After a reign that has brought every possible sort of calamity to Ireland, Leo Varadkar has announced his intention to resign as Taoiseach in April.
Varadkar was elected as a prolife candidate, who wanted to tackle immigration and welfare cheats.
Under his watch, abortion was legalised and increased to almost 10,000 a year, birth rates collapsed by almost 1/3, mass immigration became so bad that the country has spent over a year in open revolt against its own government, even burning down the city centre in Dublin and as for welfare cheats, Varadkar’s government allowed tens of thousands to arrive in the country without a passport per year while also overseeing an out of control drug crime problem.
The successes?
There are none. Young people are flocking the country in record numbers in order to escape Leo’s Ireland, something that we are told was a relic of the 1980s. The country is in the worst state that anyone can remember it being in.
There is really nothing to say, save perhaps for the time in 2021 when Varadkar attended the Traditional Latin Mass at St. Kevin’s Harrington Street in Dublin.
His resignation signals the end of a particularly delusional and ideological brand of arrogant politics and hopefully the beginning of a new more hopeful one.
We wish him the best in his future endeavours, which will hopefully not in any way shape or form include making decisions that affect our country.
The rejection of two recent referendums shows us that Varadkar and Fine Gael’s project of social destruction is not shared by the population at large.