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Full coverage: Sinn Fein

“I don’t have to agree with how the British government does its business to have good working relationships”

Sinn Féin’s Northern Ireland Economy Minister Caoimhe Archibald discusses growth, jobs, tariffs, and tax from a cross-border perspective.

Thomas Hubert
4th Sep, 2025 - 5 min read

Conor Murphy: “There is no glory in conflict at all, there are horrible things done”

Sinn Féin’s Conor Murphy has a long career in the republican movement, including being jailed for IRA membership in the 1980s. He talks about moving to the Oireachtas, his regrets about the past and his comments on the murder of Paul Quinn.

Dion Fanning
9th Mar, 2025 - 4 min read

Anne Harris: Mary Lou McDonald needs to remember who she is, and what that person stands for

Sinn Féin keeps repeating the same mistake. It’s a cognitive dissonance which can be seen in sharp relief in its decades long treatment of Máiría Cahill.

Anne Harris
17th Dec, 2024 - 7 min read

Sinn Féin and the dangers of an iron demand for loyalty

The party is engulfed by the resignation of its front-bench TD Brian Stanley just as it embarks on a "a complete overhaul of governance procedures" following the McMonagle controversy. John Looby argues its problem is rooted in placing loyalty above all else.

John Looby
15th Oct, 2024 - 3 min read

Power, passion and pragmatism: Kevin Cunningham on the paradox of Fianna Fáil

The party's resilience raises two questions: why hasn't it returned to its former glory, and how has it maintained such steadfast support? Twelve graphs help explain the paradox.

Kevin Cunningham
20th Jul, 2024 - 8 min read

Stephen Kinsella: It suits a lot of people to say it, but the story of the recent elections is not Sinn Féin’s slump  

The right’s consolidation is the story of the local and European elections in 2024, not Sinn Féin. However, based on experience elsewhere, there is not enough time to create a concrete, well-organised, hard-right or populist alternative for the coming general election.

Stephen Kinsella
13th Jun, 2024 - 7 min read

Like Switzerland, Sinn Féin took a simple idea and went hard at it. However, the party now needs to reinvigorate itself

The path forward for Sinn Féin is unclear. The degree to which it toes the government’s line on immigration while castigating its failure to deliver more housing will likely determine its success. The party needs to innovate – and unlike Switzerland, it doesn’t have centuries.

Stephen Kinsella
23rd May, 2024 - 6 min read

Tommie Gorman: Brand Michelle O’Neill and the Sinn Féin acid test

Fresh from triumphant local elections in the north, Sinn Féin's long march towards full-on power and responsibility is nearly complete. How the party negotiates this new territory will have consequences, writes Tommie Gorman.

Tommie Gorman
27th May, 2023 - 8 min read

“Section 31 goes two ways. There’s a really good way to silence someone by slapping libel actions around the place”

In this week's Experience podcast, Colm Tóibín talks about the joylessness of the World Cup in Qatar and why he won't talk about Sinn Féin.

Dion Fanning
12th Nov, 2022 - 3 min read

“Successful political movements need a group of people who will always ask difficult questions”

In the latest episode of Experience, Dion Fanning talks to Eoin Ó Broin about why everyone needs to be more careful when talking about the past, conflict resolution and how Blackrock College gave him the confidence to succeed.

Dion Fanning
15th Oct, 2022 - 2 min read
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