Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 

Keaveney and Doherty clash on NAMA 21.09.09

DONEGAL politicians have clashed on NAMA with Fianna Fáil Senator Cecilia Keaveney calling the bank rescue scheme "good for Inishowen" while Sinn Féin Senator Pearse Doherty dubbed it "a bailout for the greediest in Irish society".
Senator Cecilia Keaveney described the proposal to spend €54 billion on toxic bank loans as good news for the local economy.
“Since the country’s financial difficulties began a year ago, local businesses have suffered with their access to credit from banks being severely hampered. This has put businesses and employers in Inishowen and all over Donegal under severe pressure and has resulted in the failure of enterprises and an increase in unemployment," she said.
“NAMA will ensure that credit flows again to viable businesses and households in Donegal by freeing up the banks to lend again. This is essential for our economic recovery and to secure jobs and businesses.”
The Moville-based senator said NAMA was "not about bailing out the banks" but about "securing the flow of credit for Donegal businesses and households".
“If Irish banks were allowed to fail it would have devastating consequences for us all. It could result in the loss of savings for customers and would undermine confidence in the whole sector requiring even greater intervention to repair the damage," she added. But Senator Doherty and Fine Gael Deputy Joe McHugh see things in starkly different terms. Senator Doherty said the biggest losers if NAMA is adopted, would be the unemployed, ordinary mortgage holders and the least well off who would be "hit by savage Budget cuts". He called for nationalisation of the main banks and the development of a State bank.
“There is no doubt whatsoever about who Fianna Fáil and the Greens are serving with this rotten Bill. It is a bailout for the greediest in Irish society – the bankers and the speculators whose boundless greed has
Senator Pearse Doherty and Senator Cecilia Keaveney
devastated the Irish economy.
“Throughout the Celtic Tigers years, Fianna Fáil-led Governments pampered this elite group. They allowed them to benefit from massive tax breaks at unknown cost to the State. They allowed them to determine the State’s housing policy – a policy which was no policy but to let the market drive everything. And boy did that market drive. It drove property prices to unreal and unsustainable levels.
“It drove a frenzy of greed for profitable property, inducing many who could not afford to do so, to borrow to buy in the grossly inflated market. It drove debt to levels previously unknown in this country. It was fuelled by cheap loans supplied by a banking system corrupted by the culture of greed that saw massive salaries, bonuses and perks lavished at all senior levels in the financial institutions. And finally the locomotive was driven into a wall and we are now left to deal with the train wreck that is the Irish economy," said Senator Doherty.
Meanwhilel, Deputy McHugh said it would be the ordinary people who would pay for NAMA and "failed property developments". "Half a million residents of this island are unemployed, and the Government is introducing a Bill that imposes a debt of €22,500 on every Irish citizen.
"Britain bailed out its banks some months ago, and today in London, banks are making the same mistakes that they made in the past – uncosted loans, 110% mortgages, and bonuses. Ireland must not make the same mistake. We need to change our banks, not restore them," he said.
Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home