Cam Ogie ✍ The GAA can no longer credibly claim neutrality.
What we are witnessing is not passive inaction, but an active choice to avoid moral accountability — a choice that increasingly places it at odds with the values of many of its own members.
At the centre of this contradiction is the organisation’s continued relationship with Allianz, maintained despite sustained opposition from players, supporters, and county boards. More troubling still is the deliberate suppression of debate: motions curtailed, dissent marginalised, protest dismissed, and visible expressions of solidarity — such as Palestinian flags — actively removed. This is not administrative caution. It is political management.
The GAA, an organisation historically rooted in resistance and cultural identity, is now deciding which forms of solidarity are acceptable — and, more importantly, which must be silenced. That alone exposes the illusion that sport can somehow exist outside politics. Politics is not absent here. It is being controlled.
But the deeper failure lies not only with leadership — it lies with the counties themselves.
There are those who have spoken out. And there are those who have remained silent.
That silence is not neutral. It is strategic. It allows those counties to benefit — competitively, financially, and institutionally — while others take the risk of dissent.
Yet even those who have spoken out now face a defining contradiction. If they walk onto the pitch in this year’s All-Ireland Championship as if nothing has changed, they do more than undermine their own position — they actively reinforce the system they claim to oppose.
Because participation provides legitimacy. And more critically, it provides cover.
It gives silent counties the justification they have been waiting for: "If it was truly unacceptable, they would refuse to play."
And just like that, the moral pressure disappears. The system stabilises. And those who said nothing are rewarded for saying nothing.
This dynamic is not unique to the GAA. It reflects a broader pattern in how institutions respond to injustice.
Consider FIFA and its handling of global conflict.
Russia was rapidly excluded from international football following the invasion of Ukraine — a decision framed as a clear moral stance. Yet no such consistency exists elsewhere. The United States continues to host the FIFA World Cup. Israel remains fully embedded in international competition despite widespread global condemnation of its actions in Gaza.
This inconsistency is not accidental. It reflects power. Sport does not transcend politics — it mirrors it. And participation within these systems is itself a political act, no matter how often players insist: “It’s only football.”
It is not. It is a choice to continue within a structure that selectively applies morality.
And this is where the comparison with Palestine Action becomes unavoidable.
Whatever one thinks of their methods, their strategy is clear: they do not issue statements and then carry on as normal. They act in ways that disrupt the systems they oppose. They target infrastructure, relationships, and economic links. They impose consequences.
They understand something fundamental that many within the GAA now appear unwilling to accept:
Power does not respond to words alone. It responds to disruption.
The GAA, by contrast, is attempting to contain dissent — to allow just enough expression to release pressure, but not enough to force change.
And those counties who have spoken out, but continue to participate unchanged, risk becoming part of that containment. They become the acceptable face of protest — vocal, visible, but ultimately ineffective.
All of this unfolds against a backdrop of escalating global violence.
The devastation in Gaza has been marked by mass civilian casualties, widespread destruction of infrastructure, and the collapse of basic living conditions. Hospitals, schools, and refugee areas have been repeatedly impacted. This is not abstract geopolitics — it is sustained human catastrophe.
At the same time, tensions involving Iran have escalated into direct confrontation, raising the risk of a wider regional war. The language used by political leaders in this context — often strategic, detached, and devoid of empathy — reveals how easily human suffering is reduced to calculation.
And consider the calibre of those shaping this reality. Donald Trump speaks in terms of dominance and resource interest. Benjamin Netanyahu continues military expansion under the language of necessity. Mohammed bin Salman — widely linked to the murder of Jamal Khashoggi — is welcomed and legitimised at the highest levels of global power. These are the actors defining the current moment.
And still, institutions like the GAA behave as though remaining “neutral” is a defensible position. It is not. Because neutrality, in this context, is not the absence of politics. It is alignment with the status quo.
This is why the responsibility now rests with those counties and players who have already spoken out. Because they are at a point where words are no longer enough.
To continue participating without consequence is to absorb moral outrage without producing change. It is to remain inside the system while claiming to challenge it.
But refusal — real, tangible refusal — changes the equation.
There comes a point where protest must evolve or it becomes performance. The GAA has reached that point. And so have its counties. Because if those who claim to stand for something are not willing to act —then those who stood for nothing will continue to prevail.
Quietly. Comfortably. And justified — not by their own courage — but by the inaction of those who claimed to oppose them.
At the centre of this contradiction is the organisation’s continued relationship with Allianz, maintained despite sustained opposition from players, supporters, and county boards. More troubling still is the deliberate suppression of debate: motions curtailed, dissent marginalised, protest dismissed, and visible expressions of solidarity — such as Palestinian flags — actively removed. This is not administrative caution. It is political management.
The GAA, an organisation historically rooted in resistance and cultural identity, is now deciding which forms of solidarity are acceptable — and, more importantly, which must be silenced. That alone exposes the illusion that sport can somehow exist outside politics. Politics is not absent here. It is being controlled.
But the deeper failure lies not only with leadership — it lies with the counties themselves.
There are those who have spoken out. And there are those who have remained silent.
That silence is not neutral. It is strategic. It allows those counties to benefit — competitively, financially, and institutionally — while others take the risk of dissent.
Yet even those who have spoken out now face a defining contradiction. If they walk onto the pitch in this year’s All-Ireland Championship as if nothing has changed, they do more than undermine their own position — they actively reinforce the system they claim to oppose.
Because participation provides legitimacy. And more critically, it provides cover.
It gives silent counties the justification they have been waiting for: "If it was truly unacceptable, they would refuse to play."
And just like that, the moral pressure disappears. The system stabilises. And those who said nothing are rewarded for saying nothing.
This dynamic is not unique to the GAA. It reflects a broader pattern in how institutions respond to injustice.
Consider FIFA and its handling of global conflict.
Russia was rapidly excluded from international football following the invasion of Ukraine — a decision framed as a clear moral stance. Yet no such consistency exists elsewhere. The United States continues to host the FIFA World Cup. Israel remains fully embedded in international competition despite widespread global condemnation of its actions in Gaza.
This inconsistency is not accidental. It reflects power. Sport does not transcend politics — it mirrors it. And participation within these systems is itself a political act, no matter how often players insist: “It’s only football.”
It is not. It is a choice to continue within a structure that selectively applies morality.
And this is where the comparison with Palestine Action becomes unavoidable.
Whatever one thinks of their methods, their strategy is clear: they do not issue statements and then carry on as normal. They act in ways that disrupt the systems they oppose. They target infrastructure, relationships, and economic links. They impose consequences.
They understand something fundamental that many within the GAA now appear unwilling to accept:
Power does not respond to words alone. It responds to disruption.
The GAA, by contrast, is attempting to contain dissent — to allow just enough expression to release pressure, but not enough to force change.
And those counties who have spoken out, but continue to participate unchanged, risk becoming part of that containment. They become the acceptable face of protest — vocal, visible, but ultimately ineffective.
All of this unfolds against a backdrop of escalating global violence.
The devastation in Gaza has been marked by mass civilian casualties, widespread destruction of infrastructure, and the collapse of basic living conditions. Hospitals, schools, and refugee areas have been repeatedly impacted. This is not abstract geopolitics — it is sustained human catastrophe.
At the same time, tensions involving Iran have escalated into direct confrontation, raising the risk of a wider regional war. The language used by political leaders in this context — often strategic, detached, and devoid of empathy — reveals how easily human suffering is reduced to calculation.
And consider the calibre of those shaping this reality. Donald Trump speaks in terms of dominance and resource interest. Benjamin Netanyahu continues military expansion under the language of necessity. Mohammed bin Salman — widely linked to the murder of Jamal Khashoggi — is welcomed and legitimised at the highest levels of global power. These are the actors defining the current moment.
And still, institutions like the GAA behave as though remaining “neutral” is a defensible position. It is not. Because neutrality, in this context, is not the absence of politics. It is alignment with the status quo.
This is why the responsibility now rests with those counties and players who have already spoken out. Because they are at a point where words are no longer enough.
To continue participating without consequence is to absorb moral outrage without producing change. It is to remain inside the system while claiming to challenge it.
But refusal — real, tangible refusal — changes the equation.
- It removes legitimacy.
- It forces confrontation.
- It denies silent counties the cover they currently rely on.
There comes a point where protest must evolve or it becomes performance. The GAA has reached that point. And so have its counties. Because if those who claim to stand for something are not willing to act —then those who stood for nothing will continue to prevail.
Quietly. Comfortably. And justified — not by their own courage — but by the inaction of those who claimed to oppose them.
⏩ Cam Ogie is a Gaelic games enthusiast.

















