Ireland's junior coalition party withdrew from Prime Minister Brian Cowen's government on Sunday, signaling the end of a crisis-riddled administration and hastening an election due on March 11.        
 The Greens said, however, they would support legislation underpinning  the 2011 budget, as agreed under an 85 billion euros EU/IMF bailout, to  ensure a swift election, possibly in February.        
 The Green Party's move highlighted continuing political uncertainty over  efforts to cope with financial crisis rooted in a collapse in the  property market and a malaise of the banking system.        
 "It conjures this picture of a country where there is deep political  crisis as well as economic crisis," said Austin Hughes, chief economist  at KBC. "It will hurt sentiment."        
 All of Ireland's mainstream parties want the finance bill, which  legislates for tax changes already implemented in the budget, passed  before the poll.        
 The two main opposition parties, the center-right Fine Gael and  center-left Labour, have issued an ultimatum to Cowen to get the bill  passed by Friday or they will pursue motions of no-confidence in him and  his government this week.        
 "I don't want another weekend of this kind of uncertainty where we're  the subject of jokes and puns internationally," said Labour MP Pat  Rabbitte.        
 Over the past week, eight ministers have resigned, an ill-judged cabinet  reshuffle backfired and Cowen stood down as leader of the Fianna Fail  party.        
 Without the support of the Greens, Cowen would certainly lose any  confidence vote and have to call an immediate election, shelving the  finance bill but not damaging Ireland's fiscal goals given that the tax  measures in the 2011 budget have already taken effect.        
 The premier, attending a Gaelic football match in the central Irish town  of Portlaois while his government was imploding in Dublin, said such a  timetable was too tight.        
 "It's not possible to get it done in a week," Cowen said, adding that  Finance Minister Brian Lenihan would meet with counterparts from all  opposition parties on Monday to discuss how to fasttrack the finance  bill.        
 AN ASYLUM        
 The Greens have been itching to end their partnership with Cowen's  Fianna Fail party since November when the government was forced to apply  for an 85 billion euros bailout from the EU and the IMF to save the  banking sector from collapse.        
 Their three and a half year tenure in government saw Ireland transformed  from economic star to euro zone basket case on the back of a disastrous  property bubble.        
 With the administration lurching from crisis to crisis, Greens' leader  John Gormley recently likened being in government to being in an asylum.         
 Relations between the two parties broke down completely last week when  Cowen, fresh from winning a vote of confidence within his party, tried  to reshuffle the cabinet in an apparent bid to boost the election  chances of his colleagues.        
 Cowen's subsequent decision to resign as leader of the Fianna Fail party  amid mounting internal criticism but remain as premier prompted the  Greens to finally end the partnership.        
 "Our patience has reached an end," Gormley said in the same five-star  Dublin hotel where Cowen had on Saturday announced the end of his  leadership of Fianna Fail.        
 But on the streets of Dublin there was little praise for the Greens, who  like Fianna Fail, are fighting for their survival in the forthcoming  poll.        
 "They have been halfway out the door for weeks now. It's a joke. They  should have pulled the plug months ago," said Geraldine Feeney, 42, a  part-time sales assistant.        
 The Greens' withdrawal leaves Cowen with just seven ministers, the  constitutional minimum, to fill 15 ministries. He said he would reassign  the two Green ministerial portfolios to an already overburdened  cabinet.        
 Opinion polls indicate that Fine Gael and Labour will form the next coalition government.        
 His Fianna Fail party will elect a new leader on Wednesday with  bookmakers expecting former foreign minister Micheal Martin to beat  three other challengers, including Finance Minister Brian Lenihan, in  the contest.        
 
 


