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The New Long Fella

He is the grandson of Éamon De Valera – one of the founding fathers of the State and a former Taoiseach and President. So has his unique lineage had anything to do with the success of EAMON Ó CUÍV? These and other issues are teased out in a remarkable interview with Ireland’s Minister for Community Affairs.

Jason O'Toole, 22 Sep 2009

Minister Éamon Ó Cuív is the grandson of Éamon de Valera, the dominant Irish political figure of the 20th Century.

While Ó Cuív will never repeat the achievements of his grandfather, who was Taoiseach and President, there’s no disputing that the 59-year-old Minister has managed to give the Long Fella a run for his money when it comes to making headlines.

Ó Cuív most famously made news by publicly declaring that he voted 'No' to the first Nice Treaty. He has also raised eyebrows by declaring Ireland should rejoin the Commonwealth.

In recent months, he has been involved in an assortment of controversies. He is the Minister responsible for changing the name of Dingle into the Irish 'An Daingean'; last December he was involved in a scuffle with students protesting at NUI Galway; more recently, he apparently fell asleep in the Dáil chamber.

Despite being raised in Dublin, Ó Cuív now has an accent that political pundits like to make fun of.

“My son was in a certain establishment not too far from this building with a few friends of his,” Ó Cuív tells me, “and this dentist joined their company and he asked where they were from. My son said, ‘From Connemara’. And he said, ‘That phoney Éamon Ó Cuív who, I understand, comes from Dublin 4, has a phoney Connemara accent’!

“Now, of course, this man didn’t realise he was talking to my son. Eventually when they were leaving he asked each member of the group their name, and he came to my son. And he said, ‘Éamon Ó Cuív is my namesake’. And yer man says, ‘You’re coddin’!’ And he says, ‘No,’ he said and he pulls out a business card! So, yeah, I mean, there is that bit of an attitude alright. But I can smile at it.” Eamon Ó Cuív is in charge of a department – Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs – which An Bord Snip has recommended should be axed.

Jason O’Toole: Has your grandfather’s political career cast a shadow over your own?

Éamon Ó Cuív: In a lot of cases it was totally to my disadvantage, because people saw you coming. I served a long apprenticeship as an ordinary member of the party. There was no fast track. I was living in an area that geographically was very far out of the way, so I wasn’t seen as an instant candidate. So, the De Valera name certainly didn’t get me in.



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