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It started on Tuesday with tractors and trucks on major roads. Dublin city centre ground to a half. By Thursday, protesters were blockading Ireland's only oil refinery, the army had been called in, and the Taoiseach was calling it an act of national sabotage. Three days! That's how fast this has escalated, and nobody seems to know how it ends because nobody's entirely sure who's leading it.
Christine Bohan, Jane Matthews, Christina Finn and Rónán Duffy dig into why the government came out with the strongest language we've heard in years, and whether they've boxed themselves into a corner by refusing to talk to the protesters.
Also, on a lighter note: would you like another bank holiday?
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By The JournalIt started on Tuesday with tractors and trucks on major roads. Dublin city centre ground to a half. By Thursday, protesters were blockading Ireland's only oil refinery, the army had been called in, and the Taoiseach was calling it an act of national sabotage. Three days! That's how fast this has escalated, and nobody seems to know how it ends because nobody's entirely sure who's leading it.
Christine Bohan, Jane Matthews, Christina Finn and Rónán Duffy dig into why the government came out with the strongest language we've heard in years, and whether they've boxed themselves into a corner by refusing to talk to the protesters.
Also, on a lighter note: would you like another bank holiday?
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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