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Minister Jim O'Callaghan defends Taoiseach after Oval Office visit criticism

Micheál Martin presents US President Donald Trump with a bowl of Shamrock
Micheál Martin presented Donald Trump with a bowl of shamrock yesterday

Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan has defended Micheál Martin's performance in the Oval Office after People Before Profit TD Richard Boyd Barrett said the Taoiseach did not say "a single word of criticism of the flagrant, murderous breaches of international law" to US President Donald Trump.

Deputy Boyd Barrett said "every single working person in this country" is paying a "direct economic price" for the war in Iran, adding that Israel is "in the dock for genocide".

Mr Boyd Barrett said the Iran war has claimed the lives of more than 3,000 innocent Iranian people, including around 160 schoolgirls.

He said there are "real fears, we are going to see a repeat of the genocidal horrors that we have seen in Gaza".

In response, Minister O'Callaghan said: "What the Taoiseach did yesterday in the White House was extremely important for Ireland's and Europe's point of view".

He said the Taoiseach "has to deal with the circumstances with which he is faced".

Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan
Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan said there was engagement with the US behind the cameras

"Obviously, if you were Taoiseach, you wouldn't have gone to the United States," he said.

He said there was a "real benefit" to the St Patrick's Day meeting.

"He was able to speak out in respect of Keir Starmer, he was able to speak out in respect of immigration, and he was able to speak out in respect of Ireland's view is that we should resolve disputes through pacific methods," said Mr O'Callaghan.

He said Ireland is a small, "non-military" country with a "strong voice". The minister said there was also engagement behind the cameras.

Labour Leader Ivana Bacik welcomed Mr Martin's defence on Europe's immigration policies in the Oval Office. She also called for a positive campaign about migration in Ireland.

She said we have seen the misuse of our national flag and "hostile language" around immigration.

In response, Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan said the Taoiseach did "an excellent job" in "extremely challenging circumstances".

Mr Boyd Barrett also said he would not stand beside a "warmonger like Donald Trump who he said is ripping up the international legal rulebook to pursue a bloody and murderous war against Iran".

"Our Taoiseach can't even bring himself to actually condemn this, even when it is imposing an economic cost on every single person in this country and across the world," he said.

He said on 15 march, four US carriers "went through Shannon in just one day".

"Are you telling me they are not involved in the bloody carnage that Trump and the Israelis are inflicting on the Middle East," he asked.

Doherty critical of Taoiseach's meeting in White House

Sinn Féin TD Pearse Doherty said the Taoiseach failed to speak to the values of the Irish people during his meeting in the White House as he failed to call out US actions in the Middle East as illegal.

Green Party TD Roderic O'Gorman, meanwhile, said the Taoiseach's visit to the White House was not a diplomatic victory as it is being portrayed.

"I was particularly struck by the comments of the Taoiseach that Donald Trump is doing his bit for peace in the Middle East.

"Donald Trump has initiated an illegal war on Iran," Mr O’Gorman said.

"He has supported a genocide in Gaza.

"Donald Trump has generated the economic chaos that we are all experiencing now.

"Donald Trump has not done his bit for peace in the Middle East

"He is the driver of division, of chaos and of death within the Middle East."

People before Profit-Solidarity TD Ruth Coppinger said the Taoiseach "managed to say absolutely nothing" about the attack on a school in Iran at the beginning of the war in his meeting with Mr Trump.

She said this was "extremely embarrassing for the leader of a neutral country".

Ms Coppinger also said Mr Martin did not correct US President Donald Trump when he misgendered President Catherine Connolly.

"He wanted that to be just ignored," she said.

"We have to question why this ritual goes on every year," she said.

PBP-Solidarity TD Richard Boyd Barrett said Mr Martin did not show an "ounce of solidarity" with the "victims of Trump's war while he boasts about these criminal, immoral and murderous actions".

He called this "truly shameful".


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Former ambassador to the US says Taoiseach avoided hazards

Meanwhile, a former Irish ambassador to the US said the Taoiseach emerged from his meeting in the Oval Office with Mr Trump "without any bruises".

Dan Mulhall, who served as ambassador from 2017 to 2022, said the St Patrick's Day meeting between the two leaders saw Mr Martin avoid hazards.

Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Ireland, Mr Mulhall said the key interest Ireland has with America is economic.

"We don't want to see the economic ties we have to the United States damaged because of the attitudes of the Trump administration.

"I think the Taoiseach served that purpose well yesterday," Mr Mulhall said.

"And in fact, Marco Rubio made a really kind of extraordinary statement.

"It could have almost been written by us about lauding the economic ties between the US and highlighting the number of Americans who are employed by Irish companies.

"So, I think overall you could say we got through a difficult day on a difficult course and the Taoiseach came home fairly well without any bruises on his body."

Regarding the Taoiseach’s failure to call the US-Israeli war on Iran illegal, Mr Mulhall said it is "easier said than done".

"Look, this is a reality TV show that Donald Trump has created in the Oval Office. It's quite extraordinary compared with past traditions of these kind of meetings."

US President Donald Trump and Taoiseach Micheal Martin in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC
Micheál Martin met Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House on St Patrick's Day

Mr Mulhall said any leader who meets Mr Trump in the Oval Office is playing the role of an "extra", and added that the Taoiseach managed to "fact-check" the US president a couple of times.

"But the fact is that Donald Trump is the producer, the director, and the main actor.

"And no matter who comes into the Oval Office - Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron, Friedrich Merz - they're all extras in the show.

"And all of them have the same aim, which is to make sure that they play as big a role as they possibly can as extras, but recognising that there's no way of ever outplaying Donald Trump on his home turf in the Oval Office.

"And it's a question of getting out of there, making as many points as you can make.

"Every leader who's gone in there in the last year has suffered the same fate of having to listen to Donald Trump, going on and on and on about things.

"And you can only fact-check him a couple of times and the Taoiseach did that. If you do any more than that, then it becomes a confrontation and that doesn't end well for any leader, including the Taoiseach."

Dan Mulhall served as Irish ambassador to the United States from 2017 to 2022 (file photo)

Mr Mulhall said that the Taoiseach got the message across to the Americans "about the importance of the economic link for the US as well as for Ireland".

He added that the Taoiseach defending UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer was "a good thing to do".


Analysis: Martin picks his battles in notable moment of diplomacy


During yesterday's meeting, the Taoiseach said that Mr Starmer had done a lot to reset the Irish-British relationship and that he was an earnest, sound person that he thinks Mr Trump could get on with.

Mr Mulhall said that European leaders will have seen that the Taoiseach "did his best to defend Europe in a very difficult situation".

"And I think he'll get some kudos from that as well. And that's no harm for us either," Mr Mulhall said.

"So I think overall, I think he comes out of it pretty well.

"And I think he did enough to be able to hold his head up high and say, 'I tried my best to push back against Donald Trump in that very difficult environment'.

"I mean, I'm sure every European leader was going, 'oh my goodness, I'm glad I wasn't there’.

"Because the one thing that saved the Taoiseach was that we're not members of NATO.

"Neutrality was really a big plus card yesterday because he couldn't really attack us on that basis because we're not members of NATO."