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'There is a lot of disquiet in the party' - Fianna Fáil TDs split over Harris no-confidence motion

'There is a lot of disquiet in the party' - Fianna Fáil TDs split over Harris no-confidence motion

There is growing disquiet and frustration within Fianna Fáil over Micheál Martin's refusal to back a motion of no-confidence in Health Minister Simon Harris.

Sinn Féin president Mary Lou-McDonald said Brexit cannot be the "catch-all excuse" to avoid accountability and allow bad governance. She called on Fianna Fail to support her party's motion of no-confidence in Mr Harris.

Mr Martin has called on the Health Minister to provide a full explanation of the escalating costs around the national children's hospital and to correct the record of the Dáil.

Mr Harris is due to make a statement to the Dáil this week clarifying a response he gave to Fianna Fáil's Barry Cowen last September in which he said the cost of the children's hospital was "in line with the expected expenditure profile".

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This was after he had been informed that the overspend was running at €191m and that contractor BAM was seeking an additional €200m.

But a number of backbenchers and grassroots members are frustrated by this approach and believe the confidence and supply agreement is no longer working.

Sligo TD Marc McSharry has already called for Mr Harris to resign and believes it is now time for a general election, but yesterday he said it would be up to the party to reach a collective decision on the Sinn Féin motion of no-confidence.

Bobby Aylward said: "There is a lot of disquiet in the party, there are mumblings. The grassroots feel we are being painted with the same brush as the Government. If this was normal times without Brexit we would probably be out knocking on doors. It's not just the hospital overrun, it's the nurses, the doctors, homelessness - this Government is not ruling.

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However, other Fianna Fáil TDs including Margaret Murphy O'Mahony and Niamh Smyth said calling for a head will not deliver any answers and the party cannot risk a general election with a no-deal Brexit looming.

But Ms McDonald said an apology from Mr Harris "falls well short" of the accountability that is now needed.

"We will discharge our duties. The big question is will Micheál Martin discharge his?" she said.

"If Micheál Martin is serious about good governance, serious about accountability, well then he will back our motion. If he is simply a mudguard for Fine Gael, if he is simply prepared to stand by and allow and facilitate bad government and to look the other way at incompetence and bad decisions, he will continue on the way he has thus far.

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She dismissed the claim that the Government would fall if a motion of no-confidence in Mr Harris were to pass in the Dáil.

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