Allowances for TDs and Senators too restricted, says Norris

‘We got €311 in wage restitution. Oh jolly, gee, wonderful. . . it is less than €1 a day’

Senator David Norris has lashed out at the treatment of those elected to the Seanad, referring to their remuneration as 'demeaning'

Members of the Oireachtas are being treated like "cattle'' and are subject to ridiculous restrictions on allowances, Independent Senator David Norris has said.

“Then we have the abolition of the long-serving increment,’’ he told the Seanad.

"I don't know of another job in Ireland that does not get a long-serving increment and I believe it was illegal to remove that.''

He said on Wednesday it was time Senators stood up and asserted their dignity.

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He said if members of the Dáil and Seanad did not work effectively the public would very soon respond to that.

“We got €311 in wage restitution,’’ he said. “Oh jolly, gee, wonderful. . . it is less than €1 a day.’’

Mr Norris said the chief executives of companies were paid multiples of what Taoiseach Enda Kenny was paid.

“Enda Kenny is making decisions, whether you agree with them or not, for the entire country.’’

Mr Norris said when he was first elected to the Seanad 30 years ago it was a very gentlemanly place, with people drifting in and out, and he had been blamed for pushing it in the direction of a full-time professional job.

Senators are paid €65,000 annually.

Earlier, Sinn Féin Senator Paul Gavan said Minister for Finance Michael Noonan should come to the House to debate income equality.

He said the Irish Congress of Trade Unions had produced a document detailing the pay of chief executives. In some cases they had increased by "a staggering 373 per cent'' in the past six years.

Mr Gavan said Government figures showed that 10 per cent of the population now owned 54 per cent of the wealth in Ireland.

“We have a crisis in income inequality,’’ he added.

Michael O'Regan

Michael O'Regan

Michael O’Regan is a former parliamentary correspondent of The Irish Times