting resources” after a primary school in East Wall was told it was at risk of losing two teaching posts.
Independent Ireland candidate in Galway West Noel Thomas said the cost of living crisis is the biggest issuer voters raise with him while canvassing.
An error on leaflets distributed for Fianna Fáil’s Dublin Central candidate, John Stephens in advance of Friday’s voting day incorrectly asked constituents to head to the polls a day early.
Minister for Foreign Affairs Helen McEntee answered Leader’s Questions in the Dáil in lieu of Taoiseach Micheál Martin who is in Paris to meet French president Emmanuel Macron. McEntee said it is “unacceptable” the Israeli government has prevented detained Irish citizens from accessing consular assistance.

7 hours ago
Photograph: Alan Betson / The Irish Times
Photograph: Alan Betson / The Irish Times

Modern Irish political campaigning is less about big donations and large online spends and more about shaking hands, hanging posters and knocking on doors.

But this rose-tinted view of Irish campaigning overlooks the large sums politicians spend trying to influence our votes, Liz Carolan writes.

In 2024, parties collectively spent about €10 million on the general election.

Add in the local and European elections, and Fine Gael alone spent €3.2 million that year. We only learn these figures months after power has been allocated, and when our attention has moved on to how it is being wielded.

Read her piece in full here.


9 hours ago

Israel preventing consular staff from engaging with Irish citizens ‘not acceptable’ – McEntee

Much of Leaders’ Questions in the Dáil was dominated by the detainment of activists taking part in the Gaza-bound flotilla, Parliamentary Correspondent Marie O’Halloran reports.

Minister for Foreign Affairs Helen McEntee confirmed that 14 Irish citizens who were detained in Israel have arrived by bus at Ramon Airport, to be flown to Istanbul where they will be met by Ireland’s Ambassador to Turkey, Clare Brosnan.

Referring to reports that two citizens had been hospitalised, McEntee said they were not Irish. However, she said “others have been injured”, adding that she would confirm whether these include Irish citizens.

McEntee said consular teams have consistently called for access and the ability to engage directly with affected citizens, but “that has been denied”.

“And I want to utterly condemn these actions and say that it is not acceptable. Whether it’s the Irish Government or any other government, that we have been prevented from engaging and speaking directly to our citizens,” she said.


9 hours ago

Boylan accuses Government of ‘inexplicably cutting resources’

Sinn Féin's Janice Boylan pictured earlier this month alongside fellow Dublin Central candidates Ray McAdam (Fine Gael) and Gerry Hutch (Independent). Photograph: Sam Boal/Collins
Sinn Féin's Janice Boylan pictured earlier this month alongside fellow Dublin Central candidates Ray McAdam (Fine Gael) and Gerry Hutch (Independent). Photograph: Sam Boal/Collins

Sinn Féin’s candidate for the Dublin Central byelection, Janice Boylan, has accused the Government of “inexplicably cutting resources” after a primary school in East Wall was told it was at risk of losing two teaching posts.

Boylan said St Joseph’s is the only primary school in the area and is “already starved of resources”.

Boylan met the principal of St Joseph’s with party leader Mary Lou McDonald, saying she was informed that its pre-junior infants programme was also facing closure.

Reducing such provision would “further compound the already-existing disadvantage in this community”, she said.

“This decision by the Fine Gael/Fianna Fáil Government needs to be immediately reversed.”


9 hours ago

‘So close’: What the poll numbers tell us in Dublin Central

Jack Horgan Jones takes a closer look at what the numbers in the TG4/Irish Times poll mean for the upcoming byelection in Dublin Central. Video: Bryan O'Brien

10 hours ago

‘Anything to say about Enoch Burke?’: Martin confronted by Burkes

Taoiseach Micheál Martin was followed and confronted by members of Enoch Burke’s family while he was canvassing in Galway.

In a video posted on social media on Wednesday evening, Burke’s mother, Martina Burke, is seen running after the Taoiseach, asking him if he has “anything to say about transgenderism”.

He was also asked if he had “anything to say about Enoch Burke”.

Moments later, he was approached by Isaac Burke, who told the Taoiseach his brother had been in prison for “700 days”, as Martina Burke labels Martin a “creep” and a “disgrace” in the background.

Enoch Burke is in jail for breaching a court order banning him from Wilson’s Hospital School, Co Westmeath, where he previously taught German and history. He has repeatedly breached orders not to trespass.

In the sometimes tense exchange on Wednesday, the Taoiseach largely did not respond to the Burkes until he asked for “space” after the camera was held close to his face.

Martin subsequently told Isaac Burke to move “out of my way now” after he held his arm in front of the Taoiseach while he walked.

“I don’t mind what you say, what you do, but you don’t impede my progress,” the Taoiseach said.

At one point, flanked by the Burkes, the Taoiseach waves and smiles at a passerby in the distance while canvassing for his party’s Galway West candidate, Cillian Keane, as Martina Burke shouts: “Shame on you, Micheál.”

Last month, Martina Burke and her daughter, Ammi Burke, were released from prison, having served a two-week sentence for contempt of court.


11 hours ago

Irish citizens detained by Israel expected to be deported

Activists, including several Irish citizens, who were detained by Israeli forces after taking part in a global flotilla bound for Gaza are expected to be deported to Turkey on Thursday.

Minister for Foreign Affairs Helen McEntee said the detained Irish citizens were transferred overnight from Ashdod port to Ktzi’ot Prison, a detention facility in the Negev desert usually used for Palestinians.

Consular access had “not yet been granted” to the detention facility, McEntee said.

“Our Embassy in Tel Aviv remain on the ground and stand ready to provide all appropriate consular assistance and support as soon as access is permitted,” she said in a statement.

It is expected the Irish detainees will be deported to Turkey later on Thursday, she said, where they will be met by representatives of the Irish Embassy there.


12 hours ago

Moved away but go home to vote? You may have committed a crime

Have you ever moved county, city, emigrated even, but still travelled home to vote in your local constituency? Then you may have committed an electoral crime.

It is illegal to vote in an Irish constituency you are not ordinarily resident in. There are loopholes – for example, emigrants are still allowed to vote at home up to 18 months after leaving, and students living away on weekdays can still be considered resident at home.

But for those who have relocated long term and find themselves registered in two constituencies, it is a crime punishable with jail time.

Yet it is also potentially easily done. Only one person was charged with attempting the crime of election fraud in the five years before the last general election.

Why just one? Because the Electoral Register is a mess.

Read more from Data Journalist Rachel Lavin here.


12 hours ago

Who will win Friday’s byelections?

Political Editor Pat Leahy gives his take on what’s happening in these two constituencies and predicts who will win.

Byelections: who are the favourites to win in Dublin Central and Galway West?

Listen | 29:57

12 hours ago

Voters told to head to the polls a day early in leaflet error

John Stephens leaflet
John Stephens leaflet

An error on leaflets distributed for Fianna Fáil’s Dublin Central candidate, John Stephens, in advance of Friday’s byelection has incorrectly seen constituents asked to head to the polls a day early.

Those who received the election literature on Wednesday were told to vote for Stephens on “Thursday, 22nd May”.

A small number of the leaflets with the production error were distributed, and it is understood it has since been rectified.

The phone number printed is also a digit short.


13 hours ago
Three-horse race in Galway West - Poll

13 hours ago

People ‘are sick of the Government parties’

Noel Thomas canvasses on Galway's William Street. Photograph: Alan Betson
Noel Thomas canvasses on Galway's William Street. Photograph: Alan Betson

Although Independent Ireland candidate Noel Thomas came to national attention for his stance on immigration, he says it is “not one of the big issues on the doors” in Galway West.

Instead, the cost-of-living crisis is the biggest issue being raised, according to the councillor who left Fianna Fáil in 2024 after a fallout with the party over its immigration policy.

During a recent canvass, he told Andrew Hamilton there are people who are “sick of the Government parties” and feel “let down”.

“The ordinary person, when you knock on their door, they feel like they have no other purpose but to be there to pay taxes for the Government,” he said.

Read in full here.

Noel Thomas canvasses Losita Stack and Majella Fahy on Galway's Eglinton Street. Photograph: Alan Betson
Noel Thomas canvasses Losita Stack and Majella Fahy on Galway's Eglinton Street. Photograph: Alan Betson

Irish Times polling earlier this month showed Thomas in second place with 16 per cent of first-preference votes. He was behind Fine Gael’s Seán Kyne (17 per cent).


13 hours ago

Fears grow in Government over further tech job losses

Fears are growing in Government that yesterday’s job losses at Meta’s Irish operation could be followed by further cuts in the wider sector.

Meta on Wednesday cut up to 350 jobs, about 20 per cent of its Irish workforce, as part of the latest round of job losses that will see it shed thousands of roles worldwide.

Industry figures have privately warned Ministers and officials that as many as 80 per cent of tech jobs globally could be lost over the coming decade.

Read more here.


14 hours ago

In advance of tomorrow’s votes, all Irish Times polling coverage and data, including the most pressing issues for voters, can be accessed here.


14 hours ago

McEntee to take Leaders’ Questions

Minister for Foreign Affairs Helen McEntee will be taking Leaders’ Questions in the Dáil later today, during which the issue of the detained Gaza flotilla activists is likely to arise.

A video posted by Israeli far-right national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir has drawn criticism from both Israeli and international political figures.

In the video, Ben-Gvir is seen walking through a ship and taunting detained activists as they knelt on the floor with their hands bound.

A detained Irish activist, Caitríona Graham, is seen being restrained by soldiers and pushed back down by the head to a kneeing position after chanting: “Free, free Palestine.”

McEntee described it as “utterly appalling and unacceptable behaviour”.

Footage from Ashdod, Israel shows Israel's minister of national security mocking detained activists who were aboard a Gaza-bound aid flotilla. Video: Reuters

More can be read on that here.

The Taoiseach, meanwhile, has written to the president of the European Council calling for an EU-wide banning of products from Israeli settlements and the suspension of the EU’s Association Agreement with Israel following its “shocking treatment” of the activists.


14 hours ago

It is the final day of campaigning for Friday’s byelections in Dublin Central and Galway West.

In advance of the polls opening at 7am tomorrow, party leaders will be joining candidates for a final round of canvassing, with the exception of Taoiseach Micheál Martin.

The Fianna Fáil leader will be in Paris to meet French president Emmanuel Macron.

However, Irish Times polling suggest his party’s candidates in both constituencies are unlikely to challenge for a seat.

In polls carried out earlier this month, Sinn Féin’s Janice Boylan was leading the race in Dublin Central, followed by Social Democrats candidate Daniel Ennis. Veteran criminal and Independent candidate Gerry Hutch was in third place.

In Galway West, Fine Gael’s Seán Kyne held a slim lead over Independent Ireland candidate Noel Thomas. Labour’s Helen Ogbu was in third place.