Differing fortunes for Government parties as vote fragments in Dublin

FG now largest party in capital, while Labour has gone from 18 seats to just two or three

Josepha Madigan TD talks to beaten FG running mate Alan Shatter. Photograph: Barbara Lindberg
Josepha Madigan TD talks to beaten FG running mate Alan Shatter. Photograph: Barbara Lindberg

Fine Gael’s performance in the capital marked something of a bright spot for the party as it lost ground elsewhere across the country. It is now the most popular party in Dublin, taking an expected 14 seats out of 44 across the 11 constituencies in city and county.

Labour was the largest party in Dublin in terms of Dáil seats after the 2011 election, with 18 seats, but will return just two, or possibly three, deputies from the capital to the 32nd Dáil.

A number of counts are continuing, such as Dublin Bay North, while recounts have been called in Dublin South-West and Dublin South-Central.

Fianna Fáil made gains in the capital and is expected to take six seats, with an outside chance of a seventh.

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It took just one in Dublin at the previous election, but lost it in the Dublin West byelection caused by the death of former minister for finance Brian Lenihan. Sinn Féin also made gains this time out and will take six seats, possibly seven.

Tight vote management saw Fine Gael maximise its support, across south Dublin in particular, and it took two out of four seats in Dublin Bay South, with outgoing TD Eoghan Murphy and running mate Kate O'Connell both getting elected.

Also in Dublin, Fine Gael took two out of an available three seats in Dún Laoghaire, with Mary Mitchell O'Connor and Maria Bailey both successful. This means that the party now holds three out of four seats in the constituency, with outgoing Ceann Comhairle Sean Barrett automatically returned to the Dáil.

Fine Gael also narrowly missed out on two seats in three-seat Dublin Rathdown, where Josepha Madigan was elected but former minister for justice Alan Shatter lost his seat to the Green Party's Catherine Martin. Ms Martin will be joined in the Dáil by Green Party leader Eamon Ryan, elected for Dublin Bay South.

Fine Gael has called a full recount in Dublin South-West, where Colm Brophy was initially elected but Anne-Marie Dermody lost out to Independent Katherine Zappone for the last seat.

While it did not take two seats in any northside constituencies – with party deputy leader James Reilly losing his seat in Dublin Fingal – Fine Gael gained one in Dublin North-West through Noel Rock and held on to Paschal Donohoe's Dublin Central seat.

In line with its poor performance across the country, Labour held just two seats in Dublin, with Aodhán Ó Ríordáin fighting for a third in Dublin Bay North.

Tánaiste Joan Burton, whose seat in Dublin West was seen as under threat, held on, as did Brendan Ryan in Dublin Fingal. Labour candidates who lost included Kevin Humphreys in Dublin Bay South, Alex White in Dublin Rathdown, Joanna Tuffy in Dublin Mid-West, John Lyons in Dublin North-West, Joe Costello in Dublin Central and Eric Byrne in Dublin South-Central.

Labour also failed to hang on to party seats held by retiring TDs such as Eamon Gilmore, Pat Rabbitte, Robert Dowds, Seán Kenny and Michael Conaghan.

Fianna Fáil's gains came in Dublin Fingal, Dublin Bay North, Dublin Bay South, Dublin West, Dublin Mid-West and Dublin South-West. It has also called a recount in Dublin South-Central, where its candidate, Catherine Ardagh, was initially beaten to the last seat by Bríd Smith of Anti-Austerity Alliance-People Before Profit.

The AAA-PBP will have more seats than Labour in Dublin, with Paul Murphy in Dublin South-West, Richard Boyd Barrett in Dún Laoghaire, Gino Kenny in Dublin Mid-West and Ruth Coppinger in Dublin West. Ms Smith was initially deemed elected but faces the recount in Dublin South-Central, while John Lyons is also competing for the PBP-AAA in Dublin Bay North.