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seanad at 100

Mary Robinson says climate crisis a ‘minority issue’ as Seanad marks centenary

She made the comments at an event to commemorate the centenary of Seanad Eireann.

FORMER PRESIDENT MARY Robinson said the climate crisis is a “minority” issue, and called for the Seanad to play a role in bringing the issues into communities.

The former senator said that the climate crisis needs to become part of people’s every day mainstream life.

She made the comments at an event to commemorate the centenary of Seanad Éireann.

The Seanad Cathaoirleach Mark Daly was joined by the former president and Senator Davis Norris to mark the event.

Robinson was 25-years-old when she became a member of the Seanad and was one of only six women who sat in the House in 1969.

Robinson, an advocate for human rights and climate justice, said the Seanad could do far more to engage climate crisis issues.

“I think a minority issue in Ireland is the climate crisis.

“It’s still a minority issue.

“People don’t talk about it around the table, they don’t talk about it enough,” she added.

“The Seanad could do far more to engage on all of the issues, including retrofitting of houses, energy issues and how to get clean energy.

“We need transformative change in less than eight years to be in the right place for 2030 to have a safe world for the future.

“Climate has become specialist subject for specialists, it isn’t.

“It’s an issue for everyone.

“The Seanad could play a real role in bringing it to communities.

“It has to be far more part of our mainstream life in a crisis sense of needing to be transformative.”

Mr Daly said the Seanad was set up in the middle in Ireland’s civil war and was established to ensure the unionist minority had a place in the new Republic.

“The concept was to make sure new that the State established democratic principles and the Seanad was one of those,” he added.

“It was probably the most diverse group of politicians that we have ever had in that it had 20 Protestant members, as well as Jewish and Quaker members.

“It was about making sure unionist minority had a place in the new State and those who found themselves on the southern side of the border and were members of that community, had a place so that their voices could be heard in the state.

“That was one of the key elements around making sure the new Seanad was representative across the board and that’s why it had such a diverse group.

“That has transitioned now to other minority voices and communities.”

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