schmittel wrote: ↑Sun Oct 26, 2025 12:25 pm
to all that I would add CC's smarts in dealing with the media.
She knew where she was vulnerable and handled it brilliantly, reframing questions like eirigi and syria but refusing to apologise or accept any culpability here, and by contrast initially appearing to fudge, deflect and hide from the acting for banks as a barrister questions.
In the way she initially handled the banks questions, the media and her opponents sensed a discomfort and a potential opportunity that they might be able to finally back her into a corner and illicit some sense of regret for her actions.
Thus for the last week of the campaign they moved the focus away from the questions on which she was very vulnerable with middle of the road undecideds and kept the focus on the questions in which she had the Minister for Justice defending her.
I think was very deliberate on CC's part. The middle of the road/undecided voters were never going to react in horror to the idea that she had done her job professionally as a barrister practising company and contract law. And that's all they heard about in the final week of the campaign.
She played them like a fiddle.
Fine Gael---with their traditional instinct for fukking up a campaign---stumbled badly and walked into the trap
Exactly as you say---middle Ireland was never going to hate Connelly for doing her job professionally as a barrister. Jim O'Callaghan even defended her, ffs. Never p1ss off lawyers. They'll gang up on you
Where CC was vulnerable ---the Eirigi gunwoman, Syria, the video of her praising Brexit and criticising the EU---she skillfully shifted the narrative onto safer ground. And nobody ---not the interviewers and certainly not poor Heather---knew how to shift it back again
Once FG realised they had picked a lemon, they had only one choice : Try to play to Heather's strengths
What were Heather's strengths?
(1) She is warm, "nice", safe, an experienced politician
(2). Being from a border county and given her background, she could be a force for unity, a bridge, a healer. She could reach out, she had a unique perspective on both sides of the divide. She certainly understood more about "the two traditions on this island" and the need for unity, than CC did.
But no, that's not the Fine Gael way.
Instead, they turned her into "nasty Heather" flailing out and attacking Connolly. It was obvious that Heather was uncomfortable and ineffectual in this role. A more sneaky, more bitchy back-stabber might have been more effective at negative campaigning, and landed a blow on CC