Ex-Fianna Fáil councillor attacks party over political strategy

Mary Fitzpatrick claims party has missed opportunities and risks long-term decline

Fianna Fáil’s Mary Fitzpatrick has attacked the party for its current political strategy. File photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill/The Irish Times
Fianna Fáil’s Mary Fitzpatrick has attacked the party for its current political strategy. File photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill/The Irish Times

Former Dublin city councillor for Fianna Fáil Mary Fitzpatrick has launched a heated attack on the party.

Ms Fitzpatrick, who intends on contesting the next general election for Fianna Fáil, said the party has missed opportunities and its recovery is becoming more elusive.

Ms Fitzpatrick said: “Fianna Fáil’s senior strategists should stop being defensive, recognise its failures, and change its electoral strategy if it is to stave off long-term decline and avoid finding itself a small, niche, rural [predominantly male] party after the next general election.

“For Fianna Fáil to achieve recovery it must first recognise that its post-2011 strategy has failed, in part.”

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Ms Fitzpatrick said the party’s electoral plans have failed most in Dublin.

She also cited an article in The Irish Times about Fianna Fáil's electoral future.

‘Party was decimated’

In a post on her website, Ms Fitzpatrick wrote: “The party was decimated in 2011 and there are no sitting TDs in Dublin or in half the country’s constituencies. So of course there are new faces and there are also longer serving faces.

“One of the only upsides of the 2011 Fianna Fáil wipe-out was that, for the first time in generations, Fianna Fáil has space for new people, fresh energy and fresh ideas. However, to construe the presence of new faces as a sign of real change or real recovery is a dangerous delusion.”

The former councillor said the party’s current strategy “lacks ambition, smacks of arrogance, is out of touch with the feelings of members and supporters in Dublin and is ultimately defeatist”.

“It is unacceptable for anybody in Fianna Fáil to decide it will take until 2021 or 2026 for Fianna Fáil to recover - the electorate should not have to wait that long, the electorate and members will not wait that long. The architects of that strategy need to go back to the drawing board instead of embracing defeat.”