Dublin authorities sent in police and buses to dismantle a tent city housing migrants and refugees in the city center.
Around 200 tents were removed, and the occupants, mostly from
Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Nigeria, were herded onto buses.
The operation came after the camp grew too large, visible, and politically inconvenient.
The streets were cleaned, but the smell of election and diplomacy gone wrong lingered.
The shantytown near Dublin's International Protection Office (IPO) was widely criticized as unhygienic, unsafe, and unfair, but the timing and manner of its existence were seen as political.
Seven days prior, Irish Justice Minister Helen McEntee stated that 80% of recent arrivals entered through Northern Ireland, which Rishi Sunak, the UK's Chancellor, used to support his Rwanda migration plan.
This led to a dispute between the two governments, with both under pressure to manage migration.
The UK is trying to prevent losses in local elections in England and Wales on Thursday and a general election later this year.
Ireland's ruling coalition is facing pressure to reduce migration before local and European elections in June and a general election by March.
In response, authorities dismantled an improvised migrant camp that had existed for 14 months.
Asylum seeker Sami Kupiszewski, 50, from Turkey, criticized the action as hypocritical and a lack of dignity for those affected.
The camp's residents were not provided with alternative housing or support.