DUBLIN CITY COUNCIL
RESULTS:
Dublin City Council (63 seats) COUNT COMPLETED:
Ballyfermot-Drimnagh (6) – Daithí Doolan (SF), Brid Smith (PBP) Greg
Kelly (SF), Daithí De Róiste (FF), Paul Hand (Ind), Vincent Jackson
(Ind) Filled
Ballymun (7) – Cathleen Carney Boud (SF), Noeleen Reilly (SF) Andrew
Montague (Lab) Noel Rock (FG) Paul McAuliffe (FF) Andrew Keegan (PBPA)
Aine Clancy (Lab) Filled
Beaumont-Donaghmede (9) – John Lyons (PBP), Mícheál MacDonncha (SF),
Larry O’Toole (SF), Tom Brabazon (FF), Denise Mitchell (SF) Declan
Flanagan (FG) Paddy Bourke (Ind) Alison Gilliland (Lab) Michael O’Brien
(AAA) Filled
Cabra-Finglas (7) – Cieran Perry (Ind), Anthony Connaghan (SF), Emma
Murphy (SF), Brendan Carr (Lab), David Costello (FF), Teresa Keegan
(Ind), Seamus McGrattan (SF) Filled
Clontarf (6) – Damian O’Farrell (Ind), Seán Haughey (FF), Naoise Ó
Muirí (FG), Jane Horgan-Jones (Lab), Deirdre Heney (FF), Ciarán O’Moore
(SF) Filled
Crumlin-Kimmage (6) – Criona Ní Dhálaigh (SF), Tina McVeigh (PBP),
Ray McHugh (SF), Pat Dunne (UL), Rebecca Moynihan (Lab), Catherine
Ardagh (FF) Filled
North Inner City (8) – Christy Burke (Ind), Janice Boylan (SF), Niall
Ring (Ind) Ciaran Cuffe (Green) Gary Gannon (Ind) Jonathan Dowdall (SF)
Éilis Ryan (Ind) Ray McAdam (FG) Filled
Pembroke-South Dock (8) Chris Andrews (SF), Mannix Flynn (Ind) Dermot
Lacey (Lab) Frank Kennedy (FF) Kieran Binchy (FG) Claire Byrne (GP)
Paddy McCartan (FG) Sonya Stapleton (PBP) Filled
Rathgar-Rathmines (6) – Kate O’Connell (FG), Patrick Costello (Green)
Jim O’Callaghan (FF) Paddy Smyth (FG) Ruairi McGinley (Ind) Mary
Freehill (Lab) Filled
Dublin West By-Election:
(This was to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of independent TD, Patrick Nulty).
THE SOCIALIST PARTY won a second Dáil seat in the Dublin West constituency after Councillor Ruth Coppinger went ahead of Fianna Fáil’s David McGuinness on the sixth count in the Citywest count centre..
Coppinger joins party leader, Joe
Higgins, in Dáil Éireann and was
elected on the sixth count with 12,334 votes. She failed to reach the quota of
14,478, but withstood competition from Fianna
Fáil’s McGuinness who got 9,237 votes. McGuinness had reached second place, ahead of Sinn Féin’s Paul Donnelly after gaining
from the transfers of the eliminated Fine Gael candidate Eamonn Coghlan on the fourth count.
But, the elimination of
independent David Hall saw his
transfers go mostly to Coppinger who
moved over 600 votes ahead of McGuinness
after the fifth count before benefitting from a sizeable transfer from the
eliminated Sinn Féin candidate, Paul Donnelly, on the sixth and final
count. Speaking soon after her election Coppinger
said: “We’re just delighted that we kept this seat for the left and for Socialism.”
Earlier, upon arriving in
Citywest, Coppinger said that
voters’ switch to left-leaning parties in the constituency was “somewhat
inevitable if you consider the level of anger, the level of disillusionment with
the establishment parties”. She said: “So, parties such as the Socialist Party, who are anti-austerity
and parties who are critiques of austerity, like Sinn Féin, who have a much bigger apparatus in the Dáil in terms of 14 TDs, would be seen
as a vehicle to express a protest.”
Earlier in the day, Sinn Féin’s Paul Donnelly said it was
“a fantastic result” for the party and “the manifestation” of the work his party
has put in across the constituency over the last four years.
It’s been a bad day for Labour whose candidate Loraine Mulligan polled just over 1,500
first preferences votes and was eliminated on the second count along with Green
Party candidate Roderic O’Gorman.
The fact that Donnelly headed the poll in first
preferences but, was displaced by Coppinger
in the later counts, with transfers from eliminated candidates, shows the
importance of the transferable vote in Irish elections and the ability of the
voters to target the candidates they want elected. Nevertheless, Donnelly’s high poll puts him in contention for a seat in Dublin West in the next General Election.