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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

Elections are not won on the big policies, but are actually won parish by parish, polling station by polling station, street by street. We will have to do a lot of work in the next few years – reconnecting the party, particularly in urban areas, with the people, literally in every street.

Pundits are forecasting that Fianna Fáil will be wiped out.

We had a very bad showing in the local elections. But there are many more parties in the Dáil who would love to get on a good day what we think was a disastrous day. Therefore, any forecast of the demise of Fianna Fáil is premature. And as Charlie Haughey said on one famous occasion, ‘Go and dance on somebody else’s grave’. But we have a challenge if we want to become by far the biggest party in the State again. But I take huge heart from Fine Gael: if you remember back to the 2002 election there were plenty of pundits forecasting the demise of Fine Gael; when Enda Kenny became leader they said that no way could Enda Kenny revive the party. And one has to take their hat off to Enda Kenny and what he has achieved for Fine Gael. There’s nobody writing them off at the moment.

You famously voted ‘no’ in the first Nice Treaty referendum...

I am never going to answer that question in relation to any election again because the principle that politicians would have to declare their vote either in a general election or a referendum goes totally in the face of the whole principle of the secret ballot. So, I did say before the last Lisbon referendum that I was volunteering the information well in advance of the Lisbon referendum but I also made it absolutely clear that nobody had the right to ask me how I voted, and that from now on if anybody asked me in any future election, on a matter of principle I’ll tell them that is an incorrect question to ask – because it would be me this week, some other politician another week, and the whole principle of the secret ballot would unravel.

Did you ever try marijuana when you were a student?



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