Minister rejects criticism of zoned land tax plan from 'Green backbenchers'

Minister for Sport Thomas Byrne has rejected any criticism “from Green backbenchers” about Fianna Fáil’s record in Government on housing
Minister rejects criticism of zoned land tax plan from 'Green backbenchers'

Vivienne Clarke

Minister for Sport Thomas Byrne has rejected any criticism “from Green backbenchers” about Fianna Fáil’s record in Government on housing.

Mr Byrne was responding to Green Party criticism of reported plans by the Minister for Finance Jack Chambers to defer for a further year the Residential Zoned Land Tax.

“I don't think anybody disagrees with the concept that a farmer who doesn't want houses on their land, is not interested in zoning their land should have to pay a tax on that land which they are working on as farmland, or in some cases that I'm familiar with, literally their farm yard. That's not something that anybody wants,” he told RTÉ radio’s Morning Ireland.

“I think the bottom line is that everybody is in agreement with Minister Chambers, that a farmer who was farming land, who was not interested in putting houses on the land or maximising the value of the land, shouldn't have to pay a tax on it.

“There's political agreement there that no farmer who is farming their land should have to pay this tax. I don't think anybody would disagree.”

Mr Byrne said that the three coalition parties in government worked “really well together” although there were “occasional issues”.

“People are going to have disagreements. But I think you see overall in this coalition that we've worked really, really well together, of course, there would be issues between three different parties of government.

"But I think we are focused and certainly in Fianna Fáil we are focused and have shown we have been focused on the provision of housing in the last two years. It's been our number one priority and the results are there and we want to see more of those results. And that's what we'll be putting forward in terms of the next general election.”

more Coalition articles

Middle East conflict Taoiseach under pressure within Fianna Fáil amid fuel protest fallout
Anglo Irish court case Government 'needs to move away from year-to-year budgeting', fiscal watchdog warns
New Taoiseach appointed Politics watch: Independent votes sign of Coalition tension?

More in this section

Clean-up operation ongoing after oil spill at Dublin Port Clean-up operation ongoing after oil spill at Dublin Port
Tánaiste warns of risk of stagflation to Irish economy Tánaiste warns of risk of stagflation to Irish economy
Glamorgan v Gloucestershire - Bob Willis Trophy - Day Two - Sophia Gardens Councillor suggests releasing birds of prey to stop seagulls tormenting the public

Sponsored Content

AF The College Green Hotel Dublin March 2026 The College Green Hotel: A refined address in the heart of Dublin
SETU and Glassworks set to accelerate innovation SETU and Glassworks set to accelerate innovation
Driving Growth in Munster: How property finance is powering Cork’s future Driving Growth in Munster: How property finance is powering Cork’s future
Contact Us Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited

Add Echolive.ie to your home screen - easy access to Cork news, views, sport and more