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The Long And the Short Of It

The Mayor of Limerick, Jim Long, has been embroiled in a number of controversies recently. So who is he? What does he represent? And is he really a racist, as his accusers claim?

Olaf Tyaransen, 18 Apr 2012

Are you going to the wedding?

I am. I have huge connections with foreigners and coloured people. Absolutely huge connections. I was the only councillor in Limerick City who had a weekly clinic for the Africans, helping them with their wives and their visas and stuff like that.

Didn’t a fellow Fine Gael member get into trouble in Naas…

(Interrupts sharply) He did, yes, but just let me finish my statement. What I clearly ended up, which was not broadcast in the transcript, and this was the final part of my statement and I’ll stand over it. What I said was, “migrants and migrancy follows the plentiful, and when all these people came into the country, we had plenty of jobs, and now the jobs are gone I expect them to follow where the migrants are.” Didn’t ask them to leave. Never said anything like that. That was taken out and there was the words, “They should go home” – I didn’t say they should go home. I said they should go where the jobs are, because we were suffering. I never said they’re not welcome in the country, and I would never say it. Now (smiles), you asked me another question?

Enda Kenny asked Darren Scully, the former Mayor of Naas to step down following racist remarks. Did he have a word with you?

I had a chat with Enda and I explained exactly what was said, and Enda said, ‘Now, that was a completely different version’. And he asked would I stand over it, and I said I would. He said, ‘Would you be prepared to apologise for what you said?’ I said, ‘No, it doesn’t warrant an apology. And I will go on television and I will go on radio and I’ll go on any mic that you want, and I’ll say to these people today, “You’re more than welcome in Limerick but you have to come into Limerick and go on the same playing field as our guys.’ If I was accused of being a racist at the time or a traitor, then accuse me of being a racist, because I’m not going to be a traitor against my own. Don’t ask me to represent my guy who’s not working, then ask me to represent the guy who is working for €8 an hour. Give to my guy what you’re giving to anybody else, and that is what we were not doing. That is the context in which I put it, and I stand over that. So there is no apology needed for a common sense approach. And he [Darren Scully] didn’t have a common sense approach.



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