make Ireland great again 🇨🇮🇨🇮🇨🇮🇨🇮🇨🇮🇨🇮🇨🇮🇨🇮🇨🇮🇨🇮🇨🇮

Joined November 2014
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Replying to @fedup42Mn
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RT @WatchdogTh96012: Irelands Media “a thundering disgrace”. #IrishMedia #JohnMcGuirk
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
€90 million is a massive amount of money.
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Replying to @MaryLouMcDonald
Ladies and gentlemen I give you hypocrisy.......
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
I have no issue with elon musk commenting on irish affairs, its actually incredible that the only trillionaire in the world with no stake in the game is closer to the views of the irish public about unsustainable numbers of illegal immigration than our own political leaders
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These animals need to be stopped now no more migrants send them all to Brussels because that's who is spreading this disease through Europe
Das ist die Bestie – dieser 30-jährige afghanische Migrant, der heute in Brierfield bei Burnley einer 17-jährigen Britin von hinten ein Messer in den Hals gerammt hat. Das Mädchen kämpft immer noch um ihr Leben, liegt in kritischem Zustand im Krankenhaus. Es hört einfach nicht mehr auf😢
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Thank goodness for @elonmusk if it wasn't for you Irish people would have to rely on state lies
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
Murderous migrants beheading innocent people in their home town is what’s making people angry, not “social media”!
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Same here buddy trying to hold down 2 jobs just to keep a roof over our head. We are not represented we are ruled.
I started work at 5.30 am this morning and I'm home since 9pm I'm fucking shattered I'm not young anymore I'm now having a drink to try and unwind before I get up and do it all again tomorrow Why doesn't this pay off ? Why can't this pay off for my children ? Why are my taxes going towards making the lives of men who have no connection to me,my family or my land more comfortable and better ? I hate the left I hate self loathing Irish people with no pride I hate corrupted appeasing NGOs I hate Irish politicians I hate what my country has become I love Ireland I love Irish people God bless 🇮🇪🇮🇪
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
If you’re a follower from outside Ireland, please share this: show Britain, Europe, the world that Ireland is rising 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪 We are fighting back against mass migration and population replacement of our country ☘️ It would bring a tear to a glass eye. God bless Ireland! 🇮🇪 #Newtownmountkennedy #IrelandisFull #IrelandBelongsToTheIrish @PhilipDwyer_MOI 📹
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
Ahmed, Algérien, reçoit 4000€ d’aide pour être logé à l’hôtel. L’aide sociale lui remet l’argent en liquide, mais il a mis en place un système de fausses factures avec la gérante de l’hôtel, pour toucher l’argentvet vivre dans un logement moins cher. Frauder est un jeu d’enfant. Il est étonnant que l’argentvsoit remisxen liquide et non viré sur le compte de l’hôtel. Une entreprise ferait comle l’État, elle se prendrait des redresselents épiques et des mises en cause pour abus de bien social. Il ne fait pas s’étonner que nous payions énormément d’impôts pour avoir des services de merde.
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
The Constitution of Ireland guarantees that no citizen shall be deprived of his personal liberty save in accordance with law. The Court of Appeal, in two judgments delivered on 22 January 2026 arising from my own proceedings, confirmed that personal liberty means freedom from unlawful detention, unlawful imprisonment, and unlawful confinement, given a broad meaning. Physical freedom and physical movement are at the heart of that guarantee. Personal liberty can be restricted by law. The Oireachtas provided for precisely that in section 263 of the Policing, Security and Community Safety Act 2024, which allows the Minister for Justice to designate the Courts Service as an authorised body, enabling security screening at the Four Courts. That law exists. The Minister has not used it. No ministerial designation order under section 263(1) has been made. The Courts Service and MCR Group are currently restricting citizens' physical movement into the Four Courts without any lawful basis. The law provides the mechanism. The Minister has not activated it. That gap between what the law permits and what the Minister has done means every citizen stopped at the door of the Four Courts is being subjected to an unlawful restriction of their constitutional right to personal liberty.
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
🚨BREAKING: A 17 year old girl has been gang raped by 4 Afghans in Bristol They trapped the girl in their home and she was only freed when the girls mother called police to the property
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
Imagine the levels of propaganda it took to make you more comfortable with random beheadings and gang rapes than being called racist.
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
The Post below and all others from Lawyers for Justice are 100% correct. It is of great concern and indeed disturbing to observe a number of people who have now jumped on the bandwagon to further mislead and gaslight the Irish People into believing that there is still a chance some new Dail vote will remove the effect of the EU Asylum and Migration Pact. It is too late.Where were these people 2 years ago, when I, Lawyers for Justice and others campaigned VIGOROUSLY to get the Dail to vote against the Protocol 21 opt-in, when there was still TIME before the vote on June 26th 2024.We even endeavoured to have the matter dealt with in the High Court.The only remedy now ( with this current administration) is to seek an exemption from relocation quotas under Article 62 of Regulation (EU) 2024/351 (AMMR) before July 1st on the grounds of significant migratory pressure.Poland has already done thid and was granted an exemption.The reason our Government aka Administration have not done so is very clear as they do not serve the interests of the Irish people, as I have stated publicly many many times.So for those out there who genuinely want to help please lobby/campaign for the Irish Government to apply for an Article 62 exemption as stated above.We acknowledge the situation is dire, but campaigning for the wrong remedy is nothing more than a convenient distraction and serves only those who seek the destruction of our beloved country. There are many more benecial campaigns which can be undertaken to restore our Country and our Sovereignty ( e.g.The proposed removal of our Triple Lock ) even if we have suffered a major set back with the Migration Pact.Giving false hope should not be one of them.

There is no Protocol 21 opt out provision. Protocol 21 is an opt in provision not opt out. Ireland is not automatically bound to EU measures under Title V of Part 3 of TFEU in the areas of freedom, security and justice (including immigration). This is unless Ireland OPTS IN under Article 3 or 4 of Protocol 21, then it is legally bound. That is the whole point of Protocol 21. The deal was sealed to opt in to 7 measures of the EU Migration Pact when it was voted on by politicians in Leinster House and the Seanad on 26 June 2024. The government notified the EU Commission on 27 June 2024. Ireland became legally bound when the adoption of the 7 measures were published in the Official Journal of Europe in August 2024.. The EU Migration Pact is being rolled out with varying commencement dates. Most of the measures will apply to international protecrion applicants from 12 June 2026. In Ireland the International Protection Act 2026 was signed into law by the President on 22nd April 2026, to take effect of the 7 measures of the EU Migration Pact. Ireland is therefore legally bound to comply with the 7 measures opted in to or face non compliance infringement proceedings, both financial and legal, by the EU Commission, like they did with Hungary. Once opted in Ireland is treated just like any other EU Member State. There is no opt out. The politicians sold out Ireland to the EU when they voted to opt in on 26th June 2024. What the Irish people should do to reduce this mess is demand that the government apply for a full exemption under Article 62 of the AMMR (relocation quotas) like Poland did on basis of significant migratory pressure. Poland made an application for a full exemption but Ireland has not.The quotas are likely to rise year by year and our country is already at crisis point.
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
Following is an article I have written on the EU migration pact and why Ireland should not go ahead with it. We have three days left to stop it so rather than submit to a newspaper to see if they might publish it, I'm posting it right here. There is no time to lose and the attempted beheading in Belfast last night must be a wake up alarm: 'We Were Right About the Lisbon Treaty Opt-Outs, The EU Migration Pact Proves It': As the EU’s Migration and Asylum Pact comes into force in just three days’ time, Ireland finds itself locked into a system we never needed to join. We had a cast-iron opt-out under Protocol 21 of the Lisbon Treaty, the very safeguard the “Yes” side swore would protect our sovereignty over justice and home affairs. Yet our government chose to opt in. The result? A predictable erosion of control at the worst possible time. Back in 2008 and 2009, when Libertas led the No campaign, we warned that the Lisbon Treaty was a power grab dressed up as reform. We were told the opt-outs on immigration, asylum and borders were unbreakable. “Ireland decides,” they said. “Nothing changes without our consent.” The guarantees secured after the first referendum were sold to the Irish people as ironclad in order to get a 'Yes' in the re-run. History has now delivered the verdict: the guarantees were a mirage. Protocol 21 exists precisely because Ireland is not in Schengen, maintains the Common Travel Area with the UK, and has every right to manage our own borders as an island nation. It gave us the flexibility to opt into measures that suited us and stay out of those that did not. That à la carte approach served Ireland well for decades. Then, in June 2024, the Dáil voted, by the narrowest of margins, to surrender it. We're now bound by Brussels’ rules on asylum processing, biometric tracking, returns and mandatory “solidarity” contributions, protection money by another name. This was never necessary. Denmark has used its parallel opt-out far more robustly. We could have done the same. Instead, we have handed decision making on who enters Ireland, how claims are processed and what burdens we must carry to unelected officials in Brussels, officials who designed this Pact for Mediterranean frontline states, not for Ireland's unique geography or our acute housing and services crisis. The Pact itself is, to put it plainly, a mass of fraud. Asylum laws across Europe do not work. Grant rates remain high for many nationalities, appeals drag on, returns are pitifully low. The “mandatory but flexible” solidarity mechanism is neither mandatory enough to deter abuse nor flexible enough to protect smaller states like ours. It will not fix the pull factors that drive irregular migration; it will entrench them. And the most vulnerable of all, those genuine refugees with a real and present risk to life, will be the ones pushed to the back of the queue behind the long line of economic migrants and system-gamers. As if to slice the point home, last night in north Belfast a Sudanese national in his 30s, who reportedly entered the Common Travel Area from Paris via Dublin in 2023, claimed asylum and was granted leave to remain, apparently straddled a local man on a public street and tried to saw his head off with a knife. The victim, now fighting for his life with horrific wounds to his face, neck and back, was saved only by the bravery of passers-by. This is not abstract policy failure. This is the human cost of a migration regime that has lost control. Ireland is already struggling with record international protection applications, a homelessness emergency and stretched public services. Opting in adds annual costs, whether in relocations or cash payments and procedural straitjackets that undemocratically tie the hands of future governments. We have ceded the ability to design a faster, stricter, fairer national system tailored to our needs. This is exactly what we warned would happen when we opposed Lisbon. Sovereignty is not something you lend to Brussels on the promise it will be returned when inconvenient. Once surrendered, it is gone. The politicians who assured us the opt-outs were secure have been proved wrong. The Irish people, who twice expressed deep unease at the direction and form of European integration, have been proved right. It is not too late but the clock is now at three days. Ireland should demand the immediate restoration of our full national control over migration policy before the Pact locks us in on the 12th of June. We owe it to our citizens, to our most vulnerable, and to the genuine refugees the system is failing. The Lisbon opt-outs were meant to protect us. It is time our leaders remembered why we fought so hard to keep them and why we must now use them.
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
Sick to my stomach after watching the immigrant trying to behead the man in belfast. If this doesn't wake people up, im afraid ireland is lost
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
We need to become evil, Ireland should be a place where no illegal unvetted migrant feels safe. It's time to defend ourselves.
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RT @patricej36: The Sudanese attacker was in Dublin before been granted leave to remain in the North. Now all you open borders lunatics th…
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Leonard Proctor retweeted
WAKE UP IRELAND 🇮🇪
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🚨 BREAKING: Monagh Drive, West Belfast. A foreign man is allegedly beating his wife and her own father to death in cold blood. Two little children are missing. This is the direct result of open borders and mass immigration from incompatible cultures. While politicians lecture us about “diversity,” our streets are turning into war zones where native women and children are slaughtered by imported savagery. The pattern is undeniable. The media and police try to bury it. Stop the boats. Deport every last one. Ireland and Britain for the native people.
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