28/06/24View in Browser

When politicians don’t want the top jobs

By Donagh Cagney

In Brussels, politicians haggled over top jobs this week, but in Dublin, nobody wants them.

Irish politics has seen some high-profile and unforced resignations over the past months. Last week, the leader of the Green party and climate minister, Eamon Ryan, called it a day, citing the toll the job had taken and expressing a wish to focus on his family.

In April, the country’s Taoiseach (prime minister) Leo Varadkar stepped down. Varadkar, the country’s first openly gay and then youngest leader, was a trailblazer – but ultimately, the trail burnt him out. In his resignation speech, he acknowledged that he was “no longer the best person” for the job.

Both men jumped – neither was pushed by political rivals.

In fact, what happened next was even more striking.

Ryan’s ambitious Deputy Leader, Catherine Martin, who challenged his position in a bruising 2020 internal contest, almost immediately ruled herself out as a replacement.

When Varadkar resigned, almost all his senior party colleagues declined to step up – including his deputy leader, who had previously competed against Varadkar for the party leadership in 2017.

This was not due to a lack of strong candidates – Varadkar’s party has been in power for more than a decade, and several of his colleagues have significant ministerial experience.

In the end, only one politician – Simon Harris – put their name forward to take Varadkar’s place, and he was duly appointed party leader and Taoiseach.

Think about that: The guy currently running Ireland got the job in large part because nobody else wanted it.

There is no simple collective explanation for these decisions.

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Barcelona Mayor Jaume Collboni (C) and councilors hang a rainbow flag on the balcony of the town hall on the occasion of the International LGBT Pride Day in Barcelona, Spain, 28 June 2024. EPA-EFE/QUIQUE GARCIA

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For more policy news, don’t miss this week’s Tech Brief, Agrifod Brief, and Economy Brief.

Look out for…

  • Hungary takes over the Council of the EU on Monday.
  • France holds the first round of snap parliamentary election on Sunday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

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