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03 Oct 2025

Nolan says any new rural alliance must be capable of delivering results

Nolan says any new rural alliance must be capable of delivering results

Deputy Carol Nolan

INDEPENDENT TD for Laois Offaly Carol Nolan has said that debate on any new rural alliance between TD’s must remain centred on the need to deliver effective influence over agricultural and environmental policy rather than the form that such an alliance might take.

The Independent TD, who is a member of the Rural Independent Group, was speaking as speculation continues to grow around the possibility of a new rural political party being established prior to the next general election.

“If being a political party was the be all and end all and if being a political party was the best way to deliver for rural Ireland then we would not be seeing the alarm and outright fear that exists in rural Ireland because of the policies of Fianna Fail, Fine Gael and the Greens,” said Deputy Nolan.

“The fundamental problem over the last number of years has been extreme policies and the willingness of the existing political parties, including Sinn Fein, to back them to the hilt and push them through the Dáil’s legislative process.

“That is why I would be far more concerned with generating the capacity to push back against those policies rather than concentrating on and getting bogged down in suggestions about a new political party,” said Deputy Nolan

“Absolutely we do need a more cohesive rural bloc within the Dáil that can build on the great work the Rural Independent Group has done to date. We need far greater levels of co-ordination and a willingness to hit Government where it hurts should it continue to pursue what are functionally anti-rural, anti-farmer policies.

“Do we need a new rural party to do that? I remain unconvinced about that at present, but I am, as always, open to listening to everything my rural and urban colleagues across the Dáil have to say.

“The important thing here is that we make credible, persuasive arguments that can bring the public with us in our defence of Irish agriculture and the rural way of life. Political parties come and they go, but rural Ireland is here to stay,” concluded Deputy Nolan.

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