Letters to the Editor: An official Irish-American federation would bring many benefits
Dancers perform an excerpt from 'Riverdance' at the Friends of Ireland lunch hosted by Speaker of the US House of Representatives Mike Johnson and attended by Taoiseach Micheál Martin last month in Washington DC. Picture: Niall Carson/PA
As Ireland faces new global opportunities, it’s timely to formally recognise and enhance the extraordinary potential of our relationship with the Irish-American community. With 44m Americans claiming Irish heritage, establishing an official Irish American federation presents immense economic, cultural, and social opportunities that would significantly benefit both Ireland and the United States.
One of the key benefits would be providing Irish Americans with formal recognition and opportunities they richly deserve. Irish Americans have long played a prominent role in shaping American society and politics, yet their ancestral homeland could now offer something more tangible in return. A carefully structured programme granting dual citizenship, special residency pathways, and dedicated support services could encourage thousands of Irish Americans — especially retirees — to relocate or maintain strong residential links to Ireland.
The Irish American federation would greatly enhance dual citizenship opportunities, providing comprehensive access to Irish healthcare, education, social welfare, and community supports. Such initiatives would prove particularly attractive to Irish Americans seeking retirement in a place deeply connected to their roots, enriching local communities while strengthening cultural ties.
Moreover, the federation could facilitate a strategic reciprocal agreement, offering a solution to the estimated 50,000 undocumented Irish immigrants in the United States. In return for Ireland’s commitment to welcoming and providing residency for between 250,000 and 1.5m Irish Americans over the next two decades, the US could agree to regularise the status of these undocumented Irish immigrants, granting them official green card residency. Such an arrangement would bring peace of mind and security to countless Irish families, solving a longstanding humanitarian issue while reinforcing our strong bilateral relationship.
The federation would bring clear economic benefits. Irish American companies — such as Ford Motor Company, McCormick & Company, Walsh Group, and Doherty Enterprises whose heritage connects directly to Ireland — would enjoy preferential access to the Irish market. Special trade arrangements under this new federation would simplify the entry of American-made products, fostering economic growth and providing Irish consumers with wider choices and improved access to American innovation, technology, and manufacturing excellence.
Likewise, the federation would actively promote tariff-free access for Ireland’s iconic food, beverages, crafts, and other premium products in the US.
This favourable access would invigorate Irish producers, farmers, distillers, and artisans, by expanding markets, creating jobs, and significantly boosting Ireland’s economy and global profile.
The federation would significantly expand cultural opportunities, including dedicated heritage programmes, genealogy services, Irish-American festivals, and cultural exchanges. Establishing a permanent museum of Irish-American history and dedicated cultural centres would celebrate and honour the historical contributions of the Irish diaspora. These initiatives would attract visitors, stimulate tourism, and enhance Ireland’s global visibility while reaffirming and nurturing the emotional ties of millions of Irish Americans to their ancestral home.
The federation could strategically encourage investment by Irish Americans in sectors crucial to Ireland’s future — particularly renewable energy, green hydrogen, offshore wind, sustainable agriculture, and maritime industries. This focused investment could propel Ireland into becoming a leading European hub for innovation, sustainability, and green economic growth.
Such visionary collaboration would create high-quality jobs, reduce environmental impacts, and position Ireland as a leader in global sustainability efforts.
Establishing an Irish American federation could also yield significant diplomatic advantages, offering structured representation and voice to Irish Americans in Irish civic life, potentially including voting rights in presidential elections or a special vice-presidential role dedicated to diaspora issues. This formal acknowledgment would resonate deeply, empowering millions of Irish Americans who actively seek closer ties and greater engagement with Ireland.
This kind of federation has strong historical and contemporary precedents internationally, where European nations like France, Italy, Portugal, and Spain have successfully leveraged structured relationships with their diaspora communities, yielding cultural prestige, economic prosperity, and strategic diplomatic advantages. It is high time Ireland embraced a similarly proactive, forward-thinking, and structured approach.
We now have a historic opportunity to create a partnership worthy of our heritage, one that future generations will celebrate. Let us embrace this opportunity fully and boldly, creating an enduring legacy that will redefine Ireland’s global relationships for decades to come.
I note that has labelled Trump’s tariffs, not as ‘Liberation Day’, but ‘Ruination Day’. According to Donald Trump, it appears that pharma tariffs are still very much under active consideration.
One must remember that pharma represents 20% of Irelands GDP. There’s about 80,000 people in this country employed directly and indirectly within this sector and it also contributes upwards of €4bn in corporation tax and it also supports a huge amount of people’s livelihoods.
Of the pharma product produced in Ireland, it’s reported that about 60% goes to the EU and about 40% goes to the US. One has to be fearful in terms of US tariffs when it comes to that 40%.
This unease really depends on the level and permanency of these tariffs. These taxes will raise the cost of our exports into the US making our products less competitive which could then have a knock on impact on sales.
Ultimately, the increase in prices could then end up being passed on to US insurance companies, resulting in higher prices for American consumers. We may lose jobs here in Ireland and experience an economic hit here.
However when one looks at America, one finds that US families pay the highest rates for health care globally. They pay circa $12,500 per annum and so the healthcare costs in the US are already very high. A lot of American households are already priced out of healthcare. There is no doubt that the risk to further price increases is quite significant on people. I think there has been a very measured response from the Government here in Ireland and across the EU. We haven’t been impulsive. Thankfully, there’s been quite a coming together of EU leaders apropos to this imbroglio.
I’ve read several articles recently that speculated on the probability of life elsewhere in the universe, and about how aliens might treat us if they opted to visit Earth.
If they’re as far ahead of us on the evolutionary scale we’ll surely be at their mercy, for better or worse.
Fingers crossed that they won’t get the idea into their heads that they are entitled to do to us what we’ve been doing to the “dumb critters” on this planet.
Those of us they regard as exotic or as posing a worthy challenge to their marksmanship (assuming they’d be into shooting or zapping living organisms) would find ourselves running wildly to avoid getting holes punched into us.
And we’d undoubtedly be displayed proudly as trophies at alien get-togethers or on their super advanced versions of social media. What spectacles we’d make, sprawled pathetically across the bonnets of mini-UFOs, our eyes pleading though lifeless.
Or we might have to run over long distances, chased by killer contraptions unleashed by our new overlords. We might be lucky enough to escape the odd hunt, but if caught we’d provide a few minutes or seconds of hilarity for ET.
God knows what kinds of intergalactic sport they might come up with.
To advance their knowledge of the universe and everything in it they’d surely experiment on us, taking us apart, planting electrodes or other super-tech gizmos in our brains, dissecting us on big laboratory benches, wrenching out our insides to have a closer look even as our hearts go tick-tock.
They’d harvest us, naturally, being so much cleverer, and indisputably superior to us on every level. We’d be served up in a multitude of creative ways, or eaten raw by some of the hardier aliens who might have a taste for raw flesh.
We can only hope that the lads “out there” will not subject us to a hell on earth if they come calling.
But if they decide they have an ethical right to do so we would be in trouble because, let’s face it … we wouldn’t have a leg to stand on.