Ireland will hold a general election on November 29, Taoiseach Simon Harris said, as his conservative Fine Gael party, in office since 2011, seeks a record fourth term.
The prime minister confirmed to RTÉ television on Wednesday that he would dissolve parliament on Friday on his return from an EU summit in Hungary.
“I hope we will have polling day on November 29,” said Harris, 38, who took over as Taoiseach in April this year following the surprise resignation of Leo Varadkar as premier.
Nicknamed the “TikTok Taoiseach” for his social media savvy, Harris has revitalised the fortunes of a lacklustre-looking party and has travelled the country tirelessly in the past six months. Fine Gael is the most popular party, on 26 per cent, according to an Ireland Thinks poll at the weekend.
The current coalition of Fine Gael, centrist Fianna Fáil and the Green party, has been in power since 2020 and its term ends in March 2025.
But Harris had long been expected to go to the country this month after a giveaway budget, boosted by the huge surpluses Ireland has enjoyed from corporate taxes paid by global tech and pharma groups.
The next government will have to grapple with the possibility that President-elect Donald Trump could impose tariffs and slash US corporation tax with potentially far-reaching results for Ireland’s open economic model.
Fianna Fáil, Harris’s party’s former arch rival, has 20 per cent support according to the Ireland Thinks poll for the Sunday Independent.
Sinn Féin, the main opposition party, goes into the election having suffered a spectacular collapse in support. Until a year ago, the pro-Irish unity party had been seen as a shoo-in to lead the next government based on its promises to fix Ireland’s chronic housing crisis.
But its popularity has virtually halved to around 18 per cent after alienating some of its core working-class base amid a backlash over immigration.
Harris will campaign separately from Micheál Martin, Fianna Fáil leader, as the two parties seek to pull off the delicate balancing act of being government allies but election rivals.
The housing crisis is expected to loom large and Harris has admitted that Ireland’s failure to solve key infrastructure challenges is a potential drag on economic growth.
The Green party, the junior coalition member, has only 4 per cent support, sparking speculation that independents could hold the balance of power in a new government.
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