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Results 661-680 of 1,108,520 for in 'Dáil debates' OR in 'Committee meetings' (speaker:Damien English OR speaker:Ruairi Ó Murchú OR speaker:Mick Barry OR speaker:Bríd Smith OR speaker:Cormac Devlin OR speaker:Martin Browne OR speaker:James O'Connor OR speaker:Emer Higgins OR speaker:Michael Collins OR speaker:John Lahart OR speaker:Róisín Shortall OR speaker:Bernard Durkan OR speaker:Pat Buckley OR speaker:Aindrias Moynihan OR speaker:Éamon Ó Cuív OR speaker:Sorca Clarke OR speaker:Eoin Ó Broin OR speaker:Michael McGrath OR speaker:Éamon Ó Cuív1 OR speaker:Mairead Farrell OR speaker:Hildegarde Naughton OR speaker:Richard O'Donoghue OR speaker:Frank Feighan OR speaker:Neale Richmond OR speaker:Anne Rabbitte OR speaker:Pauline Tully OR speaker:Verona Murphy OR speaker:Éamon Ó Cuív61)

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment agreed to.

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment No. 17:

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment agreed to.

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment No. 18:

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment agreed to.

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment No. 19:

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment agreed to.

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment No. 20:

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment agreed to.

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment No. 21:

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment agreed to.

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment No. 22:

Gambling Regulation Bill 2022: From the Seanad (16 Oct 2024)

Seanad amendment agreed to.

Social Welfare Bill 2024: Committee and Remaining Stages (16 Oct 2024)

Mattie McGrath: I welcome the improvements in the budget as regards PRSI for self-employed persons, although we are starting from a low base. When the crash came, employees were rightly able to get supports. They had paid in, as had their employers. However, a self-employed person with a van – a plasterer, welder, fitter, block layer or whatever – got nothing. While I accept that a lower...

Social Welfare Bill 2024: Committee and Remaining Stages (16 Oct 2024)

Heather Humphreys: I thank the Deputies for raising those points. A group of current and former Members have brought a High Court action seeking to have class K contributions payable as public officeholders declared unconstitutional. The matter is subject to legal proceedings, so maybe I had better say no more. I do not want to-----

Social Welfare Bill 2024: Committee and Remaining Stages (16 Oct 2024)

Michael Creed: Has the Minister received legal advice on the matter? We do not need to know what that advice is.

Social Welfare Bill 2024: Committee and Remaining Stages (16 Oct 2024)

Heather Humphreys: We can always get legal advice, but as far as I am concerned, it was an austerity measure taken during difficult times. It is now a simple question of whether we should reverse that measure.

Social Welfare Bill 2024: Committee and Remaining Stages (16 Oct 2024)

Michael Creed: Retrospectively.

Social Welfare Bill 2024: Committee and Remaining Stages (16 Oct 2024)

Heather Humphreys: Yes. The benefits available to the self-employed have been expanded considerably over the years. They get maternity benefit, paternity benefit, parent’s benefit, treatment benefit, the contributory pension, jobseekers’ benefit for the self-employed, the invalidity pension and the partial capacity benefit. They do not get illness benefit. That can be considered, but are...

Social Welfare Bill 2024: Committee and Remaining Stages (16 Oct 2024)

Seán Sherlock: I am conscious of the time and that other colleagues have tabled amendments, so I will be brief and speak specifically to my amendment. Where people lose office or cease to be Members, they can find themselves in the invidious position of having no payments due to them. Notwithstanding High Court actions or otherwise, the question also arises as to whether the Minister can, by statutory...

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