“We need more travellers in the Dail” – Calls for reserved Dáil seats for Travellers – TheLiberal.ie – Our News, Your Views



“We need more travellers in the Dail” – Calls for reserved Dáil seats for Travellers




A report examining the absence of Traveller women from Irish politics has warned that their continued underrepresentation in political life will perpetuate their broader exclusion from society.

‘Beyond Gender Quotas: Addressing the Political Exclusion of Traveller Women in Ireland’ has called for the creation of ‘nested quotas’ and Special Electoral Districts or reserved seats to tackle the exclusion of Traveller women from elected office, reports RTE.

A ‘nested quota’ would involve embedding a sub-quota for Traveller women within the current 40% gender quota for the selection of candidates for Dáil elections.

Currently, out of 1,185 elected representatives in Ireland, just one is a Traveller woman, reports RTE.

The report, prepared by Maynooth University researcher Shane Gough with the support of the Department of Children, Disability and Equality, says Ireland has an opportunity to lead internationally by adopting “intersectional, evidence-based and legally sound reforms” guaranteeing Traveller women a voice in democratic decision-making.

It says Traveller women’s exclusion from Irish politics “is neither accidental nor inevitable” and that intersectional exclusion is evident in political recruitment, candidate selection, media treatment and public discourse, reports RTE.

Traveller women who have stood for election report extreme levels of racist and sexist abuse, both online and offline, which the report describes as “a powerful deterrent to candidacy” contributing to “a regression in Traveller participation in recent election cycles.”

TheLiberal.ie won’t quit
Please support us with a small donation on PayPal!

Coordinator of the National Traveller Women’s Forum Maria Joyce said the absence of Traveller women from elected office is the result of “deeply embedded societal and institutional discrimination and party political gatekeeping,” reports RTE.

No Traveller women stood in the 2024 local elections while one Traveller man did — a ratio of one candidate per 33,000 people, compared to one candidate per 5,266 people for all migrants.

In the 104-year history of the State, only two Traveller women have ever been nominated by political parties to contest Dáil elections, reports RTE.

According to Ms Joyce, existing equality measures in Ireland — including gender quotas for candidate selection — are not reaching Traveller women, and without targeted mechanisms Traveller women will continue to be excluded.

“International evidence shows that intersectionally designed measures, like nested quotas and Special Electoral Districts — which are used in New Zealand to provide dedicated representation for the Maori population — are the most effective tools for addressing this form of exclusion,” she said, reports RTE.

Recommended measures include the establishment of a Traveller and Minorities Sub-Panel for the Seanad with a nested gender quota of at least 50%, and the introduction of a nested Traveller candidate quota within the existing gender quota for Dáil candidate selection, along with increased constituency magnitudes in future Dáil boundary revisions to facilitate the election of Traveller women.

In city and county council elections, the report recommends piloting two-seat gender nested Traveller Special Electoral Districts in councils with significant Traveller populations before rolling them out to all councils, reports RTE.

It has also proposed exploring a Traveller Special Electoral District at national level for the Dáil, modelled on the New Zealand system for the Maori population, once it is constitutionally possible.

Tell us your thoughts in the Facebook post and share this with your friends.

Share this story with a friend

Share this story

Tell us what you think on our Facebook page