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Failed “Super Junior” Ministers Case Shows Reckless Disregard For Taxpayers.

Unsuccessful legal challenge raises serious questions about judgment, priorities and respect for public money.

The legal challenge taken by Deputies Mr Paul Murphy (People Before Profit) and Mr Pa Daly (Sinn Féin) concerned the attendance of so-called “super junior” ministers at Cabinet meetings. They argued that because the Constitution limits the number of full Government members to 15, allowing junior ministers to attend and participate at Cabinet went against that constitutional limit. However, the High Court rejected that argument and ruled that the attendance and participation of those ministers did not breach the Constitution.

Pictured above left → right: Mr Paul Murphy and Mr Pa Daly.
Failed “super junior” ministers case leaves taxpayers footing the bill.

The failed High Court challenge has now resulted in yet another avoidable cost for the taxpayer, and people are entitled to ask: what exactly was the justification for bringing it in the first place?

The court has already ruled that no provision of the Constitution was breached. Despite that, the public is now expected to pay 50% of the legal costs incurred by the two TDs in pursuing this unsuccessful action. At a time when families are struggling with housing costs, rising bills, overstretched health services and pressure on local communities, this is an outrageous misuse of time, energy and public money.

This case was presented as a matter of principle, but many people will see it for what it really was; a political exercise dressed up as constitutional concern. If there was no sound legal basis to succeed, then why was it necessary to pursue it at all? Why was it worth exposing the public to further legal costs without their consent? And where was the consideration for the taxpayers and voters who expect their elected representatives to show restraint, judgment and basic common sense?

Public representatives are elected to solve problems, not manufacture them. They are sent to the Dáil to fight for better housing, safer communities, improved public services and value for money for the people they represent. Instead, these two Deputies chose to embark on a failed legal challenge that has achieved nothing for their electorate except yet another bill that the public may now have to carry.

The suggestion that this action somehow served the public interest will ring hollow for many ordinary taxpayers. There is nothing responsible or commendable about pursuing costly litigation without sufficient justification and then leaving the public to absorb the obvious consequences. That is not accountability. It is not leadership and it is not respect for the people who pay the taxes and cast the votes.

The real issue here is one of priorities and judgment. At a time when every cent of public money should be spent carefully, this case showed a remarkable lack of awareness about the pressures facing ordinary working people. Voters are entitled to expect better than symbolic legal grandstanding with little apparent prospect of success.

There must now be full transparency around the total cost of this failed case, including both the portion of costs that the State has been ordered to pay and the State’s own legal expenses in defending the proceedings. Taxpayers deserve to know the full price of this unnecessary action.

This episode should serve as a warning. Taking a case of this kind without clear justification, without tangible benefit to the public, and without proper regard for the likely financial consequences reflects badly on those involved.

The electorate deserves representatives who fully respect public money, understand public priorities and exercise better judgment than this.

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