Alan Kelly | |
|---|---|
Kelly in 2025 | |
| Teachta Dála | |
| Assumed office November 2024 | |
| In office February 2011 – February 2016 | |
| Constituency | Tipperary North |
| In office February 2016 – November 2024 | |
| Constituency | Tipperary |
| Leader of the Labour Party | |
| In office 3 April 2020 – 24 March 2022 | |
| Preceded by | Brendan Howlin |
| Succeeded by | Ivana Bacik |
| Deputy leader of the Labour Party | |
| In office 4 July 2014 – 20 May 2016 | |
| Leader | Joan Burton |
| Preceded by | Joan Burton |
| Succeeded by | Office abolished |
| Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government | |
| In office 11 July 2014 – 6 May 2016 | |
| Taoiseach | Enda Kenny |
| Preceded by | Phil Hogan |
| Succeeded by | Simon Coveney |
| Minister of State | |
| 2011–2014 | Transport, Tourism and Sport |
| Member of the European Parliament | |
| In office 1 July 2009 – 9 March 2011 | |
| Constituency | South |
| Senator | |
| In office 13 September 2007 – 1 July 2009 | |
| Constituency | Agricultural Panel |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Alan Thomas Kelly (1975-07-13)13 July 1975 (age 50) Portroe,County Tipperary, Ireland |
| Political party | Labour Party |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 2 |
| Relatives | Declan Kelly (brother) |
| Education | Nenagh CBS |
| Alma mater | |
| Website | alankelly |
Alan Thomas Kelly (born 13 July 1975) is anIrish politician and author who has been aTeachta Dála (TD) for theTipperary North constituency since the2024 general election, and previously from 2011 to 2016. He was a TD for theTipperary constituency from 2016 to 2024. He previously served as the leader of theLabour Party from 2020 to 2022.
Following the2011 election, Kelly served as a minister in theGovernment of the 31st Dail, as part of theFine Gael-Labour Party coalition. He served asMinister for the Environment, Community and Local Government andDeputy leader of the Labour Party from 2014 to 2016 and aMinister of State from 2011 to 2014. He was aMember of the European Parliament for theSouth constituency from 2009 to 2011 and aSenator for theAgricultural Panel from 2007 to 2009.[1]
Kelly is fromPortroe just outsideNenagh,County Tipperary. He is the son of Tom and Nan Kelly. His parents' house burned down in 1974, the year before he was born. Kelly was raised on a small dairy farm. His father left farming following the introduction of milk quotas by the European Council in the 1980s and found employment working on the roads for the local county council.[2][3] Educated atNenagh CBS, he subsequently attendedUniversity College Cork (UCC), where he completed aBA in English and History in 1995. Two years later he completed aM.Phil in Political History. Kelly continued his education atBoston College, where he achieved a Certificate in Leadership in 1999. He returned to Ireland shortly after this and completed aMBS in eCommerce in 2002. Kelly subsequently worked as an eBusiness Manager withBord Fáilte andFáilte Ireland.
In Kelly's final year of secondary school, he canvassed for theLabour Party during the1992 general election. He remained active in left-wing politics in university, establishing theJim Kemmy Branch of the Labour Party in UCC. He then became involved in a number ofby-elections, local election campaigns inCork and in the widerMunster area. He has stated that he was "politically socialised in Cork".[4]
Kelly becameChair ofLabour Youth in 2000, having previously served as co-chair. In 2001 he was a member of the General Council. In 2001 and 2002 he was director of the Tom Johnson Summer School and was also a member of the General Election Planning Committee in the period 2001–2002.[5][6]
In 2007, Kelly was elected toSeanad Éireann on theAgricultural Panel.[7] Later in 2007,Eamon Gilmore, the newly elected leader of the Labour Party, appointed Kelly as Spokesperson on Tourism and was Seanad Spokesperson on Finance and Local Government.
At the2009 European Parliament election, Kelly was for theSouth constituency, taking the last seat in a tight battle between him,Sinn Féin'sToireasa Ferris and theIndependentKathy Sinnott.[8][9] Kelly was a member of theEuropean Parliament'sCommittee on Internal Market and Consumer Protection. He also served on the Delegation for Relations with the United States.[10]
Though he had promised he would see out his five-year term in theEuropean Parliament, Kelly contested the2011 general election. He ran in theTipperary North constituency and was successful, receiving 9,559 first preference votes (19.8%) and securing the third and final seat at the expense ofFianna Fáil's sitting TD,Máire Hoctor.Phil Prendergast replaced him as MEP for the South constituency.
After the formation of aFine Gael–Labour coalition government, Kelly was appointed asMinister of State at the Department of Transport, Tourism and Sport with responsibility for Public and Commuter Transport.[11][12][13] Kelly began receiving death threats during this period.[12]
He was elected as deputy leader of the Labour Party on 4 July 2014.[14] On 11 July 2014, he was appointedMinister of the Environment, Community and Local Government, succeedingPhil Hogan, who had been nominated asEU Commissioner.[15] When Kelly was given his ministerial role, he initially believed that property tax would be the big issue, but within a week realised that it would be the implementation of water charges and theIrish Water as required by the EU Water Framework Directive. Kelly claimed that his predecessor,Phil Hogan, had "designed the ditches" and that he now had to "drive the tractor through". Kelly also complained of the position that he had been left with upon becoming accustomed to the role. The cabinet had previously been told by the ERSI that the cost-benefit analysis on water metering was "robust" and based on "realistic and achievable assumptions regarding the benefits". However, by the time Kelly inherited the ministry, "it had fallen apart," according to Michael Brennan in his 2019 bookIn Deep Water: How People, Politics and Protests sank Irish Water.[16] Writing on Kelly inHow Ireland Voted 2016: The Election Nobody Won, the authors claimed that Phil Hogan left "the controversy surrounding water charges remained for his successor, Labour's Alan Kelly, to deal with".[17]
His involvement in Irish Water was controversial during his tenure as minister.[18][19] He received death threats on a regular basis during his tenure as minister.[2] As minister, Kelly announced a two-year rent freeze to combat the housing crisis.[20] He said that "blockages" had made solving the housing crisis difficult.[21] A law brought in by Kelly was criticised by the Irish Planning Institute (IPI), who said that it would increase ministerial planning powers over local authorities and could significantly change how planning operates in Ireland.[vague] Councillors opposed to the law said that it was a "power grab", and claimed it could significantly limit the planning powers of local government.[22] In November 2014, the Independent reported that Kelly had received death threats. Also in November 2014 he claimed that he had received four death threats from "anonymous warriors" in a single week.[23][24] Kelly's constituency office received a bomb threat in November 2014.[25] In December 2014 it was reported that a staff member who answered a call was told "a bullet will be put in his head before the end of the day. And we'll come down and put a bullet in your head too, you rich f**k. We won't be paying water charges."[26][27] A threatening letter sent to his office in 2015 containing a 'suspicious powder' was declared a hoax by theGardai and theDefence Forces.[28] EU CommissionerPhil Hogan moved to distance himself from the controversies with Irish Water by stressing that Kelly was now in charge of water.[29]Barry Cowen claimed in relation to a policy change that "the issue with the policy is that everytime Alan Kelly picks up a phone to a journalist, his policy for Irish Water changes and it’s become absolutely farcical."[30]
In 2015, theSunday Business Post claimed that Kelly "ignored expert advice by giving €1.5 million in grants to towns in his new constituency", stating that was responsible for the active travel towns scheme, which provides funding for walking and cycling routes to get people to switch from their cars. He gave €1 million to Clonmel and more than €500,000 to Thurles under the scheme, even though projects from other towns “got significantly higher marks” in assessments.[31]
In December 2015 Kelly became emotional as he strongly denied claims that he had leaked information about the Labour Party to the media. A number of Labour TDs identified him as the source of a leak of an internal analysis which suggested that Labour would lose up to 20 seats at the upcoming general election.[32]
Kelly attracted further controversy following a January 2016 interview in theSunday Independent headlined "Alan Kelly: 'Power is a drug ... it suits me'".[33][34] He later clarified the context in a June 2020 interview withThe Mirror, saying,[35]
"I did say those words, but everybody forgets about the dot, dot, dot in the middle. I’ve nothing against the journalist now, but if you read it, power is a drug, it suits me, there's a dot, dot, dot in the middle. The conversation was about how some people are always in opposition and will never want to go into government. Some people, you know, being in government suits them. They're able to handle it or deal with it, or whatever. That was the conversation and I suppose power, being in power, being in government are interchangeable words, so that was the context of it. But when you're explaining you're losing".
Kelly was appointed Labour's director of elections and chair of the party's national campaign committee for the2016 general election.[36] Kelly attracted controversy for his association withJohn Delaney of theFAI and denied claims that Delaney was stopping people and asking them to vote for him during the 2016 general election campaign. Delaney had asked people to support Kelly onMidWest Radio. Kelly insisted that having Delaney support him was not a form of cronyism.[37][38] Following the election, Kelly remained Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government until May 2016 duringprolonged talks on government formation.
In May 2016, Kelly announced his intention to seek the leadership of the Labour Party.[39] However, he failed to attract a nomination from his parliamentary colleagues, resulting in the unopposed appointment ofBrendan Howlin as the new leader.[40][41][42] Kelly was not present at the conference at which Howlin was announced as leader.[43][44] One TD who was present described Kelly's no-show as "childish" and "disrespectful". Kelly was adamant that Howlin "blocked" his leadership ambitions by warning colleagues that he would not stand if there was a contest. Later, Kelly tweeted an image of seven pints of Guinness lined up, ranging from full to half empty, with the cryptic message: "The seven stages of leadership". He was reportedly "considering his future in politics after being left humiliated by his parliamentary party", according to theIrish Independent.[45] Sarah McInerney ofThe Times wrote an opinion piece supporting Kelly titled "The man we love to hate should be leading Labour".[46]
Grassroots efforts to put pressure on members of the parliamentary party were unsuccessful. The parliamentary party also decided not to nominate any candidates for the position of deputy leader, leaving Kelly's previous position vacant. When asked byHot Press if he felt "shafted", he replied saying; "Yes. I was pretty annoyed about what happened. It was a difficult period but I've moved on. There are no issues. I don't bear grudges. But you don't forget. You put it inward and you use it for motivation – and you move on." In the same interview, he said that it was "wrong" that the grassroots membership couldn't have a say.[2][47] In Spring 2017, Kelly was approached to join Fine Gael by the Tipperary organisation, which he declined. A source believed to be close to Kelly confirmed this to be true but said that "Alan has time and time again said that Labour values are in his DNA and that's certainly true. He's always talking about workers and the value of work. He is certainly not one of those who just pander to the welfare or liberal agendas that Labour has become so associated with. His ambition is to drag the Labour Party back towards what he believes in rather than ever leave it".[48]
In aHot Press interview in 2017, he described himself as a practicingCatholic and said that he is very liberal on "most issues". He stated that he was opposed to thelegalisation of prostitution, but was in favour of thelegalisation of marijuana.[2]
In September 2017, Kelly called for theHPV vaccine to be given to all schoolboys in Ireland. The vaccine's roll-out among girls had recently been subject to controversy over its alleged side effects.[49]
In November 2017, Kelly was criticised by his Labour colleagues after he warned leader Brendan Howlin that he had less than six months to turn the party's fortunes around.[50][51] However, the chair of the Association of Labour Councillors, Dermot Lacey, said: "If there had been an election [in 2016], I would have voted for Alan. If there is an election, I will vote for him. At the moment there isn't a contest."[52]
In August 2018, Kelly challenged Howlin for the party leadership.[53][54] His challenge failed due to lack of support from his parliamentary colleagues. TheIrish Independent described his efforts to become leader as "persistent".[55]
At the2020 general election, Kelly was re-elected to represent theTipperary constituency, obtaining 13,222 first preference votes (9.6%) and securing the fourth of five seats.[56] In 2020, Kelly was Labour's spokesperson on health.[57]
Brendan Howlin stood down as party leader following the 2020 general election. Kelly was nominated in theleadership election by two of the party's six TDs,Seán Sherlock andDuncan Smith. He was also publicly supported by former Labour TDsJan O'Sullivan andWillie Penrose. Launching his election bid, Kelly said that a complete rebuild of the Labour Party was needed.[58] On 3 April 2020, he was announced as the new leader of the Labour Party, having won 55% of the vote.[59] Kelly became noted for his outspoken style following his election as leader.[60] In May 2020, he appeared to rule out going into a coalition government.[61]
He announced his resignation as party leader on 2 March 2022, citing a lack of confidence in his leadership from party colleagues. He announced he would stay on as leader until a replacement was appointed, and would remain as a TD for Tipperary.[62] Following anuncontested election,Ivana Bacik succeeded Kelly on 24 March.[63]
Kelly is married to Regina O'Connor, aprimary school teacher who was raised inWaterville,County Kerry. The couple have two children; a daughter and a son. His brother is formerUS Special Envoy for Northern Ireland and former CEO ofTeneo,Declan Kelly.[64] He is the author ofA Political History of County Tipperary 1916–1997 and has won numerous rugby and hurling medals according to his Labour Party summary.[5]
Kelly co-owns a racing greyhound named "Akay Forty Seven".[65][66] During a Dáil debate in December 2020, Kelly said that "with regard to greyhound people, many of whom are working-class people, greyhounds are effectively their horses".[67] He did not support a Social Democrats motion seeking to end State funding of the industry.
As of 2021, Kelly owned a holiday home in County Kerry, that he let out usingAirbnb. In an interview with Pat Kenny onNewstalk, he stated that "I have an issue with Airbnb in urban areas, rather than rural areas." According to theIrish Independent, it was used for short-term letting. He added that the house is based in "a small population area", but felt that Airbnbs in urban areas were in need of regulation.[68]
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| New office | Minister of State at the Department of Transport, Tourism and Sport 2011–2014 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government 2014–2016 | Succeeded by |
| Party political offices | ||
| Preceded by | Deputy leader ofLabour Party 2014–2016 | Position abolished |
| Preceded by | Leader of the Labour Party 2020–2022 | Succeeded by |