Verona Murphy will not recognise Regional Independents technical group for Dáil vote

By Gráinne Ní Aodha, Cillian Sherlock and Cate McCurry, PA
Verona Murphy has said she will not recognise speaking time for a group of independents at the centre of a dispute that prevented the nomination of a new taoiseach.
Ceann Comhairle Verona Murphy said that, during Thursday’s proceedings, she would recognise two other technical groups but not the collection of TDs that contain independents who ed the formation of the incoming government.
She is expected to seek further advice for future sittings.
It comes as the Dáil is to reconvene a day after a chaotic row over how speaking time should be allocated to the government-d independents.
A meeting of opposition party leaders is taking place on Thursday morning in order to agree a resolution before the Dáil resumes.
Efforts to appoint a Taoiseach after November’s general election failed as the opposition disrupted proceedings to protest against the matter on Wednesday.
Central to the row is a move to allocate opposition speaking time to the independents.
Opposition parties said this would dilute the practice of holding the government to and eat into their time to raise issues.
Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin was expected to be nominated as taoiseach on Wednesday when the Dáil reconvened, as part of a coalition deal with Fine Gael, the regional independent group and Kerry brothers Michael and Danny Healy-Rae.
On Thursday morning, Mr Martin and Simon Harris said the election of a taoiseach “must happen today”.
In a t statement, the leaders said: “The formation of groups in Dáil Eireann is a matter for the Ceann Comhairle.
“Issues regarding Dáil reform and groupings can and should be discussed by a Dail reform committee.
“This can meet as early as today but proportionality must also prevail.
“The most important duty the Dail has is to elect a taoiseach and government, and both party leaders agree this must happen today.”
Welcoming Ms Murphy’s latest decision, Labour whip Duncan Smith said: “It’s positive to see the Ceann Comhairle recognising only two technical groups, both in opposition, for the purposes of today’s meeting.
“This is the solution that I and others proposed both in our submission and at numerous meetings yesterday.”
On Wednesday, several interruptions meant what would have traditionally been a day of political ceremony in the Dail never got under way, with the Ceann Comhairle halting matters four times.
Mr Martin called the disruption by opposition parties “anti-democratic” and said it was a “subversion” of the Irish constitution.
Fine Gael leader and presumptive minister for foreign affairs Mr Harris described the activities as “stunt politics on speed”.
He said: “(Sinn Fáin leader) Mary Lou McDonald came into Dail Eireann today with one intention and one intention only, to stop Micheál Martin being elected taoiseach, and therefore to deprive the people of Ireland of the outworkings of the last general election.”

Fianna Fáil TD Mary Butler said the opposition showed “a mob mentality” and “proved that they are not fit to govern”, while Sinn Fein said the government’s approach demonstrated “arrogance”.
Of the nine independents ing the government, five of them will be given government roles.
The four remaining independent TDs, former minister Michael Lowry, Barry Heneghan, Gillian Toole and Danny Healy-Rae, are looking to a technical group, a mechanism used to allocate opposition speaking time.
The leaders of five opposition parties said claiming to be in government and in opposition at the same time is “farcical”, “not tenable” and “a clear and patent absurdity”.
Richard Boyd Barrett of People Before Profit accused the government of trying to “subvert and sabotage democracy”, while Independent Ireland’s Michael Collins said the four independents wanted “their bread buttered on both ends”.
It is understood Ceann Comhairle Ms Murphy met Ms McDonald on Wednesday evening to find an agreement.
The meeting on Thursday morning is expected to seek the approval of Mr Martin and Mr Harris to the statement that independent TDs who a programme for government cannot be in opposition technical groups.
A senior source among opposition parties was optimistic the government parties would be receptive to the proposal.