FORMER taoiseach Bertie Ahern has predicted a new Irish government will not be formed before the end of March.
He said work on creating a “stable and sustainable” coalition had not yet properly begun.
A Sinn Fein surge during last weekend’s General Election on a manifesto promising change in housing and health saw it become the third major party in the Republic.
The first meeting of the Dail parliament on Thursday is unlikely to elect a new government.
Ahern told RTE’s The Week in Politics: “When you are putting a government together we have to look to the future as well. It is not just about sorting out the present position.
“It will have to take into account the election result and what is the policy formulation.”
He said negotiators and party strategists needed to focus on housing, homelessness and health.
“Otherwise they will lock themselves into a major problem.”
While Irish premier and Fianna Fail leader, Ahern helped create the 1998 Good Friday Agreement which largely ended violence in Northern Ireland.
Sinn Fein topped the first preference poll following this month’s General Election in the republic.
Its total of 37 seats is one fewer than that of Fianna Fail.
Taoiseach Leo Varadkar’s Fine Gael won 35 seats.
No single party has enough seats to govern and Sinn Fein appears to have failed to muster enough support from a coalition of small left-leaning parties and independent members of the new Irish Parliament.
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