Jac Hayden

5K posts

Jac Hayden

Jac Hayden

@Jac_Hayden

Former RTE journalist and Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, TCD

South Dublin, Ireland Katılım Nisan 2011
1.3K Takip Edilen910 Takipçiler
Jac Hayden retweetledi
Daniel Mulhall
Daniel Mulhall@DanMulhall·
‘Attacks on undersea cables could cut off Ireland from global internet, Government warned’ A reminder to those who think our neutrality keeps us invulnerable, that we live in a world of multiple threats to which we need to respond as best we can. Putting our head in the sand is not a viable option. irishtimes.com/politics/2026/…
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Ronan McGreevy
Ronan McGreevy@RMcGreevy1301·
Is Starkey suggesting that Muslims should not be allowed vote, hold public office, serve in the army or be a solicitor? Does he think Muslim clergy should be banned or hunted out of the UK? Does he think Muslim schools should be shut and driven underground? This is the logic of what this daft fool is suggesting. It is not correct to say that Catholics were persecuted because they wanted to overthrow the British State instead of for their faith. Anti-Catholic bigotry was a prime driver of the modern British state. Even today a Catholic cannot be a British monarch.
David Starkey@DrDStarkeyCBE

This will offend some people. When considering how we deal with the problem of Islamist supremacism, it’s tempting to throw up our hands and despair. But the fact is, we’ve been here before and have a playbook for dealing with this stuff. There was in England’s history a recalcitrant religious minority that claimed the authority of a higher power to re-order English society by violence, even abrogating for itself the right to murder the monarch: it was called Catholicism. It’s imperial claims were suppressed and eventually defeated by the application of specific laws designed not to persecute people for being Catholic, but to thwart the political objective of making England a Catholic country. As always, the answer to our problems lie in our own history, if only we had the wit to see it.

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Jennifer Bendery
Jennifer Bendery@jbendery·
NEW: The Pentagon today invited more than 3,500 employees to attend a Good Friday service at its in-house chapel. Except it’s only for Protestants, not Catholics. huffpost.com/entry/news-liv…
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John O’Brennan
John O’Brennan@JohnOBrennan2·
The time has come for a purely European Defence Union. Yes, will take 3-5 years to properly put in place. But much of the structure is there from NATO and can be adapted. What matters is development of proper defence industrial base, common procurement. theguardian.com/world/2026/apr…
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MargaretOGorman
MargaretOGorman@MargaretOG66351·
I'm not a gambler. Don't put your shirt on this. But I'd be inclined to take out a bet against Pete Hegseth. The Orange Monster needs an off ramp. He's fed up of his foray into Iran. It spells failure. Trump can blame #Hegseth and hope that the news cycle keeps spinning
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Billy Kelleher MEP
Billy Kelleher MEP@BillyKelleherEU·
laying and interconnector to France to buy more Nuclear power. We spent years opposing a LNG storage/regasification facility at Ballylongford In Kerry built with private money. Now we are running around the world looking for a LNG storage/regasification unit. Hard to believe
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Brigid Laffan
Brigid Laffan@BrigidLaffan·
And the rest of Europe is tired of your treason - you are Lavrov’s puppet. You damage the interests of Europe. @FM_Szijjarto you take taxpayers money from the rest of Europe & break the Treaty commitment to sincere cooperation in the Treaty
Zoltan Kovacs@zoltanspox

🚨 @FM_Szijjarto: Foreign secret services wiretapped my calls and released them ahead of the elections with the help of Hungarian journalist @panyiszabolcs. This is a gigantic scandal and a serious interference in Hungary’s sovereignty. We will not allow a puppet government to be imposed on us.

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ALASTAIR CAMPBELL
ALASTAIR CAMPBELL@campbellclaret·
The US pulling out of NATO was part of the plan all along ... Putin’s plan that is. He just got lucky with who he helped to make US president. It really is time for Europe to get serious about the withdrawal of the US from credible global leadership or reliable alliance
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Financial Times
FT Exclusive: A broker for the US defence secretary attempted to make a big investment in major defence companies in the weeks leading up to the US-Israeli attack on Iran, according to three people familiar with the matter. ft.trib.al/HIiu9Tx
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Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦
Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦@jurgen_nauditt·
Intimidation, bribery, and drugs: A film about the political methods of Orbán's party has been released in Hungary. The documentary "The Price of a Vote" is the result of a six-month investigation by independent journalists. In the film, voters, mayors, former members of election commissions, and even police officers claim that people were coerced into voting for the ruling Fidesz party. According to them, this was achieved through bribes, threats, and sometimes even drugs. Ukraine Now
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Szabolcs Panyi
Szabolcs Panyi@panyiszabolcs·
‼️Statement on the Orbán Government Accusing Me, an Investigative Journalist, of Espionage‼️ Today, the Hungarian government has filed a complaint against me for espionage. Accusing investigative journalists of espionage is virtually unprecedented in the 21st century for an EU member state. This is typical of Putin’s Russia, Belarus, and similar regimes. I have spent over a decade documenting how Russian spies and interests have penetrated Hungarian politics, so I am probably the least surprised by this. Despite growing signs that the Hungarian government acts as a Kremlin ally and copies the Russian model, I still trust that parts of the Hungarian state—and the judiciary—follow the Hungarian constitution, not that of the Russian Federation. I have never engaged in espionage. I see my work as journalistic counterintelligence—from exposing the hacking of the Hungarian Foreign Ministry by Russian actors to revealing the activities of Hungarian pro-Kremlin propagandists. Defending myself publicly would be easier if I were not bound by source protection. But that remains my top priority. I cannot reveal who provides me information or what I receive, including from within Hungarian state structures. If I were not a journalist, I could list many facts proving it is impossible for the Hungarian state to genuinely believe I am spying. Certain meetings, contacts, and information gathering could never have happened otherwise. This baseless accusation now forces me to share details of a specific investigation, including a conversation with a confidential source that appears to have been wiretapped. Normally, this would appear in a finished article or my upcoming book—not here. (It will appear there as well.) Since 2023, I have investigated whether the relationship between Péter Szijjártó and Russian officials exceeds legal limits. The published audio, where I’m heard talking to a source, mentions that communication between Szijjártó and Sergey Lavrov is recorded by EU intelligence services. Less attention has gone to my point that this relationship raises strong suspicion of political intelligence activity and influence operations in Russia’s interest. These are serious claims and hard to prove. As a journalist, I cannot force anyone to speak or hand over documents. That is why gathering this information has taken so long—and why I spoke to that sensitive source (while the conversation was secretly recorded). Serious claims require serious evidence, and I believe I have gathered some. I have not engaged in espionage. I have not cooperated with any foreign intelligence service in surveilling Szijjártó. Instead, I tried to verify earlier fragments of information about Szijjártó–Lavrov communication. I sought to identify the channels and phone numbers used, and whether a secret channel—possibly used by Russian intelligence—exists. In other words, whether Szijjártó uses a hidden device or number unknown even within the Hungarian Foreign Ministry. This was only one part of my research. The other, more serious topic is this: Since at least 2016–2017, EU and NATO intelligence services have had indications that large amounts of cash and precious stones may have been transported from Russia on Hungarian government aircraft or private jets used by government figures. Officials from at least six countries made such claims to me. These signals did not come from monitoring Hungarian targets, but, for example, from intercepting Russian officials discussing or preparing such shipments. Alongside Szijjártó–Lavrov communication, I examined how baggage screening and handling works on such flights, which officials travel with what luggage, whether more packages arrive from Moscow than depart, and how such shipments could be handled discreetly. I know how serious this is, and I would not have written even this much—but since I do not know what else may be taken from the edited recording, or what fabricated accusations (like, for example, that I was seeking such details to commit terrorism) may follow, I believe I must share this now. Why do I investigate all this? According to many sources familiar with the Hungarian state and counterintelligence, there is no independent body in the Orbán system able to investigate or act if a senior official is suspected of espionage. Government members direct intelligence services and set expectations. The services lack both tools and authority to investigate a government member. I knew this would be difficult when I chose to pursue it. But few people in Hungary can or dare to do this, so I felt it was my duty. We have now reached the point where the Orbán government—of which Szijjártó is still a member—aware of my reporting plans and the risk they pose, has preemptively accused me of espionage. I am a Hungarian patriot. I serve the public. As an investigative journalist, my job is to hold power accountable. Neither political theater nor legal threats will deter me.
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Mykhailo Lavrovskyi
Mykhailo Lavrovskyi@Lavrovskyi·
@adam_nimoy As someone whose call sign is Spock, I’m grateful for the reminder - and for the fact that you haven't forgotten about our war.
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Adam Nimoy
Adam Nimoy@adam_nimoy·
To commemorate my father’s 95th birthday, I want to remind Spock fans that dad’s parents were Ukrainian immigrants which shaped my father in many ways. Four years of Putin’s war has brought death and destruction to our people, our homeland. LLAP. #standwithukraine #ukraine
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Ronan McGreevy
Ronan McGreevy@RMcGreevy1301·
"Lemass was extraordinarily prescient that Europe’s dependence on the US security umbrella could lead to problems in the future. Ireland, he stressed, was militarily unaligned, not neutral. In any confrontation between “East and West, we will be on the side of the West. Ireland will side with democracy against any socialist or totalitarian system. But we consider we could give more service to the West outside a formal alliance. “I, personally, would not at all disagree with de Gaulle that Europe must be capable of an independent defence, if this is feasible, because there is a great deal of sense in his contention that when the chips are down, America would not commit suicide for the sake of Europe.” My article in @IrishCentral about Seán Lemass: The Lost Memoir. irishcentral.com/opinion/others…
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Lars Bové
Lars Bové@ZaakJustitie·
In Hungary, Orbán is accusing my fellow journalist @panyiszabolcs of espionage.👇 But in Belgium, the investigation I conducted with him into Hungarian espionage in Brussels against the EU has just been nominated for the prestigious Belfius Press Prize...
Szabolcs Panyi@panyiszabolcs

‼️Statement on the Orbán Government Accusing Me, an Investigative Journalist, of Espionage‼️ Today, the Hungarian government has filed a complaint against me for espionage. Accusing investigative journalists of espionage is virtually unprecedented in the 21st century for an EU member state. This is typical of Putin’s Russia, Belarus, and similar regimes. I have spent over a decade documenting how Russian spies and interests have penetrated Hungarian politics, so I am probably the least surprised by this. Despite growing signs that the Hungarian government acts as a Kremlin ally and copies the Russian model, I still trust that parts of the Hungarian state—and the judiciary—follow the Hungarian constitution, not that of the Russian Federation. I have never engaged in espionage. I see my work as journalistic counterintelligence—from exposing the hacking of the Hungarian Foreign Ministry by Russian actors to revealing the activities of Hungarian pro-Kremlin propagandists. Defending myself publicly would be easier if I were not bound by source protection. But that remains my top priority. I cannot reveal who provides me information or what I receive, including from within Hungarian state structures. If I were not a journalist, I could list many facts proving it is impossible for the Hungarian state to genuinely believe I am spying. Certain meetings, contacts, and information gathering could never have happened otherwise. This baseless accusation now forces me to share details of a specific investigation, including a conversation with a confidential source that appears to have been wiretapped. Normally, this would appear in a finished article or my upcoming book—not here. (It will appear there as well.) Since 2023, I have investigated whether the relationship between Péter Szijjártó and Russian officials exceeds legal limits. The published audio, where I’m heard talking to a source, mentions that communication between Szijjártó and Sergey Lavrov is recorded by EU intelligence services. Less attention has gone to my point that this relationship raises strong suspicion of political intelligence activity and influence operations in Russia’s interest. These are serious claims and hard to prove. As a journalist, I cannot force anyone to speak or hand over documents. That is why gathering this information has taken so long—and why I spoke to that sensitive source (while the conversation was secretly recorded). Serious claims require serious evidence, and I believe I have gathered some. I have not engaged in espionage. I have not cooperated with any foreign intelligence service in surveilling Szijjártó. Instead, I tried to verify earlier fragments of information about Szijjártó–Lavrov communication. I sought to identify the channels and phone numbers used, and whether a secret channel—possibly used by Russian intelligence—exists. In other words, whether Szijjártó uses a hidden device or number unknown even within the Hungarian Foreign Ministry. This was only one part of my research. The other, more serious topic is this: Since at least 2016–2017, EU and NATO intelligence services have had indications that large amounts of cash and precious stones may have been transported from Russia on Hungarian government aircraft or private jets used by government figures. Officials from at least six countries made such claims to me. These signals did not come from monitoring Hungarian targets, but, for example, from intercepting Russian officials discussing or preparing such shipments. Alongside Szijjártó–Lavrov communication, I examined how baggage screening and handling works on such flights, which officials travel with what luggage, whether more packages arrive from Moscow than depart, and how such shipments could be handled discreetly. I know how serious this is, and I would not have written even this much—but since I do not know what else may be taken from the edited recording, or what fabricated accusations (like, for example, that I was seeking such details to commit terrorism) may follow, I believe I must share this now. Why do I investigate all this? According to many sources familiar with the Hungarian state and counterintelligence, there is no independent body in the Orbán system able to investigate or act if a senior official is suspected of espionage. Government members direct intelligence services and set expectations. The services lack both tools and authority to investigate a government member. I knew this would be difficult when I chose to pursue it. But few people in Hungary can or dare to do this, so I felt it was my duty. We have now reached the point where the Orbán government—of which Szijjártó is still a member—aware of my reporting plans and the risk they pose, has preemptively accused me of espionage. I am a Hungarian patriot. I serve the public. As an investigative journalist, my job is to hold power accountable. Neither political theater nor legal threats will deter me.

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Edward Luce
Edward Luce@EdwardGLuce·
Trump administration is taking money Europeans and others have paid for arms for Ukraine and other purposes, not delivering said arms, and spending cash to help with self-created Gulf mess. This is not a trustworthy power. Credibility incinerated.
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Flora Garamvolgyi
Flora Garamvolgyi@floragaramvolgy·
The Hungarian government is filing charges against investigative journalist @panyiszabolcs for espionage, Orbán’s chief of staff, Gergely Gulyás says.
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