Ireland elections: what happens next?

Ireland's election results seemed strangely familiar, as the two main incumbent parties retained power.

Tánaiste Micheál Martin TD and An Taoiseach Simon Harris TD during the GAA Hurling All-Ireland Senior Championship Final
(Image credit: Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Ireland’s political landscape after 29 November's general election looked “strangely familiar”, says Fintan O’Toole in The Guardian.

Familiar, because the two main incumbent parties, Micheál Martin’s Fianna Fail and Simon Harris’s Fine Gael, received almost exactly the same combined share of the vote as they did in 2020, and will therefore continue to govern.

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Emily Hohler
Politics editor

Emily has worked as a journalist for more than thirty years and was formerly Assistant Editor of MoneyWeek, which she helped launch in 2000. Prior to this, she was Deputy Features Editor of The Times and a Commissioning Editor for The Independent on Sunday and The Daily Telegraph. She has written for most of the national newspapers including The Times, the Daily and Sunday Telegraph, The Evening Standard and The Daily Mail, She interviewed celebrities weekly for The Sunday Telegraph and wrote a regular column for The Evening Standard. As Political Editor of MoneyWeek, Emily has covered subjects from Brexit to the Gaza war.

Aside from her writing, Emily trained as Nutritional Therapist following her son's diagnosis with Type 1 diabetes in 2011 and now works as a practitioner for Nature Doc, offering one-to-one consultations and running workshops in Oxfordshire.