Top Stories

Physical threats and investigations as officials prepare greyhound welfare legal cases

Released records show Greyhound Racing Ireland officials were subject to physical threats during a welfare inspection last year as the agriculture department prepares legal cases in three investigations.

How the Trump administration became an activist investor

The president’s reach for government stakes in private companies has business leaders scrambling, write Maggie Severns, Gavin Bade, Josh Dawsey and Meridith McGraw, The Wall Street Journal.

Single IT system for health records set to cost multiple of State’s €2bn estimate

One Health Record, which is set to replace hundreds of legacy systems, is the largest technology project in the history of the State. Does the health service have the capacity to control its cost?

Inside the jet set: “I don’t want to talk about numbers, can you make me an offer?”

Two of Ireland's best-known entrepreneurs, Barry English and Tommy Kelly, are embroiled in a complex dispute with the operating company they hired to run their private jet.

“A few others in the hopper”: Having closed another deal, CSG is eying the next target

Founded in 1981, Chemical Solutions Group has just bought Resource Chemicals. The deal will push the company's revenues towards €130m, but CEO Kevin Quinn explains why this is only the start.

Storied toolmaker closes its last hometown plant—and blames its tape measures

Stanley Black & Decker says fewer buyers want the Connecticut plant’s single-sided tape measures, preferring double-sided ones made abroad, writes John Keilman, The Wall Street Journal.

How TrojanTrack prevents injuries among the world’s best horses

World-class equine yards and riders are backing Irish start-up TrojanTrack. As it seeks to close a seed round, its founder biomedical engineer Stephen O’Dwyer explains how it is targeting a global market.

Unpredictable: Part 2 – “I’m not doing something that involves wearing an orange jumpsuit”

Hopes that Intrade might make a fortune for its founders and investors were hit by a hostile regulatory climate in the US. That did not deter its CEO John Delaney, who dreamed big after leaving his small Laois village.

Top Voices

A quiet legal shift that could weaken corporate accountability

The Company Law Review Group is scrutinising the power for creditors to seek court-ordered inspections to investigate company affairs. Will its final advice limit or strengthen rules to expose corporate malfeasance?

Tara Shine: This crisis is a chance to go back to basics

Trump and his war on Iran are doing wonders to revive stalled decarbonisation efforts. Emergencies make what was impossible possible.

Joined-up, coordinated, or neither? Ireland’s problem with plans

Ireland’s dysfunctional housing system is unable to adjust when reality outpaces outdated official plans. Could a "city-led" model like that in Finland and Denmark change the landscape for the better?

Bans or reforms? Social media’s future will involve both: Rewinding the week that was

Early results of Australia’s ban point to a muted effect, but don’t expect bans and restrictions to slow down as courts start to levy addictive design.

602 minutes: The numbers behind Leinster’s most radical European preparation

Leinster have the strongest squad remaining in this competition. With an international in every position, this is a group of players that should be targeting a club double. With the talent available to Cullen and Nienaber, that is a realistic ambition, not a fanciful one.

The stages of entrepreneurship: Stage 2 – scaling while “staying rooted in our principles”

“Delegate, don’t abdicate” has been Jack Kirwan’s mantra to turn Sprout & Co into a business on track to run 14 restaurants with 500 staff. Good hiring and a structured system are key to this phase of growth.

Dan O’Brien: Why it is past time to cut income tax

Personal taxes set at their current levels during the financial crisis are unfair – particularly when we examine what has been done with the resulting State revenues.

Colm McCarthy: It is surely time to abolish DPER and stop the pretence

If things go pear-shaped internationally, the Government’s lack of seriousness in the last few weeks has diminished future fiscal capacity. The failure will, on past form, trigger a budget adjustment consisting of another pro-cyclical assault on the capital programme.