The ‘Stifling’ of New Climate Politics in Ireland

Louise Fitzgerald, Paul Tobin, Charlotte Burns, Peter Eckersley

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In 2019, Ireland declared a ‘Climate Emergency’, receiving plaudits from across the political spectrum for doing so. Some argued the country was experiencing an era of ‘new climate politics’: in 2017 it had established the first Citizens’ Assembly on Climate, and in 2019 its Parliament debated a Climate Emergency Measures Bill, which was ground-breaking in its proposal to ban offshore oil and gas exploration. Yet, despite majority support for this Bill in Parliament, the minority Government blocked the legislation by refusing to grant a ‘Money Message’, a potential veto activated following indication by an independent actor that a Bill would require the appropriation of public money. We introduce the concept of ‘policy stifling’ to capture how the Money Message was used to block the Climate Emergency Measures Bill. We conduct detailed process-tracing analysis, building on elite semi-structured interviews with policy makers and campaigners involved in the process. We argue that whilst the Government’s stifling undermined the new era of elite climate politics, it simultaneously boosted an emerging grassroots climate politics movement with the potential for effecting more radical change in the longer term.
Original languageEnglish
JournalPolitics and Governance
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 19 Mar 2021

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