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'Quite radical' The outspoken and affable leftwinger in line to be Ireland's president
The Guardian
|October 24, 2025
The lights dimmed and the crowd packed into Vicar Street, a concert venue in inner-city Dublin, their eyes locked on the stage.
The emcee made barbed jokes about Ireland’s government, but there was little need to warm up the youthful audience. The atmosphere was already electric. He launched a chant. “I say Catherine. You say?”
The roared response could have lifted the roof. “Connolly!”
Barring a last-minute political upset, Catherine Connolly, a name unfamiliar to most Irish people just a few months ago, is expected to become Ireland’s next head of state after a presidential election today.
Anger over a housing crisis and the cost of living, various campaign blunders by the ruling centre-right coalition of Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil, rare unity in the leftwing opposition and the deft use of social media have combined to make Connolly a symbol of change.
At Vicar Street, the independent leftwing candidate strode on to the stage: grey-haired, dressed in black, smiling. When the roars subsided she spoke in Irish, then English: “What we have achieved together, I cannot put a value on that.”
Her voice was soft, the accent pure Galway. “We want a republic that we can be proud of, a republic that will never stand over the normalisation of genocide, or the normalisation of homelessness, or obscene waiting lists. But enough of that. This is a night to celebrate.”
The crowd and the performers, including Christy Moore and the Mary Wallopers, obliged by turning the concert into a rollicking mix of folk music, punk ethos and political conviction that felt like a victory party. Opinion polls give Connolly, 68, a wide lead over her establishment rival, Heather Humphreys, in the election to choose Ireland’s 10th president and successor to Michael D Higgins.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition October 24, 2025 de The Guardian.
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