Categories

Archives

Tagcloud

abortion, absenteeism, addiction, advocacy, ageing, AIDS, alcohol, allergy, alternative medicine, Alzheimer's disease, ambulance, An Bord Pleanála, anaesthetist, arthritis, assaults, asthma, autism, bacteria, beds, bedside manner, Bertie Ahern, biomedicine, blogs, Boston v Berlin, breast cancer, Brendan Drumm, Brian Cowen, budget, bureaucracy, cance, cancer, cannabis, capacity, cardiovascular, castration, Central Statistics Office (CSO), cervical cancer, charity, chemotherapy, children, children's hospice, Chlamydia, chronic disease management, chronic fatigue syndrome, Cigarettes, clinical trials, Clostridium difficile, co-location, colon cancer, colorectal surgery, community care, Competence Assurance, condoms, consent, consultants, contraception, contract negotiations, contracts, cosmetic surgery, courts, Crohn's disease, Crumlin Hospital, CSO, cystic fibrosis, data, death, dementia, denial, dentists, Department of Health, depression, developers, diabetes, diagnosis, diet, disability, doctors, Down's Syndrome, drugs, Drumm, Dáil, EDs, education, elderly, election, elective surgery, electronic patient record, embryo, emergency medicine, Enda Kenny, erectile dysfunction, ethics, euthanasia, evolution, exercise, FDA, fertility, Fertility, Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael, Freedom of Information, fun, funding, GAA, gastrointestinal surgery, genetics, golf, GPs, haematology, health, health & safety, health boards, health insurance, Health Service Executive, health tourism, healthcare, heart, hepatitis, hiccups, HIQA, HIV/AIDS, holistic, homicide, hospital, hospitals, HPSC, HPV, hse, HSE, hygiene, ICGP, ICT, IHCA, immunisation, IMO, industrial action, influenza, insomnia, intensive care, Irish Healthcare Awards, IT, IVD, IVF, JAMA, James Reilly, kidney, Labour Party, laparoscopy, Lisbon Treaty, lung cancer, management, Mary Harney, ME, media, Medical Council, medical press, medical profession, medicine, medico-legal, men's health, meningitis, mental health, mind, Minister for Finance, miscarriage, mortality, MRI, MRSA, MS, MSF, National Cancer Control Programme, NCCP, NCHDs, neonatal care, neuroscience, New England Journal of Medicine, NHS, nicotine, Nobel Prize, non-EU, Northeast, northern ireland, nurses, nursing, nursing homes, obesity, obstetrics, Oireachtas, oncology, ophthalmology, organs, orgasm, osteoporosis, Padraig Harrington, paediatics, pain relief, palliative care, pandemic, paramedic, pathology, patients, PCRS, PDs, personalised medicine, PET, pharmaceuticals, pharmacists, physicians, placebo, plastic surgery, politicians, politics, PPARS, PPR, PR, PR speak, pregnancy, premature birth, prescribing, press releases, prevention, primary care, primary care teams, privatisation, Professional Practice Review, Progressive Democrats, prostate cancer, psychiatry, psychology, Public Accounts Committee, public health, radiology, radiotherapy, RCPI, RCSI, recession, recruitment, regulation, research, risk equalisation, RTAs, RTE, safety, screening, SDLP, self-harm, sex, sexual assault, sick notes, Sinn Féin, Six Counties, sleep, smoking, Spinal injury, sport, stem cells, STI, stress, strike, stroke, subvention, suicide, sun, sunblock, sunburn, surgeon general, surgery, swine flu update, Taoiseach, tenders, testicles, the Greens, The Irish News, Tim O'Malley, tobacco, trade unions, traffic accidents, transplantation, trivia, UCC, UK, Ulster, underweight, urology, US, vaccine, Vhi, viagra, Vincent Sheridan, virology, virus, vodka, waiting lists, Well Woman centre, whiskey, wine, women

«Previous article | Next article»

Breakfast Roll Man

Breakfast-Roll.jpg

So we got it wrong.

We thought there was a health crisis and that the voters would boot out the Fianna Fail and PD Government because of their failure to reduce waiting lists and take patients off trollies.

But the voters have spoken and Fianna Fail will form the next government.

Former Fine Gael Minister Ivan Yates said on RTE television and radio that the election was won by Breakfast Roll Man.

That's the guy who leaves his house in Portarlington or Cellbridge at 6.30 am every morning, grabs a bacon buttie roll in the 24 hour garage on the way to work and eats his lunch at his desk.

When he gets home he works out how he's going to manage paying the mortgage and bring his wife and kids on a foreign holiday.

Breakfast Roll man is young, fit and healthy, so he hasn't spent much time in hospital. His main concern is the economy and that's why the Fianna Fail candidates got his number one and number two votes.

But he didn't vote for the Progressive Democrats which is why Mary Harney probably won't be the next Minister for Health.

You win some, you lose some

Posted in The Vote '07 on 26 May 2007
Tags: Fianna Fáil, Mary Harney, Progressive Democrats

Leave a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

Name

Email address (Email address will not be shown)

URL

Remember personal info?

Comments