929 episodes
- Niall talks to callers about the growing controversy over Government plans to reduce payments to people providing accommodation to Ukrainians in Ireland.
The Accommodation Recognition Payment currently gives hosts €600 per month for housing Ukrainian refugees. However, the Government plans to reduce that payment to €400 from September, before ending the scheme entirely in March 2027.
The Dáil has heard warnings that reducing the payment could force tens of thousands of Ukrainians out of their current accommodation and potentially leave many facing homelessness. Supporters of the scheme argue that hosts have helped prevent an even greater accommodation crisis and that removing the payment while Ireland is already struggling with housing shortages could have serious consequences.
Others believe the emergency arrangements have continued for too long. Ukrainians have now been living in Ireland for more than four years, and critics argue that taxpayers should not be expected to fund indefinite accommodation payments and additional supports that are not available to Irish citizens or other residents.
Some callers believe the Government should go even further by ending automatic access to medical cards and removing other special supports, particularly for people who are working or who may now be able to safely return to parts of Ukraine away from the frontline.
Niall asks whether reducing the payment is a reasonable first step towards ending emergency supports, or whether it risks creating a new homelessness crisis. Should Ireland continue providing additional assistance to Ukrainians, gradually reduce it, or bring the schemes to an end and require people to pay their own accommodation and living costs like everybody else? - Niall speaks to Ben Scallan from Gript Media about the serious questions surrounding Ireland’s citizenship and naturalisation process following the conviction of Riad Bouchaker for the attempted murder of three young children during the horrific knife attack at Parnell Square in Dublin in November 2023.
Bouchaker, who was born in Algeria, had reportedly lived in Ireland for approximately 20 years and had become an Irish citizen. However, despite spending two decades in the country, he required an Arabic interpreter throughout his trial because of his limited command of English.
Niall and Ben ask how someone can live in Ireland for so long, obtain Irish citizenship and still be unable to communicate effectively in English. Should applicants be required to demonstrate a reasonable proficiency in English or Irish before receiving an Irish passport? Should greater emphasis be placed on integration, respect for the country and an understanding of Irish society, laws and values?
They also discuss whether the Government should explain how Bouchaker’s citizenship application was assessed, whether the current system is rigorous enough and why requests for greater transparency have been resisted.
This is not simply a discussion about one convicted criminal. It raises a much broader question about what Irish citizenship should represent. Is citizenship merely an administrative process awarded after a certain number of years, or should it require a meaningful commitment to Ireland, its people and its way of life? - Niall speaks to Independent Senator Rónán Mullen about the increasingly hostile and dangerous nature of modern politics following the killing of former British government minister and Reform UK spokesperson Ann Widdecombe.
The 78-year-old former MP was found dead at her home in Devon following what counterterrorism police have described as a targeted attack. Although investigators are still working to establish the precise motive, her killing has renewed concerns about the safety of politicians and other public figures.
Speaking at a Mass for Ann Widdecombe in Dublin, Senator Mullen warned that Ireland is “not immune” to political violence. He said everyone involved in public debate must be careful about their language, because an unstable or radicalised person may interpret hateful comments as permission or encouragement to act violently.
Niall and Senator Mullen examine why politics has become so bitter, personal and divided. When Niall began working in radio, relatively few people constantly defined every issue in terms of “the left” and “the right”. Today, those labels dominate political discussion, with people frequently treating anyone who disagrees with them not simply as wrong, but as dangerous, hateful or morally corrupt.
Has social media created ideological echo chambers where anger, threats and personal abuse are rewarded with attention? Have politicians themselves contributed to the problem by portraying their opponents as extremists and enemies? Does the mainstream media deepen divisions by reducing complex issues to conflict between two opposing camps?
They also ask whether accusations such as “far right”, “far left”, “fascist”, “traitor” and “threat to democracy” have become so casually used that they are stripping political opponents of their humanity.
Robust political debate is essential in a democracy, and politicians must remain open to criticism. However, where is the line between legitimate criticism, inflammatory rhetoric and language that could encourage someone to take the law into their own hands?
Who created today’s political division: politicians, the public, social media or the mainstream media? And can the temperature be lowered without silencing passionate debate and legitimate political disagreement? #819 Anne Widdecombe and England vs Argentina: Has Irish Resentment Gone Too Far?
15/07/2026 | 1h 22 mins.In this episode, Niall is joined by barrister and political commentator Laura Perrins to discuss two stories dominating conversation in Britain and Ireland.
First, they examine the shocking murder of former Conservative minister Ann Widdecombe and the serious questions surrounding the investigation. After an initial arrest reportedly resulted in a man being released without charge, counterterrorism police later took control of the case when new evidence emerged. Niall and Laura discuss whether crucial opportunities were missed, why the investigation appeared to change direction so dramatically, and whether the authorities were too slow to recognise that this may have been a targeted political attack.
Then attention turns to tonight’s huge World Cup semifinal between England and Argentina.
While English supporters dream of repeating the glory of 1966, many Irish pubs will be filled with newly recruited Argentina fans whose main qualification is a determination to support anybody but England.
Irish people often insist that the bitterness of the past has been left behind, yet whenever England reach the latter stages of a major tournament, the old hostility quickly returns. Is it simply harmless sporting rivalry and good natured banter, or does it expose a deeper resentment that still exists beneath the surface?
Should Irish football supporters put history aside and support their closest neighbours, or has cheering against England become an accepted part of Irish identity?
Will you be waving the Union Jack and cheering on Harry Kane and the boys, or desperately hoping Lionel Messi and Argentina send England home?- In this episode, Niall speaks to callers about an email from a furious female listener whose husband wants to go on a week long lads’ holiday to Spain without her or their children.
The husband plans to travel with a group of men from his local pub, many of whom are younger, single and unmarried. His wife insists that she trusts him, but says she does not trust the situation after days of drinking, pressure from single friends and attention from other women.
What has angered her most is that the couple have not taken their two children on a family holiday this year, yet her husband suddenly appears able to find both the money and the time for a week away with the lads. After she told him he should not go, the couple stopped speaking.
Is she being controlling and treating her husband like a child, or does a married man with children have responsibilities that should come before a drinking holiday with single friends?
Can you genuinely trust your partner while still believing the circumstances are inappropriate? Should married couples be allowed to take separate holidays, or does marriage mean accepting that some parts of single life must be left behind?
Niall hears strong opinions from callers as they debate trust, temptation, double standards, family priorities and what really happens on lads’ holidays.
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