Voters air frustrations ahead of Irish general election
In what is one of Europeâs best performing economies, mum-of-four Emma says she lies awake at night worrying if her children will get the medical care they need.
She is one of many in the Republic of Ireland who say they are not feeling the benefits of the countryâs considerably healthy bank balance.
As polls in the countryâs general election prepare to open on Friday, there are lots of voters who say they feel âfrustratedâ and âgrumpyâ.
Pressures around housing, immigration and public services have dominated the campaign.
âI hear we are one of the richest countries in the worldâ
Two of Emmaâs children have complex medical needs and have spent years on âendless waiting listsâ, she says.
Her 16-year-old daughter waited so long to see a rheumatologist she âaged outâ of child services, she says.
âI hear we are one of the richest countries in the world and we have never been richer, but I donât see it,â she tells BBC News NI.
âI hear it but I donât see it.â
Emma also cares for her two elderly parents and says her mum is forced to regularly drive a 10-hour round trip to see an eye specialist.
Emma lives in County Donegal, in the north-west of Ireland.
It is one of the furthest points from the heart of government in Dublin.
Last month, the Republicâs outgoing finance minister, Jack Chambers, delivered a pre-election budget in which he promises âbright and hopeful days for all of usâ, including âŹ250 (ÂŁ208) for all households to help with energy bills.
Ireland will have a total budget surplus this year of âŹ25bn (ÂŁ20.8bn), which is made up in part by a huge tax windfall from Apple.
Thirty miles away in Bunbeg, on the countyâs west coast, local journalist Ăine NĂ BhreisleĂĄin confirms Emma is not alone in how she feels.
âWeâre being told that things are better in Ireland, but people can see the cost of living is rising and rising,â she says.
âHousing is very difficult to get. Health services, weâre being told, are having money pumped into them, but people canât access the health services they need.â
And âpeople often vote first with their pocketâ, she warns.
The âforgottenâ county
With its mountains and coastline, Donegal is a beautiful place to live in but its scale as a political constituency makes it a âcanvasserâs nightmareâ, says Ăine.
âPeople maybe feel theyâve been separated and left on their own and forgotten here in Donegal,â she adds.
There are a number of issues why this may be, but Ăine points to infrastructure, health services, expenditure and, pointedly, the issue surrounding defective concrete blocks.
Thousands of homes built with blocks containing high levels of the mineral Mica are crumbling across the county.
The mineral absorbs water, causing walls to crack and crumble.
In November 2021, the Irish government introduced what it said was a significant number of improvements to a previous scheme for mica homeowners.
The scheme, which is capped at âŹ420,000 (ÂŁ357,500), is for homeowners in counties Donegal, Mayo, Clare and Limerick â where the blocks are most present.
Housing is also a major problem in the Republic, with prices soaring and about 58,000 on the social housing waiting list.
A major report from July also suggests that at least 35,000 new homes need to be built every year to keep up with demand.
However, Irelandâs population continues to rise.
Last year around 150,000 immigrants arrived â the highest number for 17 years.
Most were from outside the UK.
County Donegal hosts the largest proportion, per capita, of asylum seekers â known in Ireland as International Protection Applicants (IPAs).
It is claimed one in every 100 people in the county is now an IPA.
âThe concern people have about immigration in Donegal is equality,â local radio host Greg Hughes says.
âThey feel people coming to the country, or people being offered refuge, are given priority.â
Greg hosts a live daily local phone-in programme on Highland Radio.
At his studios in Letterkenny, he says perhaps voters are âfeeling grumpy or perhaps disconnectedâ because not all the problems in Ireland are new.
He suggests that people also have not seen meaningful moves to address them.
âI am not saying the government isnât trying or they arenât doing their best but the reality is you say to someone in Donegal that this current country is incredibly rich, theyâll say, âWell, whenâs this going to trickle down into my pocket?ââ
Wealth gap
While chatting to Margarite in Letterkenny Shopping Centre, she says that she feels she is being âgaslightedâ â the act or practice of grossly misleading someone, especially for oneâs own advantage â by politicians.
âI think thereâs a gap between the wealth in the country and the people on the ground,â she tells the BBC.
âI think people might be grumpy about the fact theyâre constantly being told almost they feel like theyâre being gaslit that weâre a rich country with all these resources.
âBut when it comes down to things in rural areas, public transport, investment in roads, investment in local hospitals and the rate of pay in areas such as Donegal, we donât feel that wealth.
âAnd I think that causes an awful lot of frustration.â
The outgoing government parties, made up of a coalition between Fine Gael, Fianna FĂĄil and the Green Party, will be hoping to return to power following this election.
However Sinn FĂ©in are hoping to be returned as the biggest party for the first time.
They have all been defending their records in government and in opposition.
A quarter of the 686 candidates are also running as Independents.
BBC News Northern Ireland will also broadcast an election results programme on Saturday at 18:00 GMT, available on iPlayer BBC Sounds, BBC Radio Ulster and BBC Two.