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'The millennial vote is key' - Can Corbynmania be harnessed by Ireland's Labour party?

The systems may be different but does the message translate?
POLITICS HAS CHANGED. It is not going back in its box where it has gone before. People have had quite enough.

Those were the words of Jeremy Corbyn at 3am on the morning after the UK general election.

The UK Labour leader had just been re-elected in London’s Islington North and it had already become clear that his party taken enough seats from the Tories to take away their parliamentary majority.

For an election that was predicted to finish off his leadership, the result showed that the jolt he gave Labour’s grassroots extended beyond his party to the wider electorate.

Back in September 2015 following Corbyn’s insurgent leadership victory, his then Irish counterpart Joan Burton said that was his central challenge.

Upon congratulating him in a short, four-sentence statement, Burton said that Corbyn had “energised large sections of the party’s membership” and that his challenge was to

transfer that energy into upcoming election campaigns.

If that was Burton’s test of Corbyn’s success as leader, he’s delivered on his first attempt and it perhaps begs the question whether someone could similarly energise the Irish Labour party.

The political realities are of course different for both parties but they share goals and ideologies and have claimed a sistership with one another. Does that mean Corbyn’s message would translate here?

Not necessarily, argues Ireland Thinks pollster and former UK Labour strategist Dr Kevin Cunningham.

“Some people try to look at elections abroad and then just verbatim copy and paste.”

It would be wrong to say okay now we’re going to have a message that says ‘For the many, not the few’. That would not be the right thing to do. Jeremy was playing to his own strengths in that regard.

“One of the failings of the previous general election for the Labour party was they wouldn’t let Ed Miliband be Ed Miliband. He started adopting policies that people could see he didn’t quite agree with.”

Tuition fees

Two days after the UK general election campaign, Burton’s replacement as Labour leader Brendan Howlin delivered a speech to the Tom Johnson Summer School in Montenotte. In the speech he called for third-level fees to be scrapped.

Scrapping tuition fees was a major plank of the Labour’s manifesto in the UK general election, and one which many have speculated sparked such enthusiasm amongst younger voters and those in university towns.

Third-level feels is an issue that’s always been closely associated with Labour in Ireland.

In his speech, Howlin made reference to that history, noting how Labour’s Education Minister Niamh Breathnach scrapped them in 1992.

He also noted how fees never really went away but became the infamous ever-increasing registration fee. Howlin even acknowledged this happened partly when Labour were in power

“Would we have done so if Labour held a majority in Government? No,” Howlin said.

Whether the timing of Labour’s push on third-level fees is a coincidence or not, the priority is there and it’s clearly a pitch that appeals to younger voters.

But the question remains how credible promises can be from parties that aren’t likely to be in a majority position in government.

“I’d say there’s more to it than that,” Cunningham says.

“There’s a significant value on authenticity and trust and to some extent it applies to the Labour party’s policy on tuition fees, probably because the party was not really in a position control that issue.”

Appealing to younger voters is about far more than developing policies based around tuition fees and worker’s rights, however.

Another part of the appeal of the Corbyn movement has been in recognising challenges faced by educated young professionals.

Issues like affordability, wages, housing and childcare have frequently been secondary to to policies crafted to suit older voters.

Labour’s Deputy Lord Mayor of Dublin Rebecca Moynihan agrees with this analysis and says it clearly drove voters in the recent election

“I think the millennial vote is key and what Corbyn and the party has been saying has really resonated,” she says.

“And I think our generation is very, very insecure. We’re insecure about our pensions, we’ve been told that we have to have them but we don’t have jobs that are paying enough in order to get us through it. So we’re insecure in our jobs, we’re insecure in our pensions, we’re insecure about our housing.

There’s a generation of politicians who maybe are from the baby boomer generation that don’t quite realise how deeply that insecurity has permeated.

Moynihan adds that many of these priorities are ones that had been considered basic standards for decades but have now creeped beyond many people’s reach again.

“The basic things that we were fighting for at the foundation of the Labour movement, which is a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work and decent secure employment. Those things that are now aspirational again and they weren’t for a long time and I think there is a generation who don’t realise just how aspiration they are for our generation.”

Tower block fire in London Jeremy Corbyn meeting volunteers and locals after the Grenfell Tower tragedy in London. David Mirzoeff / PA Wire David Mirzoeff / PA Wire / PA Wire

One of the most decisive results of the recent election was the return of two-party politics, with the Conservatives and Labour winning 83% of the votes across the UK.

This was down to the obliteration of the Ukip vote and both parties eating into the SNP’s dominance in Scotland.

While in Ireland the dominance of the two largest parties is not quite as stark, and has been declining election after election, it remains the dominant narrative in government formation and is a reminder for Labour here that their fight is very different.

Not least because the PR-STV system is much easier on smaller parties and independents, and in Ireland that means a fragmentation of the left vote.

“I always think it’s difficult to compare the two of them,” Moynihan says of Labour here and across the water.

I know obviously people tend to look at British politics and then back to Irish politics. I mean how close are we to them now? The policies are different because the campaigns are different, because the context is different and because the systems are different.

“You’re not comparing like with like so I’m always very reluctant to do it. But in terms of the manifesto that the Labour party but forward, I think it was very good, I think it was very progressive and I think for the first time in a long time they were making an argument for a just society again.”

Read: ‘I was clearly wrong’: How Jeremy Corbyn confounded expectations in the UK’s election >

Read: With support from grime artists and actors, young voters turned out in droves for Corbyn >

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119 Comments
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    Mute Aisling
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:02 PM

    Shocked that we even have mink farms here.

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    Mute Shane McGrath
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:41 PM

    @Aisling: disgusting.

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    Mute S
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:49 PM

    @Shane McGrath: lots in Donegal

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    Mute Daff. Myers
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    Nov 9th 2020, 10:07 PM

    @Aisling: you literally took the words out of my mouth. Awful isn’t it?

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    Mute Anne
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    Nov 9th 2020, 11:56 PM

    And the government funds them with taxpayers money! Thankfully I think they have been told to wind down business.
    https://www.donegaldaily.com/2019/04/25/irish-council-against-bloodsports-slam-e200000-grants-to-donegal-fur-farms/amp/

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    Mute Ger
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    Nov 10th 2020, 3:49 AM

    @Aisling: I’ve never seen a Mink drive a tractor

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    Mute Mick Hyland
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:02 PM

    Why are there Irish mink farms?

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    Mute Niamh Hayes
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    Nov 9th 2020, 10:48 PM

    @Mick Hyland: fake eyelashes

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    Mute Amused Bystander
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    Nov 9th 2020, 11:10 PM

    @Niamh Hayes: please tell me that’s a joke?

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    Mute Dearbhla O Reilly
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    Nov 9th 2020, 11:30 PM

    @Amused Bystander: no it’s TRUE. they’re mink. Imagine dying to create something that silly looking.

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    Mute Dearbhla O Reilly
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:01 PM

    Who even wears mink any more? I would be morto. Seriously.

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    Mute Aoife Dooley
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:20 PM

    @Dearbhla O Reilly: Fake eyelashes are from minks….weird!

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    Mute Steve O'Connor
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:24 PM

    @Dearbhla O Reilly: Russians.

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    Mute Dearbhla O Reilly
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    Nov 9th 2020, 10:23 PM

    @Alan Lynch: you’re so silly. Morto for ya.
    Forgot about eyelashes being mink. Morto for wearing them too.
    Totes morto all around leds.

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    Mute David Law
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    Nov 9th 2020, 8:57 PM

    Surely nobody should be arriving from Denmark?

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    Mute Donncha
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    Nov 9th 2020, 10:47 PM

    @David Law: The UK has banned arrivals from Denmark.

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    Mute Siobhan O Donovan
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    Nov 10th 2020, 11:51 PM

    @David Law: the problem is Denmark is linked to Germany and therefore onto Europe . If it was an Island it could be contained but even if flights stopped from Denmark, flights will go ahead from neighbouring Germany…..etc . Lets hope it can be contained and this positive news of a vaccine will come good . The problem seems that it already has become zoonotic from Mink !

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    Mute willow moon
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:07 PM

    How are mink farms still a thing. I know they are mean bustards to the ahem….bustards et al. But what we are doing to them is beyond despicable. Poor little guys.

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    Mute Mike Litterus
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    Nov 9th 2020, 8:58 PM

    Talk of a vaccine circulates and suddenly the virus mutates

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    Mute Paul
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:08 PM

    @Mike Litterus: or talk of the mink since the weekend and news of vaccine breaks today. It’s less dramatic when you put it the right way round.

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    Mute Tony Gordon
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:27 PM

    @Mike Litterus: all virus mutation is very well known. Perhaps you should read more.

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    Mute John Mulligan
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:08 PM

    I hope all the animals rights people who released mink into the wild are happy now.
    We can and should cull all mink in farms and close them down, but our rivers are thick with wild mink at this stage.

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    Mute Darren Sheridan
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:35 PM

    @John Mulligan: Gas. I read these 17million mink were farmed not wild.

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    Mute Jay Kearney
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:03 PM

    Thats it no more Danish Pastries.

    52
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    Mute Tony Gordon
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:28 PM

    @Jay Kearney: why, do they make those with mink?

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    Mute Larry Brophy
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:35 PM

    Mink are being incinerated alive. The process is to gas them for 10 to 15 seconds and throw them into an incinerator but many survive the gassing. Absolutely barbaric

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    Mute Alan Barber
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:10 PM

    What is the purpose of mink farms ???

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    Mute Barney Corleone
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:15 PM

    @Alan Barber:
    Mink cheese!

    49
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    Mute Andrew Letcher
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:18 PM

    @Alan Barber: I suspect it may be to farm mink. They are very popular pets.

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    Mute There is no hope for humanity!
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:24 PM

    @Alan Barber: high end clothing, pork, cheese and mink are the biggest export in Denmark

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    Mute Rúairí O’ Sullivan
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:25 PM

    @Andrew Letcher: not pets, it’s for fur. They are kept in cages, then gassed and skinned. Fur has lots of uses….ALL fashion related

    49
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    Mute Tony Gordon
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:28 PM

    @Alan Barber: To farm minks, clue is in the name.

    15
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    Mute Tony Gordon
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:29 PM

    @Rúairí O’ Sullivan: Just remember fashion is the 2nd largest contributor to global warming!

    35
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    Mute Andrew Letcher
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:32 PM

    @Rúairí O’ Sullivan: OMG so these little black and white critters I bought. May not be mink. Does this mean no cheese either?

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    Mute Niamh Hayes
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    Nov 9th 2020, 10:49 PM

    @Alan Barber: fake eyelashes

    11
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    Mute Darren Sheridan
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:33 PM

    The Danish Government websites dates this back to early September. Worrying.

    33
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    Mute Eddie Michael
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    Nov 9th 2020, 10:07 PM

    It’s an engineered virus so its obviously going to mutate.

    19
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    Mute Tony Gordon
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    Nov 9th 2020, 10:27 PM

    @Eddie Michael: oh god, really.
    So your saying a naturally occurring virus doesn’t mutate?……oh wait….

    34
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    Mute The Kev in Kevlar
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    Nov 10th 2020, 12:30 AM

    @Eddie Michael: sweet jesus…did the YouTube machine tell you that? Did you watch 15 videos and come to that conclusion? Do you actually understand how biology works?! Trogladite

    21
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    Mute Hundredth Idiot
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    Nov 10th 2020, 8:52 AM

    I’m not saying that God is a vegan but it would explain most of 2020.

    12
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    Mute Dave Barrett
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    Nov 9th 2020, 9:38 PM

    It’s OK! We have the vaccine soon.

    7
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    Mute Trevor Donoghue
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    Nov 10th 2020, 1:30 AM

    @Dave Barrett: Er, the whole issue is that this strain is antibody resistant so the vaccine may not work on it. or where you been sarcastic? we need emoji’s on the journal.

    17
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    Mute thesaltyurchin
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    Nov 10th 2020, 1:05 PM

    Lol! Mink farms. Hands up if you laughed about the current virus coming fro a dead bat at a food market. Not exactly a million miles away. But you know, good employer, have to make a living boss! etc etc.

    1
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