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Speech by Tanaiste to MacGill Summer School

Ladies and Gentlemen

I am delighted to be here again in Glenties, and to have the

opportunity to present this lecture in honour of John Hume.

Through a lifetime of work, determination, courage, persistence and

vision, John Hume, more than most, has shaped the Ireland in which we

live today.

I am particularly pleased to be asked to give the 2012 John Hume

lecture, since this year marks the centenary of the foundation of the

Labour Party. It is fitting, in a year of celebration and reflection

for Labour, that I should pay tribute to a man who for many years led

our sister party in Northern Ireland, the Social Democratic and Labour

Party. A man who stood courageously for the core labour values of

civil rights, equality and peaceful democratic politics.

The theme of this year’s proceedings here in Glenties, is ‘reforming

and rebuilding our state’. Throughout the 100 years of our existence,

reforming and rebuilding Ireland is and always has been the Labour

Party’s mission. Reform not for its own sake, but reform for the

purpose of building a better and fairer society As Labour celebrates

its centenary, I want to take this opportunity to reflect on how the

progressive agenda stands today, and more importantly what the

progressive priorities are for the future.

Last Wednesday afternoon I attended a meeting of the Government’s

economic management council. The EMC, as it is known, consists of

myself and the Taoiseach, Michael Noonan the Minister for Finance and

the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, Brendan Howlin. This

group meets every week, together with senior officials, to discuss key

economic issues, and the strategic management of the economic crisis.

The EMC is itself a reform – a new way of doing joined up Government

across Departments and Institutions. A new way of decision making in

a coalition Government. A new way to make key economic decisions at

the heart of Government.

What struck me about last Wednesday in particular, was how different

the tone of the meeting was, compared to some of the EMC meetings that

we had in the first few months of the life of this Government.

In those early days, the crisis that we faced was existential. There

were days when I feared for the financial survival of the State.

Today, while the problems we face are still grave, we are in a much

stronger position. Following agreement at the European summit on

Ireland’s bank debt, and given the progress that we have made on a

number of core economic issues – including a significant stimulus

package – our prospects of economic recovery have been substantially

improved.

No one doubts that there are still difficulties to confront. No one

doubts that the true test of progress is the creation of jobs and

improving the situation of those thousands of families in Ireland who

have been profoundly affected by the crisis. But we now have a far

stronger platform on which to build.

The core task of this Government is to deal with the deep economic

crisis that we inherited, and to build a sustainable economic

recovery. It is our clear and stated aim, to restore financial

stability, to renew growth, and above all, to create jobs. To restore

our economic sovereignty, by exiting the EU/IMF programme. As Leader

of the Labour Party, it is clear to me that these are the first

priorities for any progressive agenda.

But this is also a Government of Reform.

Determined that this moment of crisis will also be a genuine turning point.

One of my abiding memories of John Hume is from late 1993, when he was

moved to tears at the funeral of the victims of the Greysteel

Massacre. It was one of the darkest moments of the troubles – a low

point of sectarianism that threatened to drown the tentative moves

towards peace. But it was also a turning point - a moment when

people saw the vital necessity of dialogue. That dark and difficult

time was almost 20 years ago. The Ireland we live in today is

virtually unrecognisable. The troubles as we knew them are at an end.

We have a functioning power-sharing government in Northern Ireland.

Ministers from North and South of the border meet regularly in a

North-South Ministerial Council to discuss matters of common interest.

And the visit of Queen Elizabeth has opened a whole new chapter in

the relationship between Ireland and Britain, which was subsequently

documented in the joint statement of the Taoiseach and Prime Minister

Cameron. Who would have thought that any of this was possible only

twenty years ago?

Twenty years ago, homosexuality was effectively illegal in the

republic, and divorce was banned by the Constitution. Today, we live

in a far more open and tolerant Ireland, where we have civil

partnerships for gay couples and the question of full marriage

equality is being put to a constitutional convention.

What is so striking about these examples, is the contrast between

looking back and looking forward. Events of 20 years ago can seem

like they only happened yesterday. Looking forward twenty years into

the future can seem like peering into a dim and distant haze. The

future always seems further away than the past. And yet we can see

that from great moments of crisis, can also come great change, if we

have a vision of what we want to achieve, and the determination and

courage to pursue it.

Let us ask ourselves this question: If we are to look back on this

moment in twenty years time, what is it that we want to have achieved?

Whether it be the 120th anniversary of the Labour party, or the

120th anniversary of 1916, will we be able to able to say that this

was a reforming generation? That we made a lasting impact on the

course of Irish history?

The answer to that question, will depend, not on the specifics of any

one policy, or the technicalities of any one reform.

It will depend on our capacity to deal both with the immediate

problems of today, and to address the great issues of today and

tomorrow (and in some cases of yesterday too).

It will depend on our capacity to recognise that reforming and

rebuilding our state, is not a goal in itself, but a means to building

a society that better serves its people.

It will depend, not simply on the actions of Governments, but on the

willingness of individuals both to embrace and work for change.

Hume’s vision of an Ireland at peace, with mutual respect for, and by,

its different traditions could not have been achieved without the

consent of the people. Neither could the massive social changes of

the past two or three decades.

Reforming and rebuilding the state is not, therefore, just an exercise

in constitutional amendment, the changing of laws or the remaking of

institutions. These elements are, of course, important, but they are

actions located in a changing economic and social context, and their

real significance can only be appreciated or evaluated over a longer

period of time. That is why we have to approach the task of reforming

and rebuilding, not by trying out something new in the hope that it

will work 20 years from now, but to place ourselves 20 years forward

and to look back to the present so that we can make the right

decisions to remake the Ireland we want to see in 20 years time. This

inevitably involves the making of political choices about the future

of our society and those choices go far beyond the institutional.

Reforming and re-building the State can not happen in isolation from

the great changes that are taking place in the world around us. At

times of crisis, it is all too easy to turn inwards. To focus on

repairing what was broken at home. But failing to prepare for what is

happening beyond our own horizons is like fixing the ceiling while

ignoring that the house is missing a roof, or that a new housing

estate is being developed all around us.

We can no longer think of reform and rebuilding this State as a purely

domestic project. Our state does not stand in splendid isolation. We

have, as a result of the Good Friday Agreement, a developing set of

relationships, some of them institutional, with Northern Ireland and

with Britain. We are an integrated part of a changing European Union,

and we share a currency with sixteen other states. We share a world

where economics is global, communications are instant, and we have

common concerns about peace, security, energy, environment and

climate.

Today the European Union spreads from the Atlantic coast of Connemara

to the Black Sea. In 20 years time, will the EU’s border stretch to

the Russian steppes? Today, we are a Union of 27 member states. 20

years from now that number could be closer to 40. Ireland was a

member state when there were only nine. How are we, as a small state,

to exercise our influence and leadership in a much bigger and more

populous Union? Ireland’s Presidency of the EU at the beginning of

next year will be crucial, as we are unlikely to occupy that role

again for at least 14 years. Our chairmanship of the Organisation for

Security and Co-operation in Europe (the OSCE), is also important in

this context as it enables us to provide leadership, in an

international organisation which is important to aspiring EU member

states.

The context is not even confined to Europe. Economically many believe

that this will be the Asian century. That is why we are putting a new

emphasis on our political and trade relationship with the countries of

Asia, including China. The visit to Ireland by Chinese Vice Premier

Xi earlier this year was hugely important, as was the

subsequent visit by the Taoiseach and the signing of a Strategic

Partnership Agreement between China and Ireland.

If Asia is the new economic power in the early decades of the 21st

century, then Africa is the coming continent. Seven of the world’s

ten fastest growing economies are in Africa. Africa can go from being

a net food importer today, to feeding a growing world population.

Some world powers, especially China, already recognise this. Ireland

is uniquely placed to develop a thriving relationship with the African

continent. We carry no colonial baggage, and we have built a

relationship for friendship and respect in Africa through our

Development Aid Programme and right back to the work of our

missionaries. We can build on this, which is why last year we

launched our Africa Strategy charting the progress we can make from

Aid to Trade. That is why I will be travelling to East Africa later

this week, to pursue that strategy further.

And what does a growing global population mean for finite resources?

Global commodity prices are rising, having fallen steadily during the

20th century. Now, if the only way is up (and it’s not certain that

it is), will scarcity be the mother of invention, or of tension?

One thing that is certain, will be the globalisation of the drive to

reduce greenhouse gases. Following Durban last December, the clock is

ticking on agreeing a binding deal on carbon reduction by 2015, coming

into force by 2020. In 20 years time the oil race will have become

its opposite. The race to decarbonise economic growth is already

underway. The future rests with those countries who, like Ireland can

produce large amounts of renewable energy. Twenty years from now we

will really value the fact that 90% of this county's territory is the

sea and ocean around us. The national maritime policy which has just

been completed by the Government, is the blueprint for the re-building

of this State, not just as 26 counties of land, but of our vast, and

resource rich maritime area as well.

Since the Great Famine, and before it, the economy of Ireland has not,

for any sustained period of time, provided a secure and sustainable

living for all the people of Ireland. On any analysis of Irish

economic performance over a century or more, forced emigration stands

out as our greatest failing. And yet we should and do have the

resources, the knowledge, the skills and the capacity to build an

economy here that provides good and sustainable jobs for our people.

We can build an export-led, knowledge driven economy, that is

connected to the main sources of global economic growth. We should

never again allow ourselves to become dependent on any one sector, or

any one market, and certainly not on the domestic property sector. In

the 21st century Ireland must connect itself to the economic

opportunities that are emerging in the east, and in Africa. When we

look back on this moment in 20 years time, we should see this as a

time when Ireland re-assessed its position in the global trading

system. When we made a long term and strategic decision to build

relationships in new and emerging economies, including China.

Relationships that complement, rather than replace, our existing

markets in Europe, and America.

Three times since the Second World War– in the 1950s, the 1980s, and

in the last decade, bad economic management in Ireland has led to

economic stagnation. We cannot go on like this. The lessons of the

crisis have to be learned, not least because it is working people who

suffer most in recession, through loss of jobs and lower living

standards. A small open economy has to manage its public finances

prudently and with a far greater eye to long term sustainability.

That is a lesson that the Nordic social democratic economies learned

decades ago. In passing the European Stability Treaty, we have

adopted a set of rules which will provide for better management of our

affairs. We have established a Fiscal Advisory council to cast an

independent eye over forecasts and budgets. And, critically, the

European Union has decided to establish a banking union, so that the

regulation of banking, and the costs of banking failures, will in

future be managed on a collective European basis. This must be the

moment when we break out of the cycle of economic crises. For the

sake of the children born this year, who will be approaching college

graduation 20 years from now, and seeking employment.

We all know the phrase from the 1916 Proclamation about the Republic

cherishing all the children of the nation equally. Too often in our

recent past, those words have been a reproach to us, rather than an

inspiration. Too many times, as a state, we have failed our children.

In this too, the present crisis must be a watershed. This Government

is engaged in a major programme of reform of how we deliver children’s

services. But we must also bring about lasting change. Now is the

time to amend our Constitution to provide for the protection and

rights of our children, and the Government is determined to bring

forward a referendum to that end in the autumn.

The men and women who founded the Labour Party came from thatched

cottages and tenement slums. They were born into a world where the

circumstances of your birth very often dictated the horizons of your

life. No-one can say that, in the past fifty years, economic progress

in Ireland has not brought social progress. Since the 1960s, the

educational revolution has opened up opportunity across our society.

Like many others, I was a beneficiary of those changes.

But we have more to do. Even today, too many of our children have

their lives defined by the limitations of their family circumstances.

We must ensure that the economy that we build from this crisis, is one

that offers greater opportunities for all of our people.

The changes that we are making in education, through a new national

literacy strategy, and in reforming the curriculum for Junior

Certificate are absolutely fundamental to that agenda. The Government

is working hard to reform the system of training and welfare support

to ensure that people have a wider range of skills and opportunities.

Then there are the other hallmarks of a modern, progressive country,

such as access to medical care based on need, not income. Ireland is

something of a rarity in developed European countries in having an

up-front charge of €50 or more to visit a GP.

This is the first Government in the history of the State that has

pledged to introduce universal health insurance. It’s ambitious. It

will take time. But we can do it if we take it step by step,

redirecting a small fraction of the €14 billion Health budget to lower

that bar, incentivising people to get treated earlier by their GP, and

so freeing up more expensive hospital time. My colleague Roisin

Shortall has already done enormous work in the area of primary care,

and the first phase of GP care without fees for patients with some

chronic illnesses is set to be introduced this year. And the recently

announced stimulus package provides finance for the first phase of the

primary health care centres.

Of course, progress goes beyond what can be measured by income, or by

the number of people in third level, or life expectancy. It is not

just about what we achieve collectively, but also about how, as a

society, we allow individuals to flourish. The freedom they enjoy to

pursue their own good, their own way.

Ireland today is very different from the Ireland of 20 years ago, but

there is still some road to travel before we can say that ours is a

republic that treats its citizens, regardless of their faith or their

sexual orientation, equally. Now is the time to build a new

relationship between Church and State in Ireland, based on mutual

understanding and respect, but also on the primacy of personal

freedom.

For many people, when we speak of reforming and rebuilding our state,

we are essentially talking about politics. If, as many people

believe, politics failed us before the crisis, can we construct

something better?

We have to look at this issue at a number of levels.

We can, as the Government is doing, tighten the laws on political

funding and political corruption. We can, and will through the

Constitutional Convention, examine our voting system to see if we can

improve on our present constitutional arrangements. But on another

level, you cannot legislate for honesty, and no matter what voting

system you have, the outcomes will reflect our broader political

culture.

That culture is changing, not least because of the revolution that is

happening in how and where we get our news, with the internet and

social media making news more immediate. A growing number of people

are no longer buying newspapers and are getting their news online.

Twenty years from now, will newspapers as we know them still exist?

Where will people turn for reliable information and commentary? How

will people be sure that the information that they are getting is

accurate, or that commentary is reflective rather than reactive.

Edmund Burke has been credited with being the first person to refer to

the press as the fourth estate – not part of the State, but essential

to it. We need a free media that will hold Government and other

institutions to account. We need a media that will provide for fair

and balanced debate, but the only thing we can be certain of, is that

the media will look radically different in twenty years time.

Our world is changing. It is far more integrated and inter-dependent.

More and more, our daily lives are, and will be, influenced by

events and trends beyond our borders. Our young people, in

particular, see themselves as citizens of the globe. But what kind of

global citizen does Ireland want to be?

20 years ago, Mary Robinson moved us all with the tears that she shed

for the people of Somalia. Today, once again, famine stalks the horn

of Africa.

One thing that we can be proud of in how we have managed this crisis,

is that, as a country, we have kept faith with the world’s poorest

people. We have managed to sustain our aid effort, and our engagement

in development co-operation, especially in Africa. Of course, there

are also benefits to Ireland in what we do - we will, over time, see

maturing ties of trade, as well as aid. As a result of our history we

can identify with those affected by what is still one of the world’s

greatest ills – hunger, and nutrition is a strong focus of our aid

programme.

None if what I have outlined here is impossible. Progress is

something that is in our own hands. In many areas, it is already

happening.

When we think of reforming and rebuilding our state, we inevitably

come back to political and institutional architecture. Perhaps it is

only in 20 years time that we will appreciate the massive reform and

rebuilding agenda which this Government is undertaking.

A Constitutional Convention, dominated not by experts and politicians,

but two-thirds of those members will be individual citizens chosen at

random

We will hold a referendum to decide whether we have one parliamentary

chamber or two and whether we should have a Senate at all

We are reducing the membership of Dail Eireann at a time when our

population is increasing

We are planning the biggest reform of local government since the 1890s

We are undertaking a major overhaul of public bodies as part of the

biggest reform of our public services, driven by a dedicated

Department of Public Expenditure and Reform.

We are undertaking a major change in the way state companies are

managed through the creation of NewEra

And there are many more examples.

20 years from now, some these changes will stand out more than others.

It would not surprise me if the one which is most valued 20 years

from now is the decision we recently made to establish a State Water

Utility to manage our water resources. Water may be the great

resource issue of the 21st century, and to deal with that challenge we

have decided to establish a water utility that will keep water in

public ownership and provide finance for it.

I am hopeful for our future. I believe that Ireland is a good

country, with enormous reserves of talent, determination and grit.

Our economy will recover. But it is not enough simply to put the

pieces back together again. We must build something better and new.

This crisis can be a turning point.

We can build a new and better Ireland.

If, like John Hume, we have vision, and courage, determination and

tenacity. Not just politicians, or the Government, but every one of

us.

Thank you.