Community Platform General Election Manifesto 2024 and Member Hub

he Community Platform has collectively developed our Manifesto for the General Election. The Manifesto focuses on proposals under the following four key areas, which we are asking all political parties and candidates to address:
  1. The eradication of poverty:
 
  1. The delivery of a universal Public System of Early Childhood Education and Care:
 
  1. The implementation of an effective model of collaborative governance:
 
  1. The creation of inclusive, resilient, sustainable and empowered communities:
    • We call on parties and candidates to commit to build on the pilot Community Development Programme and invest in and expedite the establishment of a network of autonomous community development projects in and with marginalised communities.
    • In addition, we call on political parties and candidates to recognise the vital role community and voluntary organisations play in society, and the essential work these organisations carry out at the local and national level. We further call on candidates and parties to recognise the barriers and challenges facing community and voluntary organisations and to commit to significantly increase investment in and resourcing of these organisations, including through the development and implementation of more sustainable multi-year funding models to allow organisations to effectively plan long term.
  These priorities are rooted in the values of dignity, social and economic justice, equality, solidarity, social and economic inclusion, sustainability, participation, and transparency which we call on all election candidates and political parties to uphold. We also call on all candidates and parties to conduct their campaigns in a way that promotes respect for all and does not incite hatred or prejudice on the grounds of gender, marital status, family status, age, disability, sexual orientation, ‘race’ (including skin colour, nationality, ethnicity), religion, membership of the Traveller Community, or socio-economic status.   READ THE COMMUNITY PLATFORM MANIFESTO FOR THE GENERAL ELECTION HERE  
The Community Platform is an alliance of 31 national networks and organisations in the community and voluntary sector working to address poverty, social exclusion and inequality. This page will be updated with manifestos, events and information from members in the run up to General Election 2024. Age Action’s General Election Manifesto, A New Approach to Ageing Policy, contains tens asks for the General Election. Age Action’s ten asks are a distillation of what we have learned from listening to older persons and asking for their views through surveys, interviews and focus, and also informed by international best practice and research findings. The AONTAS General Election manifesto Transforming Adult and Community Education calls for the next Government to make transformative and progressive policy changes that will ensure those furthest behind in our education system are prioritised first. It asks politicians to focus on issues that have a massive impact on adult and community education – like childcare, public transport, social welfare and disability payments, student counselling, and pay and conditions for tutors and staff. The EAPN Ireland General Election Manifesto 2024 sets its priorities for the next Government. The Manifesto outlines a range of commitments the network is calling on all candidates and political parties to adopt, and to deliver should they form the next Government. EAPN Ireland is calling on the next Government to commit to eradicating, not just alleviating, poverty, and for priority to be given to addressing the systemic and structural root causes of poverty, social exclusion and inequality. Focus Ireland has published its policy proposals for General Election Manifestos, What can political parties say about homelessness that will really make a difference? The document sets out six high level policy proposals, with detailed discussion of these policies, additional policy ideas which, based on its front-line experience and research, Focus believes can make a substantial difference if adopted, and a summary of what Focus sees as the most relevant proposals in relation to homelessness from the Report of the Housing Commission. ILMI has produced a Doorstep briefing for Election Candidates 2024, which is designed to empower disabled people across Ireland to confidently engage with election candidates. It includes specific, simple questions to push for commitments that support real rights-based changes – not just superficial fixes – in a way election candidates will understand and, most importantly, that can lead to tangible improvements for all disabled people. The INOU General Election Manifesto covers a range of key issues for the organisation under seven headings: ensuring adequate levels of income; improving welfare to work supports; providing quality training and education; enhancing labour market programmes; accessible and decent jobs; supportive employment services; and inclusive technological change. In the forthcoming General Election, the INOU is calling on all political parties and people standing for election to support particular measures and address the barriers facing people who are unemployed. The Irish Penal Reform Trust (IPRT) Priority Proposals for General Election Manifestos outlines 10 commitments parties should adopt to make the way in which we deal with people who offend more effective, humane, and less costly – financially and socially. This document gives a short overview of the issues, the context, and makes an argument for why these commitments are needed. It also provides concrete examples of specific actions – many implementable in the shorter term – that could be taken to realise these commitments. NALA has published its Manifesto, Our General Election Asks for Adult Literacy. It contains seven asks for political parties in this general election. These asks cover plain language, literacy programmes and literacy policy. NALA has also created an Election Webpage to: provide you with information that explains the voting process; show how you can support adult literacy in this general election; and share what political parties are saying about adult literacy in their manifestos. The National Women’s Council General Election Manifesto presents a feminist vision for an Ireland that advances women’s equality and protects women’s rights. NWC are calling on all general election candidates to demonstrate their commitment to women and equality by supporting ten key manifesto asks, including on childcare, violence against women, and universal healthcare (including reproductive rights) – issues that top the agenda for many women. The NWC Feminist Communities for Climate Justice Network have created a set of election asks with feminist climate justice at their core – climate action that takes note of existing inequalities and leaves no community behind. Pave Point has published its Manifesto Considerations: Election 2024/2025, calling on election candidates to make Traveller and Roma human rights and equality a Government priority, and to ensure an Ireland free from racism and discrimination, where all Travellers and Roma can fully realise their potential and participate as fully respected members of minority ethnic groups. The One Family General Election Manifesto focuses on tackling persistent and acute challenges faced by one-parent families through comprehensive reforms. It proposes a set of measures to raise the living standard of one-parent families, including through unifying welfare payments, reducing employment barriers and lowering the Working Family Payment threshold. Other key measures include expanding Fuel Allowance eligibility, enhancing childcare subsidies and strengthening child maintenance enforcement. It calls for equitable parental leave, accessible and comprehensive out-of-court services, as well as coordinated, targeted initiatives to combat child poverty across Ireland. The RCNI Election Manifesto 2024 calls on candidates and political parties to commit to five key priorities for the next Government. While Ireland has shown considerable leadership and all-party commitment to taking seriously zero tolerance to sexual violence, rape and sexual violence remain a whole of society challenge. The RCNI manifesto outlines the steps needed to build on that momentum and work for an Ireland where everyone is free from sexual violence and the fear and threat of sexual violence. The Simon Communities of Ireland Manifesto, Working to End Homelessness by 2030, outlines proposals for the next Government under three pillars: 1. Supporting Exits Out of Homelessness; 2. Actions to Prevent Homelessness; 3. Supporting People Experiencing Homelessness. It calls on the next Government to prioritise the ambition of the current 2030 target and to make considerable progress on the housing and homelessness crisis. Threshold’s General Election Manifesto, Making Housing Work: Solutions for Everyone, puts forward measures necessary to support renters and improve access to secure housing, provide solutions to some of the systemic problems of the Irish housing system, specifically the lack of affordability and security in the private rental sector, and safeguard against homelessness, ensuring everyone can access a home where they can live with dignity. Threshold’s overarching ask is for the forthcoming government to utilise the work done by the Housing Commission to create a long-term housing plan, akin to Sláintecare, with dedicated multi-annual funding, as has been done in Finland. Treoir’s General Election 2024 Manifesto lays out its key asks to the new government to create a fairer Ireland for all families. It advocates for policies to reduce poverty among single-parent families, make childcare affordable, address the housing crisis, and reform the family law system. The manifesto is a call to ensure that all family needs are front and centre in this election. The Women’s Aid Maintaining Momentum General Election Manifesto call for tackling domestic, sexual and gender-based violence to be made a priority in the next Programme for Government. It calls on every party and candidate to commit to Four Pillars of Action to tackle domestic violence and abuse: Prevention, Protection, Prosecution, and Policy Integration and Data Collection. Community Platform members Cairde, Immigrant Council of Ireland and Irish Refugee Council are members of a coalition of 22 organisations which has published Civil Society Manifesto Recommendations on International Protection, calling for protection of the rights and dignity of refugees and people seeking asylum. Share