George Lee | |
|---|---|
Lee in June 2009 | |
| Teachta Dála | |
| In office 6 June 2009 – 8 February 2010 | |
| Constituency | Dublin South |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1962-09-27)27 September 1962 (age 63) Templeogue,Dublin, Ireland |
| Political party | Fine Gael(2009–2010) |
| Spouse | Mary Lee |
| Children | 2 |
| Alma mater | |
| Occupation | |
George Lee (born 27 September 1962)[1] is anIrish economist, journalist, television and radio presenter, and formerFine Gael politician. He has worked forRTÉ since 1992. Since 2019, he has been Environment Correspondent forRTÉ News. He previously was Economics Editor in 1996.
Lee left RTÉ and became aTeachta Dála (TD) for theDublin South constituency in June 2009, winning aby-election with a 53.4% majority and was referred to as a "celebrity TD". On 8 February 2010, Lee announced his resignation both from Fine Gael and fromDáil Éireann, having spent nine months in politics. His reasoning was that he had "virtually no influence or input". He returned to RTÉ in May 2010,[2] and presentedMind Your Business, followed byThe Business onRTÉ Radio 1 from 2010. During his time in RTÉ News, he was named Irish Journalist of the Year for uncovering a majortax evasion and overcharging scandal atNational Irish Bank.
Lee's father was a motor mechanic and his mother was a hairdresser.[3] Lee was the seventh in a family of eight children and grew up inTempleogue,Dublin.[4] He attendedColáiste Éanna, a Christian Brothers' School in the Dublin suburb ofBallyroan. Lee is a graduate ofUniversity College Dublin and holds anMSc in Economics from theLondon School of Economics where his specialist area was labour economics and unemployment.
He is married to Mary Lee (née Kitson),[5] they have two children, Alison and Harry,[4] and lives inCabinteely. Lee famously travelled to work in RTÉ using aSegway,[1] once giving it a test ride live onTubridy Tonight.[6]
Lee joined thecivil service as an executive officer in theCentral Statistics Office.[3] Two years later he started at University College Dublin where he studied economics under academics such as Brendan Walsh and Peter Neary.
Prior to his move into broadcasting, he lectured inNUI, Galway and then worked as a journalist withThe Sunday Business Post. Lee was also a Senior Economist at Riada Stockbrokers. He also worked as Treasury Economist with FTI[7] and as a research economist with theCentral Bank of Ireland.[3]
From 1992 to 2009 he worked inRTÉ, the public broadcasting service ofIreland. He was appointed Economics Editor with RTÉ in 1996.[7] Lee was named Irish Journalist of the Year, along withCharlie Bird, in 1998 after they uncovered a majortax evasion and overcharging scandal atNational Irish Bank. He has devised, researched and presented several television series, includingMoneybox,More To Do,Winds of Change, andBeyond the Berlin Wall. He is thought of as an "economics guru".[8] He left RTÉ "in the late 1990s" to work for BCP Stockbrokers. He left the job and returned to his RTÉ post the next day.[9]
Before embarking on his political career, he filmed a four-part series based on thefall of the Berlin Wall in 2008.[10] It was aired onRTÉ One in November 2009.[11]
George Lee was parodied in the 1990s comedyBull Island, where he was seen "menacingly staring down the lens of a camera",[12] and has also been featured onRTÉ 2fm'sNob Nation.[13]

On 5 May 2009 on theNews at One onRTÉ Radio 1, Lee announced that he was resigning as Economic Editor with RTÉ and announced his intention to seek theFine Gael nomination for theDublin Southby-election in 2009.[14] Lee took a year's unpaid leave from RTÉ in May 2009.[15] On 6 May 2009 Lee was chosen as the Fine Gael candidate for the by-election. He was the only candidate for the nomination.[16]
He was elected on the first count to represent Dublin South on 6 June 2009.[17] He received over 53% of the 1st preference vote. In total he received 27,768 1st preference votes.[18][19] His RTÉ position was filled by Europe editorSean Whelan,[20] but only as correspondent.[21] Instead, David Murphy was promoted to Business Editor. When elected, Lee was referred to as a "Celebrity TD".[22]
In an opinion poll concerning support for possible candidates in the2011 presidential election conducted by theSunday Independent in October 2009, Lee came third, receiving 12% support, in front of formerTaoiseachBertie Ahern among other high-profile politicians.[23]
Lee highlighted the failure ofEMPG, the holding company for US publisherHoughton Mifflin Harcourt, and the potential impact on the Irish taxpayers of the loans given byAnglo Irish Bank to the investors in EMPG on 13 January 2010. Lee saw this as another example for the urgent need of an investigation into theIrish banking crisis.[24]
On 8 February 2010 he announced his resignation from Fine Gael and from Dáil Éireann, due to having "virtually no influence or input" into shaping Fine Gael's economic policies at a time of economic upheaval.[25][26] It emerged that on 2 February, Lee met with the Fine Gael leaderEnda Kenny and told him of his intention to resign. Kenny then offered Lee the frontbench position as spokesman on economic planning. Speaking to reporters outsideLeinster House soon after his announcement, Lee said it would have been dishonest of him to accept the position: "I had absolutely no input for nine months. I think I had to be honest with myself and honest with the electorate about that and not pretend." Asked if his resignation was a vote of no confidence in Kenny, Lee said there were "certainly lots of large mutterings at the moment in relation to the leader's position". He said he had "minimal involvement" with Fine Gael finance spokesmanRichard Bruton. "I had a maximum of two or three conversations with Richard Bruton in a total nine months period. I don’t know how my relationship is with [him]" Lee said.[27]
Kenny noted Lee had been appointed chair of the party's committee on economic policy and also its forum. "I had anticipated a very important role for [George Lee] in the coming period with Fine Gael." Kenny's spokesman later dismissed the proposition that the resignation had implications for his leadership. He cited the public endorsement of Kenny by 20 Dáil deputies over the course of the weekend.[27] Former Fine Gael leaderMichael Noonan said he was surprised at the decision: "I thought that George Lee was fitting in well", adding that he believed he would have been a cabinet member in a Fine Gael-led government.
George Lee was criticised after his resignation by SenatorEoghan Harris, who was speaking on theLunchtime programme ofNewstalk Radio. Harris suggested financial considerations and long working hours of politicians were the reasons why Lee resigned.[28][29] Fine Gael TDBrian Hayes, who was Lee's campaign manager in the Dublin South by-election, said that in discussions with Lee, the latter had complained about "a major reduction in his income" since leaving RTÉ to become a Dáil backbencher. Lee denied that financial considerations had anything to do with his decision to quit politics.[30]
RTÉ received a letter from Lee confirming his intentions to return after his leave of absence.[31] TheSunday Tribune said on 14 February 2010 that he would have to wait for three months before returning to RTÉ.[9] Exactly a year after leaving RTÉ, he returned to the broadcaster on 5 May 2010.[32] He worked as an advisor on the RTÉ business desk. He presentedMind Your Business[33] onRTÉ Radio 1 on Saturday Mornings as a summer replacement forThe Business.[2]
WhenJohn Murray moved to present his own programme, Lee took overThe Business slot on 4 September 2010 on Saturday mornings on RTÉ Radio 1.[34] In addition to the radio edition, Lee has presented a televised version onRTÉ One, also titledThe Business.[35]
Lee has been Environment Correspondent for RTÉ since 27 June 2019.[36][37]
His wife, Mary (nee Kitson) is a native of Borrisokane, Co Tipperary.