The conversation Ireland needs to have
The housing crisis. The hospital queues. The changing face of every town. It's all connected. We're here to show you the data — and build the movement that says enough.
All data sourced from the CSO, Department of Justice, and IPAT. Updated regularly. Fully verifiable.
These aren't opinions. They're official government statistics. Get them in your inbox every week →
Remigration is the idea that immigration policy should include a return element — that people who entered a country illegally, whose asylum claims were rejected, or who have no legal basis to remain, should be returned to their home countries.
It's not extreme. It's not radical. It's how immigration law is supposed to work. Every EU member state has deportation mechanisms. Ireland simply chooses not to enforce them.
The remigration movement across Europe — in Germany, Austria, France, and now Ireland — is growing because ordinary people are asking a simple question: if the rules exist, why aren't they being followed?
Ireland already has deportation orders on the books. Enforcement sits at roughly 3%. We're asking for the law to be applied — nothing more.
300,000+ Irish citizens on housing waiting lists while emergency accommodation is provided to those with no legal right to be here. The priorities are backwards.
Ireland can welcome people — on Ireland's terms, at Ireland's pace, in Ireland's interest. Mass uncontrolled immigration benefits nobody except landlords and low-wage employers.
We're not another news site. We're building the infrastructure for communities who've had enough.
Every Monday: the latest immigration numbers, policy changes, and enforcement data. No spin. Shareable. Factual.
Find local groups in your area. Connect with others who share your concerns. You're not alone — and you're not far-right for asking questions.
Printable factsheets, letter templates for your TD, social media graphics. Everything you need to make your voice heard.
Every immigration policy change since 2024, documented and explained. The rolling record of how Ireland's immigration system really works.
An ongoing investigation into where the €1.6 billion goes.
The Irish State paid private operators roughly €1.6 billion in 2025 alone to accommodate international-protection applicants — a single year that exceeds the entire first 20 years of direct provision combined. The Comptroller and Auditor General has documented that 161 of 325 centres housing 13,785 people had no signed contract at the end of 2024. The State’s third-largest accommodation supplier is owned by US private-equity giant Apollo via a Luxembourg holding. Mosney sits behind an Isle of Man parent.
The State is now being sued by five providers it backed out on. We are following the money.
Every Monday morning. The immigration numbers. The policy changes. The stories the mainstream won't touch. Free. Unfiltered. Yours.
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