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Irish PM announces surprise resignation

Varadkar added that he was “proud that we have made the country a more equal and more modern place when it comes to the rights of children, the LGBT community, equality for women and their bodily autonomy”…reports Asian Lite News

Irish prime minister Leo Varadkar will step down as party leader immediately and will resign as taoiseach as soon as his Fine Gael successor is selected.

Announcing his resignation, Varadkar described leading his country as “the most fulfilling time of my life”. He said he was stepping down for “personal and political” reasons and was “not the best person for the job anymore”. He was Ireland’s youngest PM when he became Fine Gael leader at 38 in 2017.

He currently leads the coalition government in Dublin, along with Fianna Fáil and the Green Party. Speaking from the steps of government buildings in Dublin on Wednesday, Varadkar said he had “led Ireland from unemployment to full employment, from budget deficit to budget surplus, from austerity to prosperity”.

Varadkar added that he was “proud that we have made the country a more equal and more modern place when it comes to the rights of children, the LGBT community, equality for women and their bodily autonomy”.

During his time as taoiseach, Varadkar championed referendums to change the Irish constitution legalising same-sex marriage and abortion. Varadkar also listed work to improve the affordability of childcare among his achievements as well as increasing government spending on arts and culture, international development, and public infrastructure.

He also conceded that “there are areas where we have been much less successful” but added: “I hope you’ll forgive me if I leave it to others to point them out on a day like this.”

Varadkar said his reasons for stepping down were “both personal and political”. He said that he felt the current government “could be re-elected” but he felt he was “not the best person for the job anymore”.

The Irish government parties have said they do not expect Wednesday’s announcement to trigger a general election. In the election of 2020, Varadkar led his party to a third-place finish in terms of number of seats in Dáil Éireann, the lower house in the country’s parliament.

As part of the coalition deal struck between the parties it was agreed that Varadkar and Micheál Martin would each hold the position of taoiseach for two years.

In 2020, Martin was appointed taoiseach with Varadkar serving as his tánaiste (deputy PM), before the two swapped roles in 2022. Speaking after Varadkar’s resignation announcement, Martin said he had been “surprised” by the decision.

“I want to take the opportunity to thank him sincerely, we got on very well,” Martin added. Martin said he remained committed to fulfilling the full term of the coalition government.

Eamon Ryan, leader of the Green Party, the smallest of the three coalition partners, said Varadkar had been “an energetic and committed leader of the country who was always supportive of his government colleagues”.

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Leo Varadkar re-elected Ireland PM

US Vice President Kamala Harris ranks with prime ministers in protocol, though not in her constitutional role…reports Arul Louis

Leo Varadkar has joined the ranks of current Indian descent prime ministers becoming the fourth outside India when he again became the Taoiseach of Ireland.

The Fine Gael party leader assumed the prime ministership at the head of a coalition on Saturday under an agreement with partner Fianna Fail party to swap the leadership in the middle of its term.

The 43-year-old Varadkar had done a stint as prime minister or Taoiseach, as it is formally known in the Gaelic language – from 2017 to 2020.

In a country that is 94 per cent white and 73 per cent Catholic, Varadkar broke through two barriers being openly gay and of Indian origin.

Accepting the Taoiseach nomination, he said, “Our history over the last 100 years has been about winning the additional freedoms that were denied to us or which we were unable to imagine: Becoming a Republic. Becoming a place where you are not limited by your gender, religion, race, background or sexual orientation.”

His father Ashok Varadkar, a doctor who immigrated from Mumbai, his mother Miriam who is Irish, and his partner Matthew Barrett watched his election from the parliament gallery, the Dublin newspaper Sunday World reported.

Acknowledging them in his speech, Leo Varadkar said, “Thank you for your work, the love and support you have shown me. When we enter public life, we choose this path. Our loved ones do not.”

Before entering politics, Leo Varadkar followed his father’s footsteps in the medical profession, reportedly doing an internship at Mumbai’s KEM Hospital.

According to the Irish Times, Leo Varadkar has a political heritage with his father’s two older brothers participating in India’s Freedom Struggle, with one of them jailed for a year as a political prisoner, meshing with Ireland’s own fight for independence from the common coloniser.

Varadkar succeeded Enda Kenny as prime minister in 2017 when he resigned midway through his second term heading a minority government.

In the 2020 general election, Fine Gael again failed to win a parliamentary majority and formed a coalition with Fianna Fail with the understanding that its leader Micheal Martin and he would split the term of prime ministership.

The Green Party is also a member of the coalition.

In neighbouring Britain – Ireland’s former colonial ruler – Rishi Sunak became prime minister in October. Antonio Luis Santos da Costa has been the prime minister of Portugal since 2015.

And in the African island nation of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean, both top constitutional offices are held by people of Indian descent: Prime Minister Pravind Kumar Jugnauth elected in 2016 and President Prithvirajsing Roopun elected in 2019.

In the Seychelles, another African nation on the Indian Ocean, Wavel Ramkalawan elected in 2020 is the president and under that country’s constitution is also the head of government.

On the continent of South America, President Chandrikapersad Santokhi, elected in 2020, is also the head of government of Suriname, a Caribbean nation.

In the category of heads of government, it is six.

US Vice President Kamala Harris ranks with prime ministers in protocol, though not in her constitutional role.

Mohamed Irfaan Ali is the president of Guyana elected in 2020.

He will be the chief guest of the 17th Pravasi Bharatiya Divas convention celebrating Overseas Indians next month.

The father of Singapore President Halimah Yacob elected in 2017 was a Singapore-born Indian Muslim who died when she was eight.

She was brought up by her Malay mother and she told the Straits Times newspaper that she identifies “very much a member of the Malay community”.

Of course, no listing of global Indian leaders would be complete, even if only for the record, without mention of the two right there in the homeland of India: President Droupadi Murmu and Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

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