Thomas extends lead over Kyne in Galway West byelection
By Gráinne Ní Aodha, Press Association
Independent Ireland’s Noel Thomas has extended his lead over Fine Gael senator Seán Kyne in a tight byelection race in Galway West.
Thomas topped the poll with 10,007 first preference votes, followed closely by Kyne on 9,647.
It remains to be seen if Thomas can stay ahead or whether transferred votes from eliminated candidates will see Kyne leapfrog him as the count goes on.
By the seventh count, he was almost 2,000 votes ahead of Kyne after receiving a significant number of transfers from Independent Thomas Welby.
Thomas is a former Fianna Fáil representative who left the party in 2024 after stating Ireland should stop accepting asylum-seekers because “the inn is full”.

Leader of Independent Ireland Michael Collins said Thomas had achieved an “incredible” first preference vote and that transfers from Labour candidate Helen Ogbu, who is in third position, and Fianna Fáil’s Cillian Keane would be crucial.
“It’s really down to transfers now,” Collins told RTÉ’s The Week In Politics.
“Being honest, the biggest amount of votes are going to be the Fianna Fáil candidate’s votes and the Labour candidate’s votes, and at this stage they look to us from what we’re reading as if they’re falling towards the Fine Gael candidate.
“It looks to me as if the pact between Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil – who, to me, are the one party now – is working out in their favour, and all are transferring very freely towards Fine Gael. That’s being honest.
“I’m not going to lead any listeners astray, but in saying that, you know, if we can get a sizeable lead before we end up with those transfers, then that might put us in a strong position.”

The counting of votes at the count centre at Galway Lawn Tennis Club resumed from 9am on Saturday as Social Democrats leader Holly Cairns hailed a “stunning” result for her party in Dublin Central.
Children’s football coach and father-of-two Daniel Ennis took a second seat for the party in the four-seat constituency – the constituency of former taoiseach Bertie Ahern and Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald.
Ennis hugged his fiancee Chloe as supporters chanted “Danny” after the result was declared after midnight in the RDS.
He thanked those who put their trust in him and said he “won’t let them down”.
The byelection results have left parties examining their performances, particularly Fianna Fáil and Sinn Féin.
Senior Fianna Fáil figures have admitted to poor results in Dublin Central, though are more hopeful about their showing in Galway West.

Their candidate John Stephens polled at 4 per cent in Dublin Central, while new councillor Cillian Keane got 8.8 per cent in Galway West.
The party used to hold three out of five seats in Galway West, the constituency of Éamon Ó Cuív who is the grandson of Fianna Fáil founder, former taoiseach and Irish president Eamon de Valera.
Taoiseach and Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin said it was a “poor result” in Dublin Central, and that his party has “real problems” with “some constituencies”.
He added: “We would have preferred a higher percentage outcome.”
McDonald, meanwhile, has defended her leadership and Sinn Féin’s performance after its candidate Janice Boylan came second in Dublin Central.
She said the trajectory of Irish politics over the past 10 years was one of Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael’s decline and the “growth of politics beyond that”.

She added: “We are absolutely front and centre in that, we’re not the totality of it, we recognise that too, but we have had tremendous, tremendous success.
“We have grown and we will grow again.
On Sunday, Cairns hailed the “stunning” result by Ennis on behalf of the Social Democrats and said voters “know where they stand” with the party.
The Social Democrats now have 12 TDs, ahead of Labour on 11, and she said speaking rights should be allocated according to the parties’ size.
“Daniel’s election victory today shows that people who want an alternative to the Government are increasingly choosing the Social Democrats,” she said.
“Key to that is that people know where they stand with the Social Democrats.
“They know the positive vision we have for this country, and they are voting for that.”
Voters in Galway and Dublin cast their votes on Friday to fill seats vacated by Catherine Connolly in Galway West when she became president and former minister Paschal Donohoe, who stopped representing Dublin Central to become the World Bank’s chief knowledge officer.
The turnout in Dublin Central was 39 per cent while in Galway West it was 44 per cent.
