Formation | 24 October 2006 [nb 1] |
---|---|
Type | anti Lisbon Treaty advocacy group |
Headquarters | Moyne Park, Tuam, County Galway, Ireland [nb 1] |
Location |
|
Official language | English |
President | Declan Ganley |
Key people | Naoise Nunn, David Cochrane, John McGuirk, James O'Reilly, Norrie Keane, Martina Higgins. |
Website | www.libertas.org |
The Libertas Institute is a lobby group that along with others successfully campaigned for a "no" vote in the 2008 referendum in Ireland on the Treaty of Lisbon.
Its mission statement was "...to initiate and provoke enlightened discussion on the European Union, its relevance to its member states and peoples and its role in World affairs having regard to our shared values of peace, democracy, individual liberty and free markets..." [1]
The founders of the Libertas Institute were:
Founder | Notes |
---|---|
Declan Ganley [2] | Associated with Ganley Group [3] and Rivada Networks. [4] |
Naoise Nunn [2] | Associated with Rivada Networks. [2] |
James O'Reilly [2] | Associated with Ganley Group [3] and Rivada Networks. [2] [4] |
Norrie Keane [2] | Associated with Rivada Networks. [2] |
Martina Higgins [2] | Associated with Ganley Group [3] and Rivada Networks. [2] |
Seán Ganley [2] | Brother of Declan. [2] |
Dr. Chris Coughlan | Later president of the Chambers of Commerce of Ireland [2] |
Libertas Institute personnel included:
Name | Job(s) | Notes |
---|---|---|
Declan Ganley | President [5] | Founder |
Naoise Nunn | Executive Director [5] | No longer in post [6] [7] |
David Cochrane | Publishing Director, [5] later Campaign Manager [8] | Irish political blogger and editor on Politics.ie. [9] Associated with Rivada Networks. [10] |
John McGuirk | Communications Director [10] | No longer in post [6] |
Caroline Simons | Senior Spokesperson [11] |
The Libertas Charter (archived here) defined what was considered to be Europe's traditional values and influences, asserted what citizens' rights and responsibilities were, acknowledged the EU's role since WWII, stated that the present EU's structure was inherently undemocratic and unaccountable, and pledged to create a popular movement to debate Europe's future. [12]
The charter was signed by the following:
The first Libertas Institute press release archived on the Wayback Machine dates to 22 June 2007. [13] [14] It concerned French President Nicolas Sarkozy and the Treaty of Lisbon's clause regarding free and undistorted competition: [13] an article by Ganley dated 16 July 2007 in Business Week covered similar themes. [15] The Libertas Institute continued to release press releases during its existence.
Libertas is registered at Moyne Park, Tuam, County Galway along with other organisations associated with Libertas and/or Declan Ganley. [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] A list of organisations associated with Libertas.eu and/or Declan Ganley is given here.
2007 expenditure by Libertas Institute Ltd according to its accounts was:
Date | Description |
---|---|
2007–08 | Room hire in the Davenport Hotel to discuss strategy [6] |
2007–12 | Room hire, Merrion Hotel, Dublin for a press conference [6] |
2007–12 | Photocall & billboard outside Merrion Hotel, Dublin [6] |
2007–12 | Hire of PR firm Bracken PR, employer of John McGuirk [6] |
The deadline for submitting a copy of its 2008 bank statement to SIPO was 31 March 2009. [22]
Expenditure during the Lisbon I campaign was estimated at "approximately €800,000", [6] "exceeded €1 million", [6] or "€1.3 million", [6] [22] or "€1.8 million". [22]
The Libertas Institute had a loan facility with Ganley, and by 3 October 2008 it had used €200,000 of this money. [6] Since 1 January 2008, it also had the facility to receive public donations [6] via its website. Ganley and his wife (Delia Mary Ganley, née Paterek) also donated the maximum amount of €6,300 each. [23] Libertas stated that its donors were "100% Irish". [24]
The Libertas Institute was a "third party" for the purposes of political fundraising. [6] Regulation of such is monitored by the Standards in Public Office Commission which imposed a donations limit of €5,348 per donor per year, [6] rising to €6,348.69 per donor per year in 2009, [25] imposes a limit of €126.97 for any given anonymous donation, [25] and disallows any donation from any non-Irish citizens resident outside the island of Ireland. [25]
The Libertas Institute advocated a European Energy Innovation Fund intended to license and fund carbon-neutral energy producers, the funding deriving from auctions of CO2 emissions allowances. [26] It also deprecated the Treaty of Lisbon [27] and advocated a "no" vote in Lisbon I, the first Irish referendum on the Treaty of Lisbon.
On 12 March 2008, Libertas launched a "no" campaign called "Facts, not politics" [28] and stated that they expected to spend in the region of €1.5m on the campaign. [29] The campaign targeted wavering moderates, [30] the most critical votes for the referendum. [30] The campaign was joined by businessman Ulick McEvaddy on 20 April 2008. [31] Activities undertaken by Libertas during the referendum were as follows:
Date | Note |
---|---|
2007–12 to 2008–06 | Libertas distribute 35,000 [32] copies of "The Lisbon Treaty, the Readable Version", a text edited by MEP Jens-Peter Bonde [33] and produced by the Foundation for EU Democracy, [32] [33] the European political foundation affiliated to the EUDemocrats, the European political party headed at the time by MEP Jens-Peter Bonde |
2007‑12‑13 | Ganley speaks at press conference, Dublin. [34] |
2008‑04‑21 | Ganley campaigns in Castlebar, [35] Sligo [35] and Letterkenny. [35] |
2008‑04‑28 | John McGuirk defends on the radio Ganley's rejection of the CAP. [36] |
2008‑05‑12 | Ganley spoke at a Forum on Europe regional meeting, Hotel Meyrick, Galway. [37] |
2008‑05‑28 | Ganley takes part in a televised debate and states that the Treaty of Lisbon allows the detention of three-year-old children [38] |
2008‑05‑29 | Ganley campaigns in Sligo. [39] |
2008‑05‑31 | Ganley speaks at "The Lisbon Treaty – a Modest Proposal or a Faustian Pact" debate. [40] |
2008‑06‑02 | Press call, Buswells Hotel, Dublin. [41] Ganley stated that a "yes" vote would jeopardise Ireland's corporate tax and that "a No vote would allow the Government to negotiate a 'better deal' for Ireland". [42] |
2008‑06‑09 | Libertas attend European movement debate in ESB, Dublin [43] |
2008‑06‑09 | Libertas canvass in Tallaght [43] |
2008‑06‑09 | Libertas attend Rock The Vote debate, Dublin [43] |
2008‑06‑09 | Ganley appears on RTÉ's Questions and Answers. [43] |
2008‑06‑09 | Ganley buys tickets to Brussels for Brian Cowen, Enda Kenny and Eamon Gilmore [44] |
2008‑06‑12 | Ganley spoke at a public meeting in Ranelagh. [45] |
Several politicians, including Minister of State for European Affairs Dick Roche, clashed with the group's campaign stance [46] but the Sunday Business Post reported that the group's efforts at projecting its warnings about the treaty in the media were "hugely successful". [47]
The referendum was held on 12 June 2008 [48] and defeated by 53.4% to 46.6%, with a turnout of 53.1%. [49]
Following the referendum, attention shifted to Ganley's new political party Libertas.eu, and the Libertas Institute website libertas.org was redirected to that party's website.
The Irish referendum on the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe was a vote that was planned but did not occur. The referendum was expected to take place in 2005 or 2006 to decide whether Ireland should ratify the proposed EU Constitution. Following the rejection of the Constitution by voters in the French referendum of May 2005 and the Dutch referendum of June 2005, the planned Irish referendum was postponed indefinitely.
The Twenty-eighth Amendment of the Constitution Bill 2008 was a proposed amendment to the Constitution of Ireland that was put to a referendum in 2008. The purpose of the proposed amendment was to allow the state to ratify the Treaty of Lisbon of the European Union.
Declan James Ganley is an English-born Irish entrepreneur, businessman, and political activist. He was the founder and leader of the Irish branch of the eurosceptic Libertas Party.
John McGuirk is an Irish writer and political commentator. He is the editor of Gript, a website that has been described as conservative, far-right, and right-wing. McGuirk is also a regular contributor to The Irish Catholic.
The Twenty-eighth Amendment of the Constitution Act 2009 is an amendment of the Constitution of Ireland which permitted the state to ratify the Treaty of Lisbon of the European Union. It was approved by referendum on 2 October 2009.
Libertas was a pan-European political party founded by Declan Ganley that took part in the 2009 European Parliament election in several member states of the European Union. It won one seat in France.
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Libertas Sweden is a political party in Sweden. It intended to contend the 2009 European Parliament elections under a common banner with Declan Ganley's Libertas.eu.
Libertas Ireland was a minor, Eurosceptic political party in Ireland. It contended the 2009 European Parliament elections in Ireland under a common banner with Declan Ganley's Libertas.eu. It shared a headquarters with Libertas.eu but was a national party in its own right for the purposes of Irish electoral law.
Libertas.cz is a eurosceptic party in the Czech Republic that was founded in 2009 by the former media entrepreneur and MEP Vladimír Železný. After some controversies it became an associate of Declan Ganley's pan-European alliance Libertas.eu.
Libertas Malta was a political party in Malta set up to contest the 2009 European Parliament elections under a common banner with Libertas.eu. Its only candidate Mary Gauci failed to be elected and the party has been inactive since.
Libertas Netherlands is a political party in the Netherlands. It contended the 2009 European Parliament elections under a common banner with Libertas Party Limited, the organization founded by Declan Ganley.
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