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  • Flynn agus na Fianna

    Glory day: TD Beverley Flynn celebrates with supporters after winning the last seat in Mayo in the general election Deal or no deal? Beverley Flynn tells Miriam Donohoe she would have supported the Taoiseach either way. p
  • Case study Flynn and RTÉ

    Beverley Flynn took a High Court libel action against RTÉ after it broadcast a news report, in 1998, claiming she was involved in systematic and organised tax evasion while she worked as an investment adviser for National Irish Bank (NIB). p
News Features
  • A lot done, more to do in the politics of nip and tuck

    Double Take:  When you're dealing with weighty issues, a little Botox, liposuction and plastic surgery helps, writes Ann Marie Hourihanep
  • Where there's muck, there's brass

    This year sets a new record with more than 50 music festivals. But is the bubble about to burst, asks Jim Carrollp
  • No escaping the truth

    Murders, escapes and disorder in Irish prisons - the new Minister for Justice faces an uphill battle, writes Conor Lally , Crime Correspondent. p
  • The Brown supremacy

    It has taken him a decade to get his hands on the top job, but where will Gordon Brown's famous 'moral compass' lead Britain, asks Frank Millar , London Editor. p
  • The criminal in the mirror

    How many times a week do you break the law? And do you see anything wrong with it? Fionola Meredith reports on the casual crime wave. p
  • Business as usual

    Ten years after the handover to China, Hong Kong carries on much the same as before, although calls for democracy are starting to rumble beneath the commercial veneer, writes Clifford Coonan in Hong Kong. p
  • Northerners make pudding, not war

    The US saw a new side of Northern Ireland at a festival in Washington DC this week - cuisine, dancing and tolerance, writes Denis Stauntonp
  • All aboard the paranoia express

    Profile: Loathed by right-wingers and loved by conspiracy theorists, Michael Moore combines his unique journalistic style, controversial stunts and a cavalier approach to the truth in Sicko, writes Donald Clarkep
  • Time to face down bullies of the backbench

    If TDs behave like children, the Ceann Comhairle should start using teachers' clever tactics to keep them in line, argues Kate Holmquist. p
  • This Week They Said

    It is not true that the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. It is more accurate to say that the gap between the top and bottom of the social ladder has failed to narrow. - From a new book, The Best of Times? The Social Impact of the Celtic Tiger, published by the ESRI. p
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