Editor in Chief: Moh. Reza Huwaida Friday, April 26th, 2024

Counting Begins in Ireland Election After Exit Poll Predicts Tie

Counting Begins in Ireland Election After  Exit Poll Predicts Tie

DUBLIN - Ireland has begun counting votes in a national election that an exit poll indicated might show an historic breakthrough for left-wing nationalists Sinn Fein but leave a fractured political landscape with no clear path to a governing coalition.
In a major realignment, Sinn Fein support surged by 50 percent to bring it into joint first place on 22 percent with Fine Gael and Fianna Fail, the two centre-right parties that have dominated Irish politics for a century, according to the poll released on Saturday evening after voting ended.
But Sinn Fein, the former political wing of the Irish Republican Army which has reinvented itself as the country's main left-wing party, is likely to fall behind the other two because it fielded fewer candidates for parliament.
"I think it's the most extraordinary exit poll in the history of state and the most extraordinary election in the history of the state ... because of the rise of Sinn Fein," said Gary Murphy, Professor of Politics at Dublin City University.
Prime Minister Leo Varadkar's Fine Gael and rival Fianna Fail are likely to be left slugging it out for first place in terms of seats - before starting what is likely to be a tortuous process of forming a governing coalition in the 160-seat parliament.
"Obviously on these numbers it’s going to be very hard for any combination of 80 (seats) to be achieved, we’ll have to wait and see," Fine Gael minister Heather Humphreys told national broadcaster RTE.
Counting under Ireland's complex single transferable vote system began at 09:00 GMT on Sunday with some results expected from early afternoon. The final and potentially decisive seats may not be filled until Monday or even later.
The exit poll result was an improvement for Varadkar's Fine Gael, in power since 2011, after opinion polls a week ago suggested it was in third place.
But the party's strategy of focusing on economic growth and its success in negotiating an EU exit deal for neighbour Britain failed to capture the imagination of voters, who were far more focused on domestic issues like health and housing, where Sinn Fein focused. (Aljazeera)