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It is one in the morning on Friday at the Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin and Bill Clinton is holding court. Chris Matthews of MSNBC, who is filming a documentary on Clinton for release this December, is hanging on every word.

So are a handful of invited guests who have made it past the rope line and the beefy security guard at the back of the bar area. On the table are assorted finger foods, and a waiter quietly serves refreshments to all who ask.

No one is asking, everyone is hanging on Bill Clinton's every word.

The Big Man is in town and the Irish glitterati are in tow.

Clinton remains the most popular world politician in Ireland by a country mile. His role in the Irish peace process, his evident pride in his Scots-Irish heritage and his frequent visits to the country that gave him one of his most enduring foreign policy successes, have all combined to make him Ireland's favorite leader -- including its own current crop of politicians.

Just how well he is regarded is shown by Ireland's most successful businessman Denis O'Brien who is one of those present on this night.

He had proclaimed Clinton's earlier speech to a gathering of Ireland's leading business lights convened by Business and Finance magazine a watershed moment.

As one of the very few Irish businessmen who had made it through the collapse of the Celtic Tiger unblemished, a major humanitarian, the chairman of digital giant Digicel and a huge player in the Irish media he is not given to such hyperbole easily.

Just that day the Irish government had come clean and admitted that the Irish banking system was $65 billion in the hole. Everywhere hair shirts were being donned and the gloom and doom was encircling like a fog.

Then comes Bill Clinton to blow away the haze and give hope where none had existed. In two separate speeches, on the campus of University College Dublin he had weaved the old Clinton magic to show that far from being a basket case, Ireland was incredibly lucky to be where it was.

He told students that compared to much of the world where $2 a day was a maximum wage they were fortunate to have such bright prospects in life. You could almost see them suddenly sit up and rethink their station in life.

He told the businessmen in a long and mazy speech that wandered into greek philosophy, Freudian psychology and straightforward political advice , that Ireland would be 'just fine' and that they had, just that day, a concrete bottom line of what they owed and they could now put together a definitive business plan to deal with it.

The subtext was clear. Stop feeling sorry for yourselves, stop feeling down, now you see the roadmap, crank up the satellite navigation and begin the journey.

Denis O'Brien stated bluntly that the Clinton speech would mark the launch of the Irish comeback. Declan Kelly, U.S. economic envoy to Northern Ireland, pronounced the speech the 'battle cry' that the Irish had been longing to hear.

At the Shelbourne Hotel Bill Clinton himself was in no doubt that the problem could be tackled.
The Irish just need to know their strengths" he said. "They are a beacon for the world in so many ways he said instancing the peace process and their incredible commitment to humanitarian good deeds worldwide through agencies like Concern and GOAL.

"They just need to believe."
After Clinton left they had suddenly found that belief.

 

Follow Niall O'Dowd on Twitter: www.twitter.com/NiallODowd

 
 
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01:59 AM on 10/24/2010
he was the thing to ever happen to china! by admitting china into the w.t.o he successfully planted the seeds for the demise of the american economy, american jobs to china, thank you so much mr. clinton.
03:40 PM on 10/02/2010
Telling people in the midst of an artificially induced right wing neoliberal economic catastrophe that it could be worse, they could be making $2 a day, is indecent, partcularly coming from a high priest of that economic dogma.
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Ron Broxted
03:40 PM on 10/02/2010
I admire Clinton for his work on trying to bring peace. The Sinn Fein sell out with its so called "policing agreement" that has brought no benefits to nationalist working class areas is not Clinton's fault. But he is miles away from reality in terms of telling unemployed graduates (I am one) how rosy things are. Two points, the initial one being that for the first time in Irish history one may have a neighbour called Kowalski instead of Kelly. A massive influx of East Europeans provided cheap labour. Now we have emigration (the U.S and U.K are drying up job wise). Secondly social unrest. Ain't just gonna be a hot summer, gonna be a hot world (as they say in Harlem, Detroit, Watts).
10:51 PM on 10/01/2010
greetings.....hope....believe.....or reality......what will it be?.....
10:16 PM on 10/01/2010
Watch all of Bill Clinton's Dublin speech here: http://www.businessandfinance.ie/bf/2010/9/clinton_awards
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Seaniebhoy
04:00 PM on 10/01/2010
It will take far more than a speech...Anglo Irish Bank is in such dire straits that the cost of actually bailing out the bank is more than the annual tax haul.
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11:22 AM on 10/01/2010
Obama needs to watch Clinton and learn. Obama might be able to correct his course from becoming another Jimmy Carter. Clinton makes it look easy, but Obama needs to study and LISTEN to Bill.
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03:37 PM on 10/01/2010
Hard to argue with that my friend....Bill Clinton was the ultimate political fighter of his generation
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06:30 PM on 10/01/2010
Love him or hate him, look at the data on our country during those times.
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john frodo
armchair expert
10:56 AM on 10/01/2010
I hope it works, but I wonder what someone like Paul Krugman would say about taking the Iceland option.
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Luke McIntosh
09:55 AM on 10/01/2010
The author makes it out that Clinton is beloved in Ireland, but that's not strictly true. A lot of Irish, including my father-in-law, detest him for his abortion policies and stem-cell research advocacy. Clinton's appeal lies in the fact that he's American, has Irish roots, got involved in the Peace Process, and is very charismatic.

I'd like to hope that Clinton's visit has the effect that the author thinks it will, but the Irish love their misery and to wallow in it. What we need is an Irish politican that can do what Clinton just did. I don't know that there is one, though I think Eamon Gilmore has potential.
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billygore2000
09:27 AM on 10/01/2010
Nobody can offer a ray of hope like the man from Hope.