In contrast to a poor local election result,
Fine Gael retained 4 seats, remaining the largest Irish party at a European level. Despite winning the largest number of first preference votes, Fianna Fáil lost 2 seats – a result of poor candidate selection and a reduction in the number of seats. The
Labour Party, bearing the brunt of voter anger with the Coalition government, suffered a meltdown, losing all three of its seats, including its seat in Dublin which it had held since
1989. The
Socialist Party also lost its sole seat. The big winners were
Sinn Féin and Independents who won three seats each. In
Dublin,
Lynn Boylan of Sinn Féin topped the poll and a tight four-way battle for the remaining two seats ensued between
Brian Hayes of Fine Gael, ex-Labour MEP turned independent
Nessa Childers, Fianna Fáil's
Mary Fitzpatrick and the Green Party's
Eamon Ryan. Hayes and Childers won with Hayes ahead of Ryan at the final count by a margin of 1,200 votes. In
South, both
Brian Crowley of Fianna Fáil and
Seán Kelly of Fine Gael were re-elected while first time candidate
Liadh Ní Riada of
Sinn Féin won a seat. The last seat was taken by Fine Gael Senator
Deirdre Clune ahead of her party colleague
Simon Harris. In the new
Midlands–North-West constituency, independent TD
Luke 'Ming' Flanagan topped the poll while
Mairead McGuinness of Fine Gael and Sinn Féin's
Matt Carthy took the next two seats. Fianna Fáil's two-candidate strategy in the constituency backfired, with sitting MEP
Pat "the Cope" Gallagher narrowly losing to independent
Marian Harkin. For the first time, Ireland's delegation to the
European Parliament had more women than men. ==Constituency changes==