As 2025 drew to a close, NYCI’s policy and advocacy team maintained strong momentum through an exceptionally busy Q4, driven in large part by sustained engagement on Budget 2026 and the need for clarity around the €8m Youth Affairs allocation. While much remains unknown regarding how this funding will be broken down, our advocacy efforts throughout the final months of the year focused on pressing for answers, highlighting sector needs, and ensuring that youth work remains firmly on the national agenda as Budget implementation unfolds in early 2026.
Throughout the quarter, we intensified engagement with TDs and Senators, using every parliamentary avenue available to raise youth issues. A significant number of Parliamentary Questions were tabled on youth work funding, covering current and capital budgets, UBU funding trends, implementation of Opportunities for Youth, inclusion of young people in decision‑making, and critical issues affecting Irish‑language youth work and youth provision in the Gaeltacht. Repeated PQs on Budget 2026 underscored the urgency of securing transparency and certainty for the sector. An Oral PQ with the Minister spotlighted the success of Youth Night and the need for greater investment.
Youth work also featured prominently in Oireachtas debates. The Youth Work Changes Lives campaign was raised during the Seanad Order of Business, and Senator Nessa Cosgrove highlighted NYCI’s Budget 2026 proposals on the Seanad floor. We took up invitations from members to contribute to wider policy discussions too, including attendance at the Second Stage debate on the National Minimum Wage (Inclusion of Young Persons, Apprentices and Interns) Bill 2025.
Across Oireachtas Committees, NYCI ensured youth perspectives were embedded in multiple policy arenas this quarter, from the Committee on Education and Youth’s examination of Opportunities for Youth implementation, to the Drugs Use Committee’s discussion on young people and substance use, to the Children and Equality Committee’s focus on online safety and wellbeing. At the EU Affairs Committee, the Young Voices Consultation Report and EU Youth Dialogue provided an important platform for youth voices directly.
We also continued post‑Youth Night engagement, issuing a follow‑up message to all Oireachtas members thanking them for their support and encouraging those unable to attend to visit their local youth service. A notable achievement late in the quarter came with the publication of the Joint Committee on Artificial Intelligence’s First Interim Report, which explicitly recommended additional funding for youth work to support comprehensive engagement with AI‑related issues – a direct result of NYCI’s presentation to the Committee earlier in 2025.
As we turn the page into 2026, NYCI is already looking ahead to the Budget 2027 campaign – planning early, building momentum, and preparing to deepen member involvement. A programme of events for early 2026 is already underway, beginning with our members‑only masterclass with Jillian van Turnhout on 22 January, designed to support members to build confidence, strategy, and influence in advocacy.
And as NYCI’s advocacy goes from strength to strength, we are excited to begin shaping a new Youth Work Champion Pilot in 2026. This grassroots initiative will bring youth workers and volunteers into the heart of national advocacy efforts, building a network of local voices championing the value and impact of youth work. Expressions of interest from youth workers and volunteers are now being sought, with further details to be shared early in the new year.
Q4 closed out a year of sustained, strategic advocacy, one in which youth work secured visibility, influence, and growing support across the political system. With new campaigns beginning and member engagement deepening, 2026 is already shaping up to be a year of even greater ambition for NYCI and the youth work sector.
PQs:
Youth work Budget 2026 Capital
Youth work Budget 2026 Capital 2
Child and Youth participation during EU presidency
DEY including young people in decision making
Irish language policy for youth work
Irish language and youth work 2
Action Plan for Irish in English Medium Schools- youth work actions
Dept meetings with Irish language youth work orgs
Budget 2026 and capital for youth spaces
Oral PQs (with Minister):
Youth Night & need for investment
Debates:
YWCL campaign raised in Seanad Order of Business
Senator Cosgrove raises Budget 2026 allocation & NYCI ask in Seanad
Oireachtas Committees:
Oir Committee on Education and Youth: Implementation of OFY
Oir Committee on Drugs Use: Substance Use and young people
Oir Committee on Children and Equality discussion on safety and wellbeing online
Other:
Attendance at National Minimum Wage (Inclusion of Young Persons, Apprentices and Interns) Bill 2025: Second Stage debate in the Seanad, at the invitation of Senator Nessa Cosgrove.
Email to all Oireachtas members after Youth Night thanking them for support and encouraging those who couldn’t attend a local event, to visit their local youth service
Joint Committee on Artificial Intelligence First interim Report, published on 16th December 2025 included a specific recommendation: “Additional funding for youth work should be provided to enable comprehensive work around issues relating to AI in those forums”, following the NYCI presentation to the committee earlier in the year