A Government minister has indicated a new chair of RTE could be appointed in the week ahead.
Minister for Further and Higher Education Simon Harris also described as “sensible” a proposal to put the national broadcaster back under the control of the Comptroller and Auditor General.
It comes amid continuing turmoil at RTE, including the resignation of board member PJ Mathews last week, shortly after board chairwoman Siun Ni Raghallaigh quit following much-criticised comments from the media minister.
- Minister Catherine Martin’s position ‘now untenable’ after RTÉ board resignation – LabourOpens in new window
- Kneecap confirm they flouted agreement with RTÉ not to wear pro-Palestinian emblems during Late Late Show debutOpens in new window
- Catherine Martin accused of ‘naive’ and ‘hands-off’ approach to RTE crisisOpens in new window
Minister Catherine Martin refused to express confidence in Ms Ni Raghallaigh during a live television appearance on Thursday night, saying she had been misinformed about the chairwoman’s role in approving a controversial exit package for an RTE executive.
Ms Ni Raghallaigh resigned hours later, leaving the board without a chairperson at a critical time for RTE.
Mr Harris insisted he continued to have confidence in Ms Martin, adding he wants this month to be when “things actually start getting done”.
“For far too long, there has been a drip-drip feed of revelations instead of actually going, ‘How do we move?'” he told RTE’s The Week In Politics programme.
“We need to appoint a new RTE chair. That appointment is extremely important, and I hope that appointment can happen this week, and Government is trying to do that.
“Secondly, I think the publication of the PAC’s report is really important.
“I haven’t seen the report though I’ve read reports of it. A lot of the recommendations sound very common sense to me, and I think putting RTE back under the control of the Comptroller and Auditor General is a sensible thing to do.
“Minister Martin has done a very good job in relation to this situation and has the full support of everybody in Government.”
On the future funding of the national broadcaster, Mr Harris insisted the Cabinet is “going to settle this question”.
Asked about a timeframe, Mr Harris said RTE management “haven’t exactly made it easy”.
He said the network should publish aggregate figures for exit payments in the past few years, and publish a methodology paper to restore confidence in the broadcaster.
“We’re absolutely determined to settle the question in relation to future funding, I want to see a decision made by summer, I think that is really, really important, but I think we all need to work together in relation to this,” he said.
“How RTE responds to the recommendations that will flow from the two independent reports (will) matter, how Government responds to the PAC recommendations will also matter, so this is a really important month to move beyond revelation, I think, towards recommendation and higher terrain for RTE.”
Appearing on the same programme, Sinn Fein TD Louise O’Reilly said: “I think what we’ve seen in the last couple of weeks, the last couple of days in particular, from Minister Catherine Martin is a minister that is somewhat out of her depth.
“She seems singularly uncurious about matters which fall directly under her remit, which I think is disturbing.”
She added that Ms Martin “should have had the conversation with Ms Ni Raghallaigh rather than going into a studio and effectively sacking the woman”.