
2 0 September 2016
political group in the European Parliament, the
EPP-ED. He was also author of the European
Parliament's Annual Report on Human Rights in
the World 2004. He returned to national politics
in 2007.
In June 2010, Coveney and a number of other
front-bench glitterati stated that they had no
confidence in their underpowered party leader,
Enda Kenny. Fellow Cork TD Jim O'Keeffe sug-
gested Coveney could be a compromise
successor. Following a blistering takeout driven
by Big Phil Hogan, a confidence motion in the
leader was won. Coveney made a confusing call
for party unity and was re-appointed to the
front bench as spokesperson on Transport.
In March 2011 he became Minister for Agricul-
ture, Food and the Marine in Enda Kenny's
coalition government dealing solidly enough
with debacles such as the horse-meat scandal
in 2013. Though apparently a passionate
believer in the need to address the reality of cli-
mate change – the Jesuits don’t do climate
deniers, Coveney was a patsy for the IFA’s suc-
cessful campaign to expand the Irish dairy herd
by over 300,000 cows over five years, “while
maintaining the existing carbon footprint of the
agriculture sector” – a nonsense, he must have
well known. To defend the environmental sell-
out Coveney claimed that higher yields per
animal would somehow magically offset the
massive increase in our national herd.
This definitively suggests that Coveney will
pander to important vested interests despite
the ethical pull of noblesse oblige, if it is expe-
dient – and he can get away with it politically:
no idealist this suave dynast.
Just as bad, Coveney was
accused of supporting big
earners under the Single Farm
Payment at the expense of
smaller farmers with low
Single Farm Payments (SFP)
farmers with low payments
sacrificing themselves to sup-
port farmers in the east of the
country with big payments.
Coveney was also appointed
as Minister for Defence as
part of a cabinet reshuffle in
2014. He published a bullish
White Paper which proposed
"developing relationships"
with the foreign and security
aims of "the EU, OSCE and NATO Partnerships for
Peace".
Coveney attended a meeting of the Bilder-
berg Group in Copenhagen in 2014. An internet
video shows him being shown around by an
avuncular if harassed Peter Sutherland to
whom he is duly deferential. He was appointed
Campaign Director for the referendums on EU
Stability and Marraige Equality.
Delegated by Kenny as one of three
negotiators with Independents following
2016’s uncertain election result Coveney
countered Leo Varadkar’s impolitic denial
of the feasibility of a Fianna Fáil minority
administration. He became the new Min-
ister for Housing, Planning and Local
Government in May 2016.
Early in his tenure in the new job he put
through legislation to suspend inflamma-
tory water charges for nine months, though
his choice of the superannuated if allegedly
safe Joe O’Toole to chair a committee looking at
alternatives backfired when the former Labour
Senator attacked the regressive approach of
the left to the charges, and had to be carted off
the field. He also had to sort out the mess over
changes to domestic waste charges, managing
to put it all off for a year, almost as if he didn’t
care about the principle here either.
Writing in the Irish Independent he has said
his priorities include to:
•
Comprehensively address the homelessness
issue;
•
arrest the growing affordability gap for many
households looking for housing;
•
drive the rental sector towards providing a
range of quality accommodation;
• deliver housing in a way that supports, and
does not direct, economic growth; and
•
achieve wider objectives, such as the need to
support proper planning and the creation of
sustainable communities across the entire
country that people want to live and work in.
Inheriting the Housing Department from mav-
erick Alan Kelly, Simon Coveney is faced with
the biggest challenges facing the government
today - of a hous-
ing shortage and
homelessness.
Now the almost
biblical 100 days’
set for what every-
one in FG said
would be publica-
tion of the most
ambitious action
plan for housing in
the history of the
state has passed
and a report that
the media deemed exciting – belatedly - pub-
lished, it’s appropriate to look at what he’s
actually planning to do.
After he pointedly recognised that there was
a housing emergency Coveney undertook to
produce a housing plan within 100 days of
taking office. Though he missed his own dead-
line, his €5bn Action Plan for Housing and
Homelessness was, he claimed, a “really ambi-
tious and far-reaching initiative by Government
to provide homes for people” over the next five
years or so. The “multi-stranded, action-ori-
ented approach” includes several new
initiatives to tackle the twin problems of home-
lessness and lack of affordability by prioritising
social housing, making it more attractive to
rent (rather than buy) housing and identifying
sites in State ownership where mixed-tenure
housing estates could be built in the short to
medium term. There is nothing in the plan that
seems to reflect any special insight from Cov-
eney himself and he seems to be mouthing the
views of his senior civil servants whose imagi-
nation for good planning has always been
circumscribed by an incapacity to value quality
rather than quantity, to favour the public over
the vested private interest. There is no sign he
intends to reverse Alan Kelly’s plan to reduce
the minimum size for apartments, a measure
which serves primarily developers and fails to
recognise the obvious overhang of apartments
of a quality much worse than that in most West-
ern European capitals.
The Departmental plan aims to increase con-
struction to at least 25,000 new homes a year
by 2020. In 1997 housing output was 90,000
units so in itself that may not secure Coveney’s
legacy. Indeed IBEC which seems superglued
to the Departmental ear prognosticates a popu-
lation explosion – and why wouldn't it? In its
part-Maxol-sponsored report, ‘Connected: A
Prosperous Island of 10 million people’ (July
2016) it predicted a 100% increase in the coun-
try’s population by 2050.
Gavin Daly, a Luxembourg-based planning
researcher, comments: “if the history of strate-
gies in Ireland is any yardstick, we should not
get too carried away about Rebuilding Ireland
actually ever being implemented and it will
most likely remain just a paper strategy. All of
the targets in it seem hopelessly optimistic and
the funding proposals tenuous. It is interesting,
however, that its publication was uncritically
welcomed by pretty much everyone from the
Construction Industry Federation to the Peter
McVerry Trust – for in the teeth of a ‘crisis’ who
could be against a housing strategy?”. Daly
considers the anti-negativity mantra is to be
Though apparently a
passionate believer in the
need to address the reality
of climate change Coveney
was a patsy for the IFA’s
successful campaign to
expand the Irish dairy herd
by over 300,000 cows
Priorities include to comprehensively
address the homelessness issue
NEWS