'Éamon Ó Cuív' (born
June 23,
1950) is a senior Irish
Fianna Fáil politician and is currently the
Minister for Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs. He has been a
Teachta Dála (TD) for
Galway West since 1992 and has previously been a member of
Seanad Éireann.
Ó Cuív comes from a famed political dynasty. He is the grandson of
Fianna Fáil founder, first
Taoiseach and third
President of Ireland,
Éamon de Valera. He is a nephew of the former TD,
Vivion de Valera and is a first cousin of the former Arts, Heritage,
Gaeltacht & the Islands minister,
Síle de Valera. He is the son of the noted professor and scholar of the
Irish language,
Brian Ó Cuív (1916-1999).
He was born in
Dublin in June
1950 and was educated at Oatlands College, Dublin and
University College Dublin. Before entering politics, he was the manager of Gaeltacht Co-operative, a company involved in agricultural services including timber milling, tourism and cultural development.
Electoral history
Ó Cuív first stood for election at the
1987 general election, in the
Galway West constituency, where he was the last-placed of the four Fianna Fáil candidates, only two of whom were elected. He did better in the
1989 election, substantially increasing his share of the first-preference votes, but was the only one of the three
Fianna Fáil candidates not to be elected.
He was then elected to the
19th Seanad on the
Cultural and Educational Panel. He served there until the
1992 general election when he was elected as a Fianna Fáil TD for
Galway West. His vote had increased significantly, and he was elected on the first count, coming a close second behind
Labour's
Michael D. Higgins. At the
1997 general election, he was again elected in second place on the first count, this time being narrowly behind his Fianna Fáil colleague, Senator
Frank Fahey. At the
2002 general election he comfortably topped the poll, with over 20% of the first-preference votes. Ó Cuív again topped the poll for Galway West at the
2007 general election.
Political career
Ó Cuív did not reach ministerial office in his first term in
Dáil Éireann, but in
1997 (at the start of the
28th Dáil) he was appointed
Minister of State at the Department of Arts, Heritage, Gaeltacht & the Islands, serving under his cousin
Síle de Valera who was the senior minister at the Department. Following the
2002 election he was appointed to the Cabinet as
Minister for Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs.
He is widely credited with responsibility for the Official Languages Act, which gave rise to the office of
An Coimisinéir Teanga.
Recently Mr. Ó Cuív has been at the centre of a controversy surrounding the official name of An Daingean / Dingle, a small Gaeltacht tourist town in West Kerry principally inhabited by non-Irish speakers. The residents of the town, against the wishes of other Gaeltacht residents, held a plebiscite in November 2006 to determine which version of the town name should be used. Ó Cuív originally signalled that he was happy to abide by the locals' decision, but has recently said that the name can not legally be changed back to Dingle, following advice from the Office of the
Attorney General.
In 1994, Ó Cuív raised a few eyebrows in Fianna Fáil circles when he argued for a conditional return to the
British Commonwealth as a gesture to Unionists in Northern Ireland.
[1]
In 2007, Ó Cuiv has again called for Ireland to return to the Commonwealth as a full member state in light of the restoration of
devolution to
Northern Ireland and the meeting of the
Commonwealth Parliamentary Association in
Belfast.
[2]
Trivia
★ Ó Cuív's surname is Irish, although there is no "V" in the Irish alphabet.
External links
★
Éamon Ó Cuív's page on the Fianna Fáil website
★
Éamon Ó Cuív's electoral history (ElectionsIreland.org)
★
Profile from RTÉ's Guide to the Oireachtas
See also
★
Families in the Oireachtas