Irish Rural Communities at Risk Without Ring-fenced LEADER Funding, LDCN Delegation Warns in Brussels

Irish rural communities could lose access to vital EU funding for jobs, services and social inclusion unless the LEADER programme is clearly ring-fenced in the European Union’s next long‑term budget, representatives of Ireland’s Local Development Companies have warned during recent meetings in Brussels. The delegation welcomed the strong level of recognition at EU level for the impact of LEADER and the work of Local Development Companies.

Coordinated through the Local Development Companies Network (LDCN), the delegation travelled to Brussels to engage directly with Members of the European Parliament, European Commission officials and key stakeholders as negotiations begin to intensify on the EU’s next Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF), covering the post‑2027 period.

They cautioned that without explicit ring-fencing in the next EU budget, LEADER, the EU’s flagship rural community‑led local development programme, risks being diluted or absorbed into broader funding streams, undermining its unique bottom‑up approach and its proven impact in rural areas.

A Proven Model for Rural Development

LEADER has played a central role in supporting rural innovation, social inclusion, and enterprise development across Ireland for more than three decades. Delivered locally through Ireland’s network of Local Action Groups and Local Development Companies, the programme is internationally recognised as a best‑practice model for community‑led rural development.

In Ireland alone, between 2014 and 31 March 2026, LEADER supported 6,858 projects nationally, with investment of over €286 million, particularly targeting areas where access to mainstream public services and private investment is limited.

“LEADER works because it puts decisions in the hands of local communities,” said John Feerick, Sligo LEADER Partnership.
“If this programme is not clearly protected in the next EU budget, rural communities will feel it first, through lost services, stalled local enterprises and fewer opportunities to build resilient local economies.”

Real Impact on the Ground

Across Ireland, LEADER funding translates EU priorities into tangible local outcomes.

In Donegal, LEADER support helped develop Wild Ireland, a major rural tourism and conservation project along the Wild Atlantic Way. The attraction now welcomes over 130,000 visitors annually, supports local jobs, restores native woodland ecosystems and strengthens the regional visitor economy while advancing climate and biodiversity goals.

In Kilmeedy, Co Limerick, LEADER funding enabled the establishment of the Roots Community Shop & Café, restoring essential services to a village that had lost its local shop. The social enterprise sources produce locally, and provides a vital social hub, helping to combat rural isolation and support people to live and work in their community.

Shay Riordan, West Limerick Resources stated that “These are not abstract EU policies, they are practical investments that make rural places viable, connected and resilient.”

Engagement with EU Decision‑Makers

During the two‑day visit, the delegation met with Irish and European MEPs, including members of the European Parliament’s Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development, as well as senior officials from DG AGRI and representatives of the Permanent Representation of Ireland to the EU.

Meetings included engagement with MEPs Nina Carberry, Maria Walsh, Seán Kelly, Ciaran Mullooly, Katherine Funchhion and Barry Cowen, alongside discussions with European Commission officials on the future of rural development and cohesion funding.

The delegation underlined how LEADER:

  • Addresses unmet service gaps in rural areas
  • Supports social inclusion and community cohesion
  • Enables locally identified solutions that cannot be delivered through top‑down programmes

With increasing pressure on EU budgets, they stressed the importance of maintaining targeted, place‑based funding that delivers measurable outcomes for communities.

Local Impact, European Value

While LEADER is delivered at local level, its outcomes align directly with core EU objectives, including economic cohesion, territorial balance and inclusive growth.

From enterprise hubs and childcare facilities to community amenities, tourism ventures and social enterprises, LEADER‑funded projects play a critical role in ensuring that rural regions are not left behind in Europe’s green and digital transitions.

Next Steps

Local Development Companies will continue engagement with Irish MEPs, EU institutions, and national stakeholders in the coming months as negotiations on the EU’s next budget progress. They are calling on Ireland to play a strong leadership role at EU level to ensure that LEADER remainsclearly ring-fenced and properly resourced in the next programming period.

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