Sean Quinn: How is he going to manage?

It may be a beautiful day weather wise but I can tell you I spent the day sobbing and crying after hearing Sean Quinn’s evidence in court today.

I’m 65 and have never been involved in litigation, have never been in the High Court. Anglo bullied my out of my office, wrecked my business, wrecked my reputation, wrecked my country, took my pride and now want to put me in prison.

I tell you it would melt the heart of the most hardened banker.

I simply don’t know how this great man is going to manage on his remaining millions and massive mansion.

Big bad Sinn Fein

According to Bertie Ahern admirer, Jody Corcoran, Fianna Fail, Fine Gael and Labour need to act quickly to ensure ‘extreme’ parties like Sinn Fein are kept out of power.

Micheal Martin really needs to act firmly if Fianna Fail is not to be be usurped from without and within; Fine Gael and Labour need to assist in this regard.

This is despite the fact that Fianna Fail, enthusiastically supported by Michael Martin, is principally responsible for the destruction of our country.

A country with consequences and a country of no consequence

A Commons committee, after investigating for less than a year, have found that Rupert Murdoch is not a fit person to run a major international business.

Meanwhile, back in the banana republic of Ireland a tribunal, after 14 years and costing countless millions, found that businessman Denis O’Brien had been involved in some very dodgy dealings with Michael Lowry.

No action has ever been taken (or will be) against Mr. O’Brien.

He remains a man of high standing (although that’s not difficult in a country of such low standards) and a great buddy of the present government.

Bureaucratic guff provides some comic relief

Usually when I receive an email from a government department I ignore the standard waffle at the end which warns that the email is confidential blah, blah, blah….

I received an email from the Department of Education this morning and noticed that the warning had been modified, so I had a read – It was hilarious.

In addition to the usual guff about breaking confidentiality the following warnings have been added.

Misuse of the email may constitute a criminal offence.

The Minister accepts no responsibility for changes made to the email after it was sent.

The Minister accepts no responsibility for the opinions expressed in the email.

The Minister accepts no responsibility for any damage causes by viruses.

Fecking hell, talk about covering your arse.

But the funniest part kindly requests the recipient to notify the systems manager if the email was received in error but also darkly warns:

You are prohibited from reading any part of this email or any attachments.

Law enforcement? Well, it depends

While it’s difficult to generate any great sympathy for the O’Donnell’s it is interesting to note that a group of solicitors and auctioneers can demand immediate access to a private house with the power to threaten the occupiers with imprisonment if they don’t cooperate?

On the other hand the full force of the State’s law enforcement agencies, despite decades of investigations and revelations, are unable to touch politicians, bankers and many others found to be corrupt by various tribunals.

Standards in Public Office Commission rejects complaint against Minister Quinn

Predictably, the Standards in Public Office Commission (SIPO), has rejected my complaint regarding mileage claims made by Minister for Education Ruairi Quinn, as reported in the Irish Mail on Sunday.

When I submitted the complaint to SIPO I had no expectation whatsoever that the Commission would rule against the Minister.

Over the years I have submitted many similar complaints to a whole range of government agencies for a whole variety of alleged wrongdoing.

Not one of them has ever resulted in sanctions or any other action against those involved.

My principal motive for submitting such complaints is to expose the fact that Ireland is a politically and administratively dysfunctional democracy.

The system is designed, whether intentionally or not, to protect politicians and others on the rare occasions when they are investigated for alleged abuses of public funds and resources

The manner in which Minister Quinn’s case was dealt with makes the point.

The Standards in Public Office Commission considered the case under the following headings.

The content of letters and enclosures submitted by Minister Quinn and his Secretary General

And

Under the provisions of section 4 (1) (a) of the Standards in Public Office Act 2001. Specifically, whether the Minister’s actions as complained of constituted a ‘specified act’ or acts.

The Commission decided that there was no basis on which to pursue the matter.

So where is the accountability here?

I requested access to the letters and enclosures submitted by Minister Quinn and his Secretary General under which the Commission made its decision.

My request was refused.

So here we have an ‘independent’ watchdog tasked with ensuring that politicians are made accountable basing its conclusions on secret evidence provided by the politician under investigation.

This does not happen in functional democracies.

Under the second heading the Commission seems to have concluded that Minister Quinn had committed no act that was inconsistent with the proper performance of his office.

I say ‘seems’ because the Commission provides no further explanation as to how this verdict was reached.

But the Commission was under no pressure to explain in any case because the legislation allows massive scope for the dismissal of practically any offence committed by officials or politicians.

For example:

An abuse of office allegation can be dismissed as of no significant public importance if the sum of money involved is less than £IR10, 000 (€12,700).

Under legislation the Commission can also dismiss a case if it forms the opinion that the matter under investigation was a result of incompetence or inefficiency.

This type of loophole legislation does not appear out of thin air.

It is very carefully drafted by professional civil servants working with the best legal advice and the full approval of the body politic.

Such loose, weak legislation is only one aspect of an all-embracing culture of secrecy, obfuscation, denial and non-cooperation that has created an environment where political and business corruption thrives.

Judge Alan Mahon’s verdict was as accurate as it was damning.

Corruption was deep-rooted, rampant and permeated every level of Irish politics.

Only a fool would claim that this deep-rooted, rampant corruption has, somehow, magically disappeared from the body politic.

Another consequence of political corruption is the almost impossible expectation that those with power will act to root out the disease.

A corrupt political system is unlikely to take any meaningful action to root out the disease of corruption because to do so could seriously damage the interests of those who depend on the corrupt system to maintain their power and influence.

This failure to act against corruption can lead to bizarre situations such as the incredible events surrounding Michael Lowry following the publication of the Mahon Tribunal Report last month.

Government ministers found themselves under intense pressure to explain why they had dealings with Lowry, a legitimately elected politician.

In a functional democracy this situation could not arise because the wayward politician would have been dealt with immediately by independent, well-resourced law enforcement agencies backed up by strong and effective legislation.

In addition, and parallel to law enforcement, Lowry’s political career would have been brought to a shuddering halt by an outraged body politic and electorate.

Such official and public ostracisation is of crucial importance for the maintenance of a healthy democracy because it prevents the disease of corruption from further infecting the political system and wider society in general.

The catastrophe that Ireland and its people are now suffering can be attributed directly to the failure of the state to act immediately and properly to countless scandals over the last four decades or so.

Every failure to act against an incidence of alleged corruption, no matter how small, hammered another nail into the coffin of accountable and transparent democracy.

The accumulation of such failures has, inevitably, led to the collapse of our economy, the loss of our economic sovereignty and the impoverishment of the state’s citizens.

There may well be a perfectly innocent explanation for Minister Quinn’s large expense claims but, to date, neither he nor his staff has provided any plausible explanation.

This failure, and SIPO’s failure to properly investigate the matter, is further confirmation that Ireland is a politically and administratively dysfunctional democracy.

Copy to:

Minister Quinn
Standards in Public Office Commission

Civil Servants: Protecting politicians rather than serving the State

The Irish Mail on Sunday (MoS) is, rightly, focusing on the disgraceful behaviour of civil servants who dealt with the Ned O’Keeffe allegations of fraud.

Reading the report in today’s paper I could immediately identify with the deep frustration of dealing with a secretive, arrogant bureaucracy determined to protect the interests of their political overlords at all costs.

The overall feeling when dealing with these people is one of powerlessness, that no matter what the alleged wrongdoing, the system is always going to protect the politician.

More disturbingly, there is a rapidly developing culture of invincibility among civil servants that no matter how badly they get things wrong, no matter how damaging their behaviour is to the public good, there will be no consequences.

Back in 2007, for example, I rang Dublin City Council with a very simple question.

Was Fianna Fail TD, and then minister, Pat the Cope Gallagher fined for illegally erecting election posters?

Nine months later, after numerous phone calls, emails, letters and formal complaints I finally succeeded in getting an answer.

Here are some of the bizarre/arrogant responses I got from so-called civil servants.

Bernie Lillis of Dublin City Council told me that it was her personal office policy not to reveal such information. It was, she claimed, a personal matter between her office and the politician.

The Standards in Public Office Commission rejected my complaint on the grounds that the matter (breaking of the law by a government minister on two separate occasions) was not of sufficient gravity to warrant an investigation.

Donegal County Council replied to my formal complaint (sent by post) that they could not investigate the matter, as they had received no formal complaint.

A bizarre country

Fr. Brian Darcy spoke with Marian Finucane today on his censuring by the Vatican.

Fr. Darcy is a member of a ruthless, dictorial, child abusing religious organisation that sees human rights and free speech as a serious danger to its power.

Following the interview Marian spoke with Irish Times religious correstpondent Patsy McGarry.

This interview came to an abrupt end when Marian, a broadcaster on a national station that, in theory, represents all citizens realised the time.

Sorry Patsy, we’ll have to leave it there, it’s coming up to twelve o’clock and time for the Angelus.

Outsourcing justice

Pakistan’s Supreme Court has found Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani guilty in a contempt of court case.

However, the court gave Mr. Gilani only a symbolic sentence and he will not have to serve any time in jail.

Earlier this month former Icelandic Prime Minister Geir Haarde was convicted of negligence related to the collapse of his nation’s banking system.

Both of these cases contain a mixture of politics and farce; Haarde said his conviction was ridiculous.

The thing to note, however, from an Irish perspective, is that both of these countries possess a law enforcement system with the power and will to put even the most powerful in the dock.

It is inconceivable that the Irish law enforcement system would haul a sitting Taoiseach into the courts.

Such matters are outsourced to never ending tribunals until the politician retires or dies.

The Corruption perceptions index 2011

Iceland 13
Ireland 19
Pakistan 134

Ned O'Keeffe arrested

Former Fianna Fáil TD Ned O’Keeffe has been arrested on suspicion of using a false invoice to claim for mobile phone expenses while he was a member of the Dáil.

The arrest of a politician in Ireland is an extremely rare event despite the fact that corruption is endemic throughout the body politic.

This arrest will be nothing less than revolutionary if it marks the beginning of a new phase of real law enforcement targeting those who wield power and influence.

I am not, however, holding my breath.

If the Gardai decide there’s some substance to the allegations a file will be sent to the DPP.

Judging from past experience that file will remain on a shelf for years unspecified.