The Green Party's Relaunch Is Bolder And Riskier Than Anyone Expected
New leader, new colours, new slogans, and a bet that voters will forgive faster than the polls suggest.
Leinster House returned this week to a session that already feels like a pressure cooker. Ministers arrived with polished lines, opposition benches arrived with sharpened knives, and the corridors between them arrived with a mood that has not been this tense in years.
At the centre of it all is a coalition trying to hold a line that keeps shifting under its feet. Housing, health, migration and the cost of living have refused to behave, and the government's talking points are struggling to keep up with the headlines.
What actually happened
Backbenchers are the ones to watch. A quiet rebellion has been simmering for months, with several TDs privately warning that another polling slump will trigger conversations no leader wants to have.
Opposition parties are circling with unusual discipline. Where they once wasted energy on internal spats, they are now coordinating messaging with the kind of focus that suggests someone in each camp genuinely believes the next election is winnable.
Why it matters
Behind the scenes, the real fight is over narrative. Whoever gets to define what this year was actually about, whether it is fairness, competence, or change, will walk into the campaign with a decisive edge.
Voters, meanwhile, are increasingly unbothered by the theatre. Focus groups keep returning to the same short list: rent, wages, waiting lists. The party that stops performing and starts answering may find itself in a stronger position than any poll currently suggests.
For now, though, the performance continues. Expect fireworks, expect leaks, and expect at least one resignation nobody saw coming before the season is out.
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