Éirigí Gaillimh has launched a public campaign to have a new bridge in Galway City named after the 1916 Veteran Julia Morrisey. The, as yet unnamed, pedestrian and cycle bridge will cross the River Corrib close
Brian Leeson has slammed the suggestion that it could take seven or more years for the first new housing to be built on public land in Ballinteer and Sandyford. He was responding to media reports that 37 acres of
Éirígí For A New Republic today announced that Ard Fheis Éirígí 2022 will take place in The Teachers Club, Dublin on Saturday, February 26th. Speaking in relation to Ard Fheis 2022, Éirígí General Secretary Mickey
Éirígí activists and supporters from from across Ireland travelled to Derry on Sunday to mark the 50th anniversary of the Bloody Sunday Massacre. They came from Wexford, Limerick, Dublin, Westmeath,
Jim Larkin died on this day 75 years ago. While the physical image of ‘Big Jim’ Larkin still looms large on Dublin’s O’Connell Street, his ideas around the role that trade unions should play in Irish society are far less
Today as part of our Connolly Archive series, we republish a James Connolly article entitled ‘Sinn Féin, Socialism and the Nation’ which was originally published on this day in the Irish Nation in 1909. In it
The brutal murder of Ashling Murphy sparked an unprecedented wave of vigils across Ireland and beyond. Tens of thousands of people spontaneously took to the streets to demonstrate their support for Ashling’s
Sunday, January 16th, saw Éirígí activists in Limerick join an international week of solidarity actions in support of Ahmad Sa'adat and thousands of other Palestinian political prisoners being held in Israeli gaols.
The 50th anniversary of the Bloody Sunday Massacre in Derry on 30th January, 1972 will be marked with a vigil in Eyre Square in Galway City. The hour-long commemorative event, which is being organised by Éirígí
Today, as part of our On the Shoulders of Giants series, we republish the ‘Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the Female Citizen’ which was written in 1791 by the French playwright and political activist Olympe de Gouges.