Monday, 1 June 2015

Foreword by Michael O'Regan to Heirs to the Kingdom: Kerry's Political Dynasties by Owen O'Shea (O'Brien Press, 2011)


The scene is a funeral, many years ago, of a popular TD who has died suddenly. His grieving widow and children are walking behind the hearse. Senior party people, including a government minister, are also in the funeral cortège. The minister remarks on the personal tragedy involved: a relatively young man struck down in his prime, leaving a distraught family. A local party activist, thinking of the impending by-election, whispers to a battle-hardened TD from a neighbouring constituency about what the party might do. ‘Put up the widow,’ replies the TD, in a voice far from a whisper and in the hearing of the appalled minister.
That battle-hardened TD had no time for personal sensitivities when it came to political reality. The dynasty would live on and the Dáil seat be retained because ‘the widow’ was the most electable of the available candidates, partly on the basis of the inevitable sympathy vote. The journalist who told me that anecdote observed that the TD, despite his gross insensitivity, was doing no more than giving expression to a decision that had already been made in principle back at party headquarters in Dublin. At election time, particularly a by-election, the dynastic element can be a powerful vote-getter. Dynastic politics is ingrained in Irish political life. And nowhere more so than in Kerry, as Owen O’Shea illustrates in this well-researched and absorbing read.
Politics can be a cruel trade, and dynasties sometimes find themselves in a battle to preserve their patch. There were, no doubt, those who considered themselves heir apparents and resented the automatic nomination of the aforementioned widow all those years ago. Máire Geoghegan-Quinn, now EU Commissioner, has recalled hearing the succession stakes being discussed at the funeral of her father, Johnny Geoghegan TD for Galway West, when he died suddenly in the 1970s. She went on to secure the nomination, win the seat, and serve in government. But there was no family member to take her place when she later retired from the Dáil and the dynasty petered out. Mind you, when she was appointed EU Commissioner, she showed that dynasties can resurrect themselves in another role far from the Dáil.
Dan Spring and Dick Spring
While being the next in line in a political dynasty can be a considerable advantage in securing election, voters then expect the new man or woman to prove themselves. Electorates have no time for politicians living on dynastic glories. Political dynasties can provide a remarkable local service when there is a senior office-holder and a constituency manager involved. An example of this was the period when Dick Spring was Tánaiste and his late sister, Maeve, ran their Kerry North constituency office. At its height, it was arguably the best-oiled political operation in the State.
Dynastic politicians have the advantage of tradition and service and frequently dominate the party organisation and vote. I observed the Haughey dynasty in Dublin North Central at the height of its powers, when Charlie Haughey was Taoiseach in the 1980s. During an election tour of his constituency, he mockingly referred to a poster of his running mate by asking journalists to identify ‘that fellow’. ‘That fellow’ would win a second Fianna Fáil seat, thanks in no small part to Haughey’s sharing of the vote, but Haughey was making it clear to all within his hearing that his dynasty reigned supreme. Indeed, such was his control of the vote at that time that his old political enemy, Dr Conor Cruise O’Brien, used to refer to ‘that fellow’ as Haughey’s ‘human surplus’.
Dynastic politics is at Fianna Fáil’s core, probably because it is the biggest party and has held power for such long periods. Its founding father, Eamon de Valera, put in place a dynasty without peer, given that for decades it included control of a powerful newspaper empire. The now defunct Irish Press group was launched on the contributions of party supporters of modest means, but ended up, in highly controversial circumstances, as a Dev family business. Dev even appointed his son, Vivion, also a Fianna Fáil TD, as Managing Director. Although the newspaper group is gone, the political dynasty lives on, with Dev’s grandson, Eamon Ó Cuiv a member of the 30th Dáil.
The perks of dynastic politics can be considerable in certain circumstances. Dev appointed Kevin Boland to the Cabinet on his first day in the Dáil in 1957. This was because his old comrade, Gerry Boland, would only agree to retire on the basis that his son took his place at the Cabinet table. There was a time when the monarchical right of succession was not beyond being invoked by those who considered themselves diehard Republicans when the prize was coveted access to a State car. In 1994, the then Fine Gael Taoiseach, John Bruton, appointed his brother, Richard, to the Rainbow Cabinet. It was a deserved promotion, given Richard’s ability and experience. But had he been somebody else of equal ability, and not a John-supporter in a heave sometime earlier, would he have received the ministerial nod?
Michael Moynihan
Dynastic politics and geography combined when Kerry South’s Michael Moynihan was appointed a Minister of State by his party leader and Kerry North neighbour, Dick Spring, in the FG-Labour Coalition in the 1980s. Dynastic politicians are generally more streetwise than the political novice, whether in the constituency or in party head- quarters. At the 1969 election, Labour headquarters instructed that two candidates be run in each constituency, on the basis that the party was on the brink of a significant electoral breakthrough. It was a prescription for political suicide. Kerry North’s Dan Spring was one of those Labour TDs intent on not committing political hara-kiri and resisted the move. As the promised breakthrough turned to dust, he survived. He survived, too, in the aftermath of the 1973-77 government when Labour luminaries like Dr Conor Cruise O’Brien and Justin Keating, part of the so-called ministerial team of all the talents, lost their seats.
Dynasties have to be careful about the indiscriminate crushing of pretenders to the throne. Sometimes it is a better strategy to accommodate them if room can be found on the party ticket. Jackie Healy-Rae was denied a Fianna Fáil nomination in Kerry South in 1997, despite years of service to the party and political skills honed in the legendary Neil Blaney-organised by-elections of the 1960s. John O’Donoghue and Brian O’Leary, both dynastic politicians, were the two candidates chosen. It was an astonishing electoral miscalculation by party headquarters not to add Healy-Rae to the ticket. The rest, as they say, is history. The three-man Healy-Rae operation now rivals any of the State’s political dynasties. 
Then there was the bitter parting of the ways between the Kerry South Moynihan dynasty and Michael Gleeson, one-time heir apparent to the Dáil seat secured by Michael Moynihan after several elections. Owen O’Shea quotes some Kerry politicians who felt side- lined by political dynasties. But no dynasty is unassailable. I vividly recall the 5am victory of Joe Higgins, from Lispole, representing the Socialist Party, over Fianna Fáil’s EoinRyan in the Dublin constituency in the 2009 European elections. Higgins, an outsider with limited resources, ended that dynasty after a marathon count. The Ryans went back three generations toDr Jim Ryan, who served in government with Dev and Sean Lemass.
Dan Moloney flyer
As this book outlines, Kerry has produced some remarkable women politicians over the decades. Some of them had to plough a difficult furrow in those times when politics was male-dominated. Kay Caball’s telling anecdote about Dev’s visit in the 1950s to the house of her father, Dan Moloney, then Fianna Fáil TD for Kerry North, underlines the largely subservient role of women in politics at that time, be it dynastic or otherwise. The local creamery was opened up specially on a Sunday so that there was fresh cream for the distinguished guest. She recalls her abiding memory of women fussing around the kitchen getting things ready while the men sat around the table with Dev. That era of extraordinary deference to a political leader, and the casting aside of women to marginal roles, is gone. Kerry’s women politicians, past and present, have played their role in ending it.
Kerry is ever-demanding of its politicians. ‘Is it because we win so many All-Irelands?’ a weary Kerry politician, under pressure from his constituents, asked me some years ago. It is more than that. Relative geographical isolation, a magnificent landscape and literary success allied to the sporting achievements have led to a strong pride in the Kingdom on the part of its sons and daughters. This, inevitably, means that Kerry seeks high returns from its elected representatives.
The story of Kerry’s political dynasties is truly remarkable. It transcends the county, given that dynastic politics is a feature of public life throughout Ireland. In that sense, this is a book, not only relevant to Kerry, but also of national significance. The highs and lows, victories and defeats, bitter in-fighting and fierce loyalties, are all there. And Owen O’Shea goes onto reveal an international dynastic dimension. All politics is local, but the local can travel. Daniel O’Connell, himself the founder of a political dynasty, must be observing events with avid interest from that great parliament in the sky.
Michael O’Regan is Parliamentary Correspondent of The Irish Times and is a native of County Kerry.
Heirs to the Kingdom: Kerry's Political Dynasties is available  www.obrien.ie, www.omahonys.ie, Amazon, in bookshops in Kerry and by e-mailing politicsinkerry@gmail.com

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