
Ireland’s political landscape is broken as 2026 begins. Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael—historically centre-right—have drifted so far left that they now mirror the very policies they once opposed: unchecked immigration, escalating green taxes, and cultural shifts that alienate the majority. The November 2024 election delivered another tired coalition, yet public frustration boils over.
Eurobarometer polls from autumn 2025 reveal 26% of Irish people now rank immigration as the top national issue—up 8 points since spring—with 66% demanding stricter controls. Arrivals topped 125,300 in the year to April 2025, net migration added 59,700, and €1.2 billion was budgeted for migrant hotels while housing completions limped to ~32,500–35,000 for the full year. Grocery prices rose 4%, energy bills surged, and youth emigration hit record highs as young Irish flee unaffordable rents and no future.
X is ablaze with #IrelandIsFull outrage, reflecting a silent majority fed up with woke education, fiscal recklessness, and border policies that prioritise outsiders over citizens. The establishment offers no real alternative—only more of the same.
A true right-of-centre party—fiscally responsible, immigration-restrictive, culturally confident, and pro-worker—could finally give voice to ordinary Irish people. Without it, the drift continues, division deepens, and Ireland loses its identity. Time for a conservative revival before it’s too late.
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