On RTE last night we had the last Television debate between the 7 candidates ahead of the canvasing blackout at 2pm Wednesday. The debate was on the Fronth Line Program hosted by Pat Kenny but the questions came from the audience.
The following is what Pat Stacey of the Evening Herald thought of the debate
RTE'S promos for the Frontline Presidential Debate implied that this was THE BIG ONE. The only one with a studio audience. who set the questions and therefore the tone, and the only one hosted by Pat Kenny.
It turned out to be true. This was the liveliest, most entertaining debate of them all, boasting one bombshell and one complete implosion. You wish it had come earlier in the campaign. So how did the seven fare?
Sean Gallagher The old wisdom that television debates ultimately have a negligible effect on how the public votes in an election will be tested to the limit after the current frontrunner's chaotic performance last night.
Gallagher, who looked stiff, tense, and uneasy throughout the evening, hadn't been handling brickbats about his involvement with Fianna Fail or the toxic Charlie Haughey at all well, while Pat Kenny's persistent questioning about how certain monies had come to "lay resting" in one of his accounts ("How can you mislay 89 grand") left him looking rattled and unconvincing.
And then came Chequegate, delivered by Martin McGuinness, who claimed he'd earlier spoken to a man who told him Gallagher had visited his house to personally pick up a €5,000 cheque for a Fianna Fail nosh-up Gallagher had personally organised at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, and also to drop off a photograph from the event.
Gallagher stated that he man rented an office to Gerry Adams during the General Election
When pressed by Kenny, Gallagher first said he had "no recollection" of this man giving him any cheque. Under increasing pressure from McGuinness, he conceded: "I may well have delivered the photographs. If he gave me an envelope..." - cue hoots of laughter from the audience and an awkward pause from Gallagher - "..if he gave me the cheque it was made out to Fianna Fail headquarters and it was delivered and that was that. It was nothing to do with me"
Oops. Afraid it had, Sean.
A week is a long time in politics; so, sometimes, is 90 minutes.
RATING 3/10
Michael D Higgins Kenny asked if he hadn't been "too presidential" by not engaging in attack on the other candidates. Higgins said he hadn't, thereby proving, again, that he's probably the most presidential of the lot. There was nothing thrown at him here that he couldn't handle and he effectively niggled away at Gallagher.
This was a good, solid performance during which Higgins used charm and self-deprecating quios about his age - deadpanning that Gallagher's labyrinthine explanation of his accounting systemwas a little "too complicated" for him - to great effect.
RATING 6/10
Martin McGuinness For much of the evening he was Gallagher's main tormented, keeping him wriggling on the hook by venturing that there was "something rotten" at the heart of Fianna Fail and that Gallagher was "up to his neck in it".
But he simply unravelled when he found himself staring down the barrel of a direct question: does he regard the IRA killings in Northern Ireland as murder or casualties of war?
He couldn't give a straight answer and fell back on a well-rehearsed routine which continually referred to dealing with the reality that there was "a conflict"
There was one deeply disingenuous incident of double-speak after Kenny had asked him if he could bring himself to say he believes Jean McConville was murdered. "I can bring myself to say the family of Jean McConville believe she was murdered" he said.
Those who were always guaranteed to vote for McGuinness are still guaranteed to vote for him. But a significant number of transfers might wander after this performance.
RATING 4/10
David Norris Norris's performance, which showed some of the sparkle of old, will have done him no harm at all. He was witty, funny, erudite, interjected intelligently and made one fine point about the possibility of polls being self-fulfilling prophecies.
He delivered a standout moment - and the biggest laugh of the night - when Kenny asked all candidates if, should they be elected, they'd resign if damaging information about them came to light : "I'm sorry to disappoint the Irish public but the closet is absolutely empty!"
RATING 6/10
Gay Mitchell You can take as many pops at the other candidates as you like during a debate - and Gay Mitchell has been popping like a bowl of Rice Krispies on every occasion. You can take a pop at the host if you wish, and he did so here, criticising Kenny for the way he was conducting proceedings.
But the one thing you can never, ever do is take a pop at the studio audience for asking the wrong sort of questions. Mitchell did just that, losing his temper with a rant about there weren't enough questions being asked about the presidency.
It was a spectacularly bad call. Mitchell has a brilliant understanding of the Constitution and the role of the president, but his tetchiness has continually undermined his strong points. He imploded last night in a puff of purple pique.
RATING 2/10
Mary Davis With Kenny seemingly uninterested in following up Davis's role on various State boards, she had a quiet night of it and acquitted herself well, especially when reinforcing her claim that the constitutional amendment to widen the powers of the Oireachtas inquiries could dilute the rights of citizens. But it's probably too late to have any significant impact. If only she and some of the other candidates had been this coherent earlier in the campaign.
RATING 5/10
Dana Rosemary Scallon The wheels had already come off Dana's campaign long before her tyre blew out. This was another utterly inept and irrelevant performance, which once again suggested she's not entirely sure exactly what she'd be signing up for it the electorate went collectively mad overnight and voted her in. The silliest comment last night has to be. "I don't trust the Dublin 4 polls. I trust the people I meet on the street." Dear, oh, dear.
RATING 0/10
Pat Kenny He might be to light entertainment what Derek Mooney is to cage fighting but when he's in his proper settings, Kenny is the best TV current affairs broadcaster we have.
He was in his proper settings here and he marshalled the evening brilliantly, cutting the candidates off when they waffled, abruptly shunting them back on track when they threatened to veer off and never, not for a moment, putting up with any nonsense, yet sill giving them time and space to talk. An excellent performance
RATING 10/10
Due to the horrible weather in Dublin last night the final debate was ideal television viewing. Sean Gallagher reminded me of rabbit in the headlights when McGuinsess brought up the cheque, the more he tried to distance himself the bigger the hole got. This has to damage his push for the Aras, but how much will be known on Friday. Higgins was Higgins and as usual never put a foot wrong. McGuinness was good in attack but his defence is woeful. Norris seems to have admitted defeat and just turned up last night to ensure that he gets enough votes to be able to claim back his expenses (must get 12.5% of the vote with transfers). I think Mitchell, Davis and Scallon were written off before this debate but Mitchell put the final nail in this coffin with his attack on the host and the audience.
Still a two horse race but much closer than the weekend polls suggested. It will be a very interesting count on Friday.
The following is what Pat Stacey of the Evening Herald thought of the debate
RTE'S promos for the Frontline Presidential Debate implied that this was THE BIG ONE. The only one with a studio audience. who set the questions and therefore the tone, and the only one hosted by Pat Kenny.
It turned out to be true. This was the liveliest, most entertaining debate of them all, boasting one bombshell and one complete implosion. You wish it had come earlier in the campaign. So how did the seven fare?
Sean Gallagher The old wisdom that television debates ultimately have a negligible effect on how the public votes in an election will be tested to the limit after the current frontrunner's chaotic performance last night.
Gallagher, who looked stiff, tense, and uneasy throughout the evening, hadn't been handling brickbats about his involvement with Fianna Fail or the toxic Charlie Haughey at all well, while Pat Kenny's persistent questioning about how certain monies had come to "lay resting" in one of his accounts ("How can you mislay 89 grand") left him looking rattled and unconvincing.
And then came Chequegate, delivered by Martin McGuinness, who claimed he'd earlier spoken to a man who told him Gallagher had visited his house to personally pick up a €5,000 cheque for a Fianna Fail nosh-up Gallagher had personally organised at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, and also to drop off a photograph from the event.
Gallagher stated that he man rented an office to Gerry Adams during the General Election
When pressed by Kenny, Gallagher first said he had "no recollection" of this man giving him any cheque. Under increasing pressure from McGuinness, he conceded: "I may well have delivered the photographs. If he gave me an envelope..." - cue hoots of laughter from the audience and an awkward pause from Gallagher - "..if he gave me the cheque it was made out to Fianna Fail headquarters and it was delivered and that was that. It was nothing to do with me"
Oops. Afraid it had, Sean.
A week is a long time in politics; so, sometimes, is 90 minutes.
RATING 3/10
This was a good, solid performance during which Higgins used charm and self-deprecating quios about his age - deadpanning that Gallagher's labyrinthine explanation of his accounting systemwas a little "too complicated" for him - to great effect.
RATING 6/10
But he simply unravelled when he found himself staring down the barrel of a direct question: does he regard the IRA killings in Northern Ireland as murder or casualties of war?
He couldn't give a straight answer and fell back on a well-rehearsed routine which continually referred to dealing with the reality that there was "a conflict"
There was one deeply disingenuous incident of double-speak after Kenny had asked him if he could bring himself to say he believes Jean McConville was murdered. "I can bring myself to say the family of Jean McConville believe she was murdered" he said.
Those who were always guaranteed to vote for McGuinness are still guaranteed to vote for him. But a significant number of transfers might wander after this performance.
RATING 4/10
David Norris Norris's performance, which showed some of the sparkle of old, will have done him no harm at all. He was witty, funny, erudite, interjected intelligently and made one fine point about the possibility of polls being self-fulfilling prophecies.
He delivered a standout moment - and the biggest laugh of the night - when Kenny asked all candidates if, should they be elected, they'd resign if damaging information about them came to light : "I'm sorry to disappoint the Irish public but the closet is absolutely empty!"
RATING 6/10
Gay Mitchell You can take as many pops at the other candidates as you like during a debate - and Gay Mitchell has been popping like a bowl of Rice Krispies on every occasion. You can take a pop at the host if you wish, and he did so here, criticising Kenny for the way he was conducting proceedings.
But the one thing you can never, ever do is take a pop at the studio audience for asking the wrong sort of questions. Mitchell did just that, losing his temper with a rant about there weren't enough questions being asked about the presidency.
It was a spectacularly bad call. Mitchell has a brilliant understanding of the Constitution and the role of the president, but his tetchiness has continually undermined his strong points. He imploded last night in a puff of purple pique.
RATING 2/10
Mary Davis With Kenny seemingly uninterested in following up Davis's role on various State boards, she had a quiet night of it and acquitted herself well, especially when reinforcing her claim that the constitutional amendment to widen the powers of the Oireachtas inquiries could dilute the rights of citizens. But it's probably too late to have any significant impact. If only she and some of the other candidates had been this coherent earlier in the campaign.
RATING 5/10
Dana Rosemary Scallon The wheels had already come off Dana's campaign long before her tyre blew out. This was another utterly inept and irrelevant performance, which once again suggested she's not entirely sure exactly what she'd be signing up for it the electorate went collectively mad overnight and voted her in. The silliest comment last night has to be. "I don't trust the Dublin 4 polls. I trust the people I meet on the street." Dear, oh, dear.
RATING 0/10
Pat Kenny He might be to light entertainment what Derek Mooney is to cage fighting but when he's in his proper settings, Kenny is the best TV current affairs broadcaster we have.
He was in his proper settings here and he marshalled the evening brilliantly, cutting the candidates off when they waffled, abruptly shunting them back on track when they threatened to veer off and never, not for a moment, putting up with any nonsense, yet sill giving them time and space to talk. An excellent performance
RATING 10/10
Due to the horrible weather in Dublin last night the final debate was ideal television viewing. Sean Gallagher reminded me of rabbit in the headlights when McGuinsess brought up the cheque, the more he tried to distance himself the bigger the hole got. This has to damage his push for the Aras, but how much will be known on Friday. Higgins was Higgins and as usual never put a foot wrong. McGuinness was good in attack but his defence is woeful. Norris seems to have admitted defeat and just turned up last night to ensure that he gets enough votes to be able to claim back his expenses (must get 12.5% of the vote with transfers). I think Mitchell, Davis and Scallon were written off before this debate but Mitchell put the final nail in this coffin with his attack on the host and the audience.
Still a two horse race but much closer than the weekend polls suggested. It will be a very interesting count on Friday.
Like your post on the Frontline debate, whilst I never intended to vote for Sean Gallagher I can understand why people have dropped him in favour of Micheal D. In my humble opinion he was the only candidate with integrity and he never wavered when people tried to get a reaction from him. I think he will be a good president, what do you think?
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