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Europe
EU trade commissioner RESIGNS after outcry over attending quarantine-defying golf party in Ireland
2020-08-27
[RT] EU Commissioner Phil Hogan is the latest political casualty of the ’Golfgate’ scandal in which a host of Irish politicians partied at a golf club dinner,
hours after introducing strict lockdown measures for the public.
Hogan, a member of Ireland’s Fine Gael party, announced his resignation on Wednesday. One day earlier, he briefed Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on his activities in Ireland last week.

Hogan attended a lavish party at the Station House Hotel in Clifden, County Galway, last Wednesday. Together with more than 80 people, including current and former MPs, senators, ambassadors and a supreme court judge, Hogan dined in an event organized by the Oireachtas (Parliament) Golf Society.

While guests sat ten to a table, the Irish public were hit with new coronavirus lockdown measures. These included a ban on indoor gatherings of more than six people at home and more than 50 in restaurants. Most pubs in the country remain closed too, and the entire county of Kildare, which borders Dublin, is under strict lockdown.

Hogan insisted that he broke no regulations, as he tested negative for Covid-19 two weeks before the dinner. However, Irish regulations require anyone returning from abroad — as Hogan did from Brussels — to quarantine for 14 days, test or no test. Since his return from Belgium, it emerged that not only did Hogan not quarantine at home, he journeyed to Dublin, Kilkenny and Limerick — via the quarantined county of Kildare.

With public anger high, Hogan is not the only Irish politician whose career was jeopardized by ‘Golfgate'. Agriculture Minister Dara Calleary resigned last week after apologizing "unreservedly" for his attendance.

For Ireland's newly-appointed Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Micheal Martin, the scandal is yet another bump in a rocky two months in office. Since forming a government in June, Martin has already lost one agriculture minister over a drunk driving charge, and faced criticism for bumping up the paychecks of his junior ministers at a time of virus-induced austerity.
Posted by:Clem

#6  Got caught, unless you think he would have woke up the next morning, looked in the mirror, and decided he wasn't fit for duty.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2020-08-27 15:48  

#5  Yeah, he resigned but still did it in the first place. "...a lavish party...". Uh huh.

Posted by: Clem   2020-08-27 08:09  

#4  Lockdown induced.

Just like COVID, the harm is from over-reaction.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2020-08-27 08:08  

#3  ...at a time of virus-induced austerity.

I wonder what really caused the austerity - the virus or stupid EU commissioners passing lockdown edicts and then breaking them themselves en masse? It's a real mystery.
Posted by: Raj   2020-08-27 07:20  

#2  Notice he resigned, Clem - would his USA counterpart do the same?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2020-08-27 04:46  

#1  Just who in the hell do these people think they are? Their arrogance is something, as is their snobbery.
Posted by: Clem   2020-08-27 00:09  

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