The two main centre-right parties in Ireland are expected to start talks on returning to government as the general election put the incumbents within touching distance of forming the 34th Dáil.
All but 12 Teachta Dála (TD) seats were filled when counting resumed at 9am on Monday but the results so far and tallies for the remaining seats suggest Fianna Fáil, led by Micheál Martin, and Fine Gael, led by Simon Harris, will together get 86 seats, just two short of the 88 needed for a majority.
With Fianna Fáil expected to be the larger party, on 48 seats to Fine Gael’s 38 or so, Harris’s position as taoiseach is likely to come under pressure.
If it is to be a direct reprise of the Fianna Fáil-Fine Gael governing partnership of the last mandate, one of the major questions is whether the parties continue their policy of rotating taoiseach, or prime minister. The previous coalition struck a historic agreement to have first Martin and then Leo Varadkar, the then leader of Fine Fáil, followed by Harris, serve as taoiseach.
Fianna Fáil’s deputy leader, Jack Chambers, said on Monday talks could last for weeks but not the near-five months it took for their coalition with Fine Gael to crystallise last time.
“I don’t expect the government to be formed in mid-December,” he told RTÉ, adding that time was needed to discuss negotiations within the party and the space to form “a coherent, stable” arrangement.
The pivotal decision centres on whether the two parties team up like-minded independent candidates to form the next government or whether they rely on the support of either of the smaller left-leaning parties, the Social Democrats or Labour.
Agreeing a programme for government after a campaign that involved big spending promises will involve much horse-trading but all parties are agreed they must deliver on housing and homelessness, the number one priority of the electorate, according to Friday night’s exit poll.
Chambers said his party would seek to prioritise its promises. “This isn’t about positions or posturing or general groupings. It’s about how we can deliver for the Irish people,” he told RTÉ.
The government’s previous partner, the Greens, were virtually annihilated in the election with its leader, Roderic O’Gorman, the sole remaining TD of 12. After scraping in on the 13th count in Dublin West constituency on Sunday night he said he did not think he had a mandate to return to government.
The two establishment parties have already ruled out working with Sinn Féin, which is expected to finish with a similar number of seats as Fine Gael but not enough to lead a stable left-leaning government.
Labour and the Social Democrats, who are expected to finish up doubling their number of seats with about 11 each, have both said they would talk to Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael but would first take stock of the position of parties on the left.
Ivana Bacik, the Labour leader, described her party’s results as “formidable” given only four sitting TDs had sought re-election.
She told RTÉ she would not consider “going it alone” into a coalition with the two big parties and they wanted to assess the position of the “TDs who share our vision and our values who want to deliver change” including delivering housing, public services, healthcare, childcare and disability services.
“We are serious about delivering change and that’s why we have talked about forging a common platform,” she said. The first people she would talk to are the Social Democrats and O’Gorman, she said.
The Social Democrats have also said they are prepared to talk to the established parties but have five red lines, including the demand for a disability minister.
Friday night’s exit poll had appeared to put Sinn Féin in pole position to take the greatest share of first preference votes at 21.1% with the leader, Mary Lou McDonald, declaring on Saturday her intention to forge a leftist alliance.
But subsequent results showed the party with a 19% share. While it will remain the single biggest opposition party, it represents a significant fall on four years ago.