Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael will have to decide who they see as “realistic partners” for government and it is “either going to be the Labour Party or Independents,” according to Independent TD Michael Lowry.
Newly elected TDs from the two big parties most likely to form the bulk of a coalition are due to meet for the first time this week to offer their views on how their parties should proceed.
With Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael expected to have as many as 86 TDs between them the parties would only need the support of potentially one smaller party or a handful of TDs to ensure a Dáil majority of 88 or more.
Sources in both parties suggested it would be some time before there would be consideration of whether the support of Independents could be sought to ensure a government could be formed.
Election 2024 final results: Fianna Fáil the biggest party in the Dáil with just one seat between Sinn Féin and Fine Gael
Just seven more women in new Dáil compared with 2020 election
Who is in government now, when does the new one start and what happens to losing TDs?
Election 2024: Form your own government with our Coalition builder tool
Mr Lowry has often backed previous governments in Dáil votes outside of a formal arrangement.
He indicated he would be open to supporting a new coalition as well.
But he said the two big parties needed to decide if they wanted the support of Labour or independents first.
Mr Lowry said: “I have always been open to acting decisively and having a role. I’ve done it with successive governments. I’m not interested in self-preferment. I’m interested in being in a position where I can have access to deliver on constituency issues. I think there’s several Independents in the same position. So it just remains to be seen. It’s early days.”
Independent Ireland, a new party, won four seats in the election. One of its prominent TDs, Roscommon-Galway’s Michael Fitzmaurice, said he would have to consult fellow party members when asked if it would seek ministerial positions in return for Independent Ireland’s support.
However, he said: “For any of our lads it’s not about Mercs and perks, it’s about making sure the policy is right.”
Given Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael’s expected Dáil numbers, he said he would not see them seeking a deal with a smaller political party such as Labour “because they’d have to give them positions”.
He said Independent Ireland was “not parish pump” and suggested the big parties would want “to pick off a few of the single Independents that will sell their soul” to get things for their local area.
Party leader Cork South-West TD Michael Collins said Independent Ireland’s door was “open regardless of whoever comes knocking as long as there’s a genuine attempt to form a government”.
Protecting the national cattle herd and lowering the VAT rate for the hospitality sector are among key issues for the party.
He did not rule out the possibility that his party would seek ministerial positions as part of a deal but said: “We’re talking about policies first. We can’t get to the ministerial positions until the polices are dealt with.”
Paul Gogarty, a former Green Party TD before he lost his seat in 2011, is back in the Dáil as an Independent for Dublin Mid-West.
He said it is “incumbent on any elected representative to discuss forming a government on achievable policy objectives” and ideally this would be with “like-minded Independent colleagues or parties with small representation”.
He said it was likely Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael “will go for rural Independents that are largely parish-pump oriented”.
Mr Gogarty said it was too soon to tell how many negotiating groupings there would be but doubted he would be involved with Independent Ireland or “climate-change denier Independents”.
- Sign up for push alerts and have the best news, analysis and comment delivered directly to your phone
- Join The Irish Times on WhatsApp and stay up to date
- Listen to our Inside Politics podcast for the best political chat and analysis
- Sign up to our Inside Politics newsletter to get the behind-the-scenes take direct to your inbox