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Irish governing Fine Gael, opposition Social Democrats share by-election spoils

Irish governing Fine Gael, opposition Social Democrats share by-election spoils

By Padraic HalpinSun, May 24, 2026 at 7:55 PM UTC

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FILE PHOTO: A person walks past Government Buildings, the Department of the Taoiseach (Prime Minister) ahead of Ireland's general election, in Dublin, Ireland November 27, 2024. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo

By Padraic Halpin

DUBLIN, May 24 (Reuters) - Ireland's governing centre-right Fine Gael and the Social Democrats, one of the country's smaller centre-left parties, won two by-elections on ‌Sunday, while the reputed head of a well-known crime family missed out on ‌election again.

The result was a blow to left-wing Irish nationalist party Sinn Fein, which has established itself as one ​of Ireland's three largest parties and hoped to gain a seat in the Dublin Central area where leader Mary Lou McDonald is a sitting lawmaker.

A poor showing for the other governing coalition party, Fianna Fail, in both by-elections could also add to pressure on Prime Minister Micheal Martin ‌from some of his own ⁠lawmakers.

The victory in Dublin for the Social Democrats' Daniel Ennis adds to the momentum the party gained at the last general election 18 months ⁠ago when it doubled its number of seats to 11 in the 174-seat chamber.

It is now the fourth-largest party in parliament, just over a decade after its formation.

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While the outcome suggested the Social ​Democrats won ​over some of Sinn Fein's progressive voters, the ​main opposition party also lost some ‌of its traditional working-class vote to increasingly popular right-wing candidates, as it did in 2024.

Gerry Hutch, who was named by an Irish court in 2023 as the head of a well-known crime family in Ireland, won 11% of the first preference vote to come fourth. Hutch, who ran partly on an anti-immigrant platform, narrowly missed out on one of the four ‌Dublin Central seats at the 2024 general election.

Hutch has ​denied being the leader of a crime gang in ​media interviews.

Former junior minister Sean Kyne ​of Fine Gael became only the fourth government party candidate since 1982 ‌to win a by-election. His victory in ​the western county of ​Galway retained the coalition's relatively comfortable majority in parliament.

Independent Ireland, a relatively new rural-focused party of the right that was a prominent supporter of a recent wave of ​public protest against surging fuel ‌prices, ran Kyne closest.

The results underlined the fractured nature of the Irish electorate ​with four parties from across the political spectrum competing closely for the two ​seats.

(Reporting by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Nia Williams)

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Source: “AOL Breaking”

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