Men who abuse women ‘not only tolerated, they are celebrated’, Dáil hears

Men who abuse women 'not only tolerated, they are celebrated', Dáil hears

Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you’ve seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

One-off amount

I already contribute

Sign in. It’s quick, free and it’s up to you.

An account is an optional way to support the work we do. Find out more.

Investigates

Investigates

Money Diaries

Daft.ie Property Magazine
Allianz Home Magazine
The 42 Sports Magazine
TG4 Entertainment Magazine
The Journal TV

Climate Crisis

Cost of Living
Road Safety

Newsletters

Temperature Check
Inside the Newsroom
The Journal Investigates

The Explainer

A deep dive into one big news story

Sport meets news, current affairs, society & pop culture

have your say

Or create a free account to join the discussion

Advertisement

More Stories

Leaders’ Questions

Men who abuse women ‘not only tolerated, they are celebrated’, Dáil hears

“We’ve created a society where there is such a pervasive sense of male violence against women that we’ve had to coin the phrase femicide to describe the epidemic,” Gary Gannon said.

1.50pm, 25 Jun 2025

Share options

The Journal / YouTube

THE ISSUE OF domestic abuse dominated Leaders’ Questions today following the publication of a report by Women’s Aid, which showed record demand for their services last year.

Social Democrats TD Gary Gannon delivered a passionate speech arguing that the problem needs to be reframed as a men’s issue.

He agreed with Labour leader Ivana Bacik that Ireland is now dealing with an epidemic of domestic abuse and railed against the notion that domestic abuse is only perpetrated by “monsters”.

He also argued that social media is “supercharging” domestic abuse.

“This didn’t happen by accident. We’ve allowed this violence to grow, and I’m fearful about where it is headed, because we’re now living in a culture where perpetrators of abuse are not only tolerated, they are celebrated.

“They are the President of the United States and sports stars with multi-million euro contracts.

“Influencers poison our young men with misogyny packaged as self-help. This network of anti-women communities online, full of grifters, abusers and con men, is flooding social media with hate and as a State, we’re doing almost nothing to stop it,” he said.

Gannon also referred to the case of Irish woman Jill Meagher, who was raped and murdered by a stranger in Australia in 2012.

“Her husband, Tom, wrote about the monster myth. In that book, he explained to us that abusers are often thought of as monsters, broken, unrecognisable, but they’re not.

“They’re often our colleagues, our neighbours, our friends, and that myth lets all of us off the hook.

“Like the man shouting at a woman in a bar, the hand on her back that she didn’t invite, the so called jokes about rape being shared in WhatsApp groups. That is how violence is normalised.

“The epidemic of men’s violence against women continues to be framed as a woman’s issue across all facets of society, but minister, make no mistake, men’s violence against women is a crisis for men to be part of solving.

Advertisement

“We’ve created a society where there is such a pervasive sense of male violence against women that we’ve had to coin the phrase femicide to describe the epidemic. Even the very term allows men to evade accountability for this ongoing crisis.

“As men, we need to do more than shake our heads. We need to call it out when we see it, because to be silent is to be complicit,” Gannon said.

The issue was raised also raised by Sinn Féin and Labour, with Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald telling the Dáil that all the statistics are going in the wrong direction.

In the last year, reported instances of physical abuse were up 22%, sexual abuse increased by 30%, emotional abuse was up 15%, and economic abuse was up 5%.

A third of women who reached out to Women’s Aid for help were subjected to abuse by an ex-partner.

“Behind these statistics are real women and their children, real lives shattered,” McDonald told the Dáil.

“The report reflects that government must do a far better job to achieve zero tolerance of violence against women.”

Labour leader Ivana Bacik acknowledged that progress has been made in recent years, noting the establishment of the government’s domestic abuse agency Cuan, but she said, despite this, the scale of domestic abuse in Ireland has reached epidemic levels.

She also said the suite of laws in place to deal with domestic violence, while welcome, are “ineffective” if gardaí are not adequately equipped to respond to women who report domestic abuse in the first instance.

The Women’s Aid report today highlighted a huge shortfall in the garda response to domestic abuse, with 44% of women surveyed saying they found the garda response “unhelpful”.

Responding to Bacik, Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan acknowledged that not all gardaí have specialised training to respond to domestic abuse, however, he maintained that women who are then referred to specialised garadaí have a positive experience.

The Justice Minister agreed with Gannon on the idea that domestic abuse needs to be reframed as a men’s problem.

“This is a societal issue, in fact, it’s more of an issue for men and boys than it is for women, because regrettably, my sex are the sex that perpetrate this violence against women to the large extent.

“So we have to start warning boys and young men about the unacceptability of using violence in a relationship,” O’Callaghan said.

He added that pornography “must be having an extraordinary impact on young men, because it presents women in a very submissive, malleable manner”.

“And we just need to warn people at a young age, [through] education that it is so unacceptable to use violence in a relationship. So not all the solutions are through the criminal justice system.”

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone…

A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article.

Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.

Support The Journal

Jane Matthews

Viewcomments

Send Tip or Correction

Embed this post

To embed this post, copy the code below on your site

Email “Men who abuse women ‘not only tolerated, they are celebrated’, Dáil hears”.

Recipient’s Email

Feedback on “Men who abuse women ‘not only tolerated, they are celebrated’, Dáil hears”.

Your Feedback

Your Email (optional)

Report a Comment

Please select the reason for reporting this comment.

Please give full details of the problem with the comment…

This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic.
Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy

before taking part.

Leave a Comment

Submit a report

Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.

Damaging the good reputation of someone, slander, or libel.

Racism or Hate speech

An attack on an individual or group based on religion, race, gender, or beliefs.

Trolling or Off-topic

An attempt to derail the discussion.

Inappropriate language

Profanity, obscenity, vulgarity, or slurs.

Advertising, phishing, scamming, bots, or repetitive posts.

Please provide additional information

Thank you for the feedback

Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a commentcancel

Newly created accounts can only comment using The Journal app.

This is to add an extra layer of security to account creation.

Download and sign into the app to continue.

Access to the comments facility has been disabled for this user
View our policy

⚠️ Duplicate comment

Post Comment

have your say

Or create a free account to join the discussion

Domestic Violence
gary gannon
journal-insta
Leaders’ Questions
thejournal-insta
thejournal-tiktok
Violence Against Women
Women’s Aid

News in 60 seconds

Gardaí continue to question suspect in ‘deliberate’ hit-and-run killing of man in Balbriggan

Middle East
‘This ended the war’: Trump likens US strikes on Iran to bombing of Hiroshima

29 mins ago

InvestigatesLaughing Gas
Nitrous oxide canisters littering streets and parks ‘sparking curiosity’ in children

PodcastThe Explainer
What do new US visa rules mean for Irish travellers?

Northern Ireland
Man (40) extradited from Germany to Northern Ireland for human trafficking offences

After spending over a month in Gaza, this doctor had a powerful message for Irish politicians

malahide castle
Heading to see Iron Maiden at Malahide Castle today? Here’s everything you need to know

As it happened
Israel says ‘campaign against Iran not over’ after Iranian president announces ‘end of 12-day war’

Man (40s) arrested after man killed in hit-and-run in north Dublin

Crocodile tears
Jeff Bezos reportedly changes Venice wedding plans after threat of inflatable crocodile protest

Irish Rugby
Senator says it is ‘scandalous’ the IRFU is a ‘major Dublin 4 landlord’

more from us

Investigates

Daft.ie Property Magazine

Allianz Home Magazine

The 42 Sports Magazine

TG4 Entertainment Magazine

Money Diaries

The Journal TV

Journal Media

Advertise With Us

About FactCheck

Our Network

FactCheck Knowledge Bank

Terms & Legal Notices

Terms of Use

Cookies & Privacy

Advertising

Competition

more from us

TV Listings

GAA Fixtures

The Video Review

Journal Media

Advertise With Us

Our Network

The Journal

FactCheck Knowledge Bank

Terms & Legal Notices

Terms of Use

Cookies & Privacy

Advertising

Competition

© 2025 Journal Media Ltd

Terms of Use

Cookies & Privacy

Advertising

Competition

Switch to Desktop
Switch to Mobile

The Journal supports the work of the Press Council of Ireland and the Office of the Press Ombudsman, and our staff operate within the Code of Practice. You can obtain a copy of the Code, or contact the Council, at https://www.presscouncil.ie, PH: (01) 6489130, Lo-Call 1800 208 080 or email: mailto:info@presscouncil.ie

Report an error, omission or problem:

Your Email (optional)

Create Email Alert

Create an email alert based on the current article

Email Address

One email every morning

As soon as new articles come online

Read More…