
Lenihan was holding Monday night talks with opposition leaders, hoping to defuse their threat to topple the government this week in a confidence vote. Prime Minister Brian Cowen lost his parliamentary majority over the weekend, and losing a confidence vote would trigger the government's immediate collapse.
Lenihan said the government couldn't dissolve parliament until next week at the earliest, because the Finance Bill — which aims to boost Ireland's income taxes and close tax-dodging loopholes — requires weeks of debate and amendment.
"We are a minority government, we do have to work with the opposition parties, but we cannot be pushed into a general election regardless of the proper procedures for the Finance Bill," he said.
Opposition lawmakers accused Lenihan of scheming to delay a possible early election in February because of disarray in the governing Fianna Fail party. They threatened to pursue no-confidence motions against both Prime Minister Brian Cowen and the government unless agreement was reached immediately for the Finance Bill to become law and the parliament dissolved by Friday night.
"We simply cannot allow this shambolic government to continue beyond this week," said Simon Coveney of the opposition Fine Gael party. "Either compromise and dissolve the parliament by the weekend, or the opposition will trigger a general election earlier than that and we will deal with the Finance Bill after the election."
Most analysts consider Feb. 25 the most likely new election date. Last week, under pressure from the Greens, Cowen declared that early elections would take place March 11. Lenihan left open the possibility of an election either on Feb. 25 or March 4.
Cowen lost his parliamentary majority Sunday when Fianna Fail's coalition partner, the Green Party, announced they had run out of patience with his error-prone leadership and defected to the opposition.
Green leaders said their six lawmakers would vote to pass the Finance Bill — but weren't committed to backing Cowen.
Cowen suffered a crushing defeat Thursday when he tried to reshuffle his Cabinet to promote Fianna Fail election candidates, but the Greens stopped him. The botched maneuver meant he lost five Cabinet ministers but couldn't replace any of them. He lost two more ministers Sunday with the Greens' withdrawal, leaving him with only seven ministers to run 15 departments.
But Pat Rabbitte, a lawmaker from the opposition Labour, said his party wasn't prepared "to let what's left of the government survive for 5 minutes longer than is absolutely necessary."
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