Top Stories

Israeli settlers and UAE scandals: Helen McEntee’s tricky trade deal workload

Foreign affairs and trade minister Helen McEntee faced questions from MEPs this week about the EU’s controversial trading partners, setting up challenging sets of talks ahead.

Java Republic owner has a taste for McCabe’s specialty coffee

Spanish coffee group Cafento, the owner of Java Republic, said it was on the acquisition trail last year. It has just bought a well-known Wicklow business.

A new chapter beckons for renowned literary pub McDaid’s

Brendan Behan, Patrick Kavanagh, and James Joyce all drank in McDaid's Pub on Harry Street, Dublin 2. The pub has rarely changed hands but now it looks set to be sold to a well-known publican family.

The AI backlash has tech executives fearing for their lives

Violent threats against AI companies are rising and spilling over into real-world security incidents, write Lindsay Ellis, Zusha Elinson and Tina Li, The Wall Street Journal.

Ireland takes the reins on the EU’s complex military mobility package

Militarily neutral Ireland will oversee talks with MEPs about a new system for coordinating transport for militaries and their contractors cross-border, which will be closely linked to Nato.

At the edge of collapse: The race to save Ireland’s small businesses from failure

From music festivals to tech start-ups, the Small Company Administrative Rescue Process has become a powerful lifeline for struggling SMEs. Yet experts warn it is not a silver bullet but a race against time that rewards early intervention.

The hotel that became one of the State’s key accommodation providers

New 2024 filings for Guestford Ltd show the hotel operator continues to benefit from a multi-million international protection contract, with profit tempered by an exceptional tax bill of half a million euro.

“You can’t buy advertising of that quality”: The accidental climate lawyer taking on the State

From semiconductor physics to the courtroom, Fred Logue has emerged as the architect of Ireland’s most significant strategic climate litigation. In an in-depth interview, he reflects on his accidental path to the law, the high-profile detour into planning judicial reviews, and his renewed focus on putting his clients on the State's climate agenda.

Top Voices

John Looby: We need to talk a little bit more about money

Debtors now trump creditors. This is the price of democracy. And to help avoid paying too high a price, I think it’s helpful to talk a little bit more about it.

Jonathan Keane: The digital euro finally starts to take shape

The Central Bank of Ireland will take part in the ECB’s pilot programme for the digital currency while the Irish-led presidency is kicking off negotiations for the legislation underpinning it.

Affordable by name, not by design: Ireland’s cost-rental model is built to fail outside Dublin

Cost-rental should be anchored to the cost of providing homes, not an arbitrary discount from market rents. Until that changes, Ireland's flagship social-rental model will work only where market rents are high enough to make the numbers add up.

How to fill the €100m funding-round gap

Europe is building world-class technology companies: A new €5bn EU fund will help them scale – and do so from home, write European Commissioner Ekaterina Zaharieva and investor Kasim Kutay.

Finance by design and the consequences of success: Rewinding the week that was

From property funds to securitisation vehicles, Ireland's financial architecture now has extraordinary scale. Understanding it may be the next challenge.

Paul Flynn: When it comes to Dublin and Kerry, history is always present

As an emerging Dublin footballer, you didn't need to be told about the game's greatest rivalry – there was just an assumption you already knew how deep it ran and what it meant to everyone.

England, the World Cup and Ireland’s identity crisis

Huge numbers in Ireland will watch England try to get past Norway in tonight's World Cup quarter-final. The majority will be fervently hoping they don't, but some of us have always felt differently about English football.

Leadership without ego: A tribute to Martin Naughton

Glen Dimplex founder Martin Naughton died last Friday aged 87 and his funeral took place on Thursday. His legacy extends far beyond the multinational he built out of Ireland when no one thought it possible.