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Stalemate

Water charges high on agenda as Enda and Micheál gear up for crunch talks

The Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil leaders will be mulling over government options with their respective parliamentary parties today.

THE FUTURE OF IRISH Water looks likely to be up for discussion in coalition talks as pressure grows on Fine Gael to do business with Fianna Fáil.

The two parties are regrouping today for the first time since the election, which saw the outgoing coalition lose its majority by a significant margin.

Taoiseach Enda Kenny indicated yesterday that Fine Gael is open to talking to Fianna Fáil, despite repeatedly ruling out a deal between them in the part.

With Fine Gael now 29 seats short of the 79 needed for an overall Dáil majority, joining forces with Fianna Fáil appears to be its only choice for forming a stable government.

But water charges are expected to complicate any deal between the old civil war rivals.

Fianna Fáil has pledged to phase out and abolish the utility if in power, calling it a red line issue in negotiations, while Fine Gael has repeatedly refused to reverse its position on the matter.

Minister for Agriculture Simon Coveney appeared to backtrack on Wednesday, however, saying his party “would be willing” to discuss the issue of water charges in post-election talks.

Speaking the following day, Kenny insisted that people should continue to pay their water bills, telling reporters he thought it would be “a seriously costly and seriously historic mistake to move away from having a single national utility”.

Mandate

Fianna Fáil TD Dara Calleary is one of a number of deputies to have questioned the legitimacy of that stance, however.

Earlier this week, he pointed out that the great majority of TDs in the 32nd Dáil now have a mandate to abolish water charges.

“We were very clear during the campaign that we would abolish Irish Water, that we would suspend water charges for five years [and] would not give refunds,” he said of his party.

More than 61% of Irish Water customers (928,000 households) have now paid their charges, according to the most recent figures from the utility.

This compares to 55% at the end of the second cycle and 44% at the end of the first billing cycle.

Irish Water said yesterday that it “remains absolutely focused on the vital job of fixing Ireland’s water services”.

“Customers are continuing to engage with us to make payments on their accounts and more customers are paying with each billing cycle,” it said.

The aftermath: Fianna Fáil toasts success, as Fine Gael looks increasingly chaotic

Read: We now have more female TDs than ever before – but do we really have gender quotas to thank?

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