Jeffery Donaldson has confronted his party’s hardliners in a way that Peter Robinson and Arlene Foster never managed to achieve. For the DUP and Sinn Féin, the real work begins now.
The imminent restoration of power-sharing in Northern Ireland cannot hide the fact that British interest in solving Irish issues is waning as the London government struggles to deal with a slew of critical issues.
Ryanair is only the most prominent example of firms buying up lands and estates to help their workers. Should the State follow suit with a key worker plan?
Apple is opening up its app store weeks before the EU’s law to halt the emergence of online monopolies takes effect. Brussels argues it will level the playing field for start-ups, but will it stifle innovation at the world’s top tech firms?
As a young, small and fast-growing economy, Ireland has relied on foreign investors to fund its growth. The model is changing now. Is the Government capable of stepping in?
Unless the size of the domestic economy pie starts growing again, some people will rightly fear that their slice is shrinking, turning them against immigrants. This is no excuse for racism or arson, though.
Using a recruiter does save you time but does not absolve you from outsourcing recruitment completely. You still need to invest time in the recruitment process.
The meteoric growth of OpenAI’s Dublin office shows that multinationals are still very happy to come to Ireland to do business, pay (less) tax, and face regulators.
Andy Farrell is not thinking in four-year cycles. This squad is optimised for winning the 2024 Six Nations, not the 2027 World Cup.
Ian Bailey spoke at length to Máiría Cahill in the west Cork town of Schull where he was the main suspect in the murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier. He was polite, edgy, guarded, a performer who could be chilling.
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