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Brenda Power | |
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Born | Kilkenny, Ireland |
Nationality | Irish |
Alma mater | |
Occupations |
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Known for | Conservative views |
Television | |
Children | 5 |
Brenda Power (born 1962) is anIrish journalist, barrister and a radio and television broadcaster onRTÉ andNewstalk.
Power is the eldest daughter of Patrick and Rose Power of Ballynooney,Mullinavat,Kilkenny. She is separated and has five children.[1] Brenda won the A.T. Cross Young journalist of the year award in the early 1980s.[2] Power is a graduate of theCollege of Commerce, Rathmines, with a diploma in journalism. While working as a journalist, Power studied at theKing's Inns and wascalled to the bar in 1996.
Power is a former presenter ofCrimecall.[3] Prior to this, she filled in forMarian Finucane andJoe Duffy on their respective radio shows. Power worked as a presenter/reporter onWould You Believe, on RTE 1 TV.[4] She has also featured as a panelist in TV3'sMidday Programme and RTE'sCutting Edge panel show.
She also presented radio shows, including the phone-in programmeYour Call onNewstalk, and had worked for RTÉ since 2000, also presentedThe Brenda Power Show on RTÉ Radio 1. During the summer of 2006, Power stood in forGeorge Hook onThe Right Hook on Newstalk. She has also worked forThe Irish Press group writingThe People Column. She wrote forMagill andImage Magazines, and as a columnist withThe Sunday Times and theIrish Daily Mail.
In 1996, Power qualified as abarrister, specialising in Common Law. Power also works as a media and public relations consultant.[4]
In 2010 she published,The Noughties: From Glitz to Gloom (Collins), about Ireland from theCeltic Tiger to crash and the Recession.[4][5]
Power has been known for herCatholic and conservative viewpoints. For instance, she has written that '...all of the seven deadly sins have since been rebranded as lifestyle choices — envy is motivation, lust is polyamory, and sloth is me-time'.[6] She has accused doctors allowing children under 16 access to abortion without their parent's consent of being guilty of assault.[7] Regarding suicide, Power has argued "failing to voice even the mildest social disapproval of suicide...we may be making it too easy for troubled people to escape themselves and their responsibilities".[8]
Power has also voiced opposition toLGBT rights. She wrote in opposition tosame-sex marriage in her Times Online column.[9] She is highly critical of LGBT adoption ("I wouldn't like a child to be brought up by two men dressed all day in women's clothes, to be frank"), gay pride ("foolish and anachronistic"), and the Irish gay community, which she describes as "misogynistic".[1] In addition, Power has comparedgender dysphoria to eating disorders and other mental illnesses.[10] She has stated her support for the decision of the English High Court inBell v Tavistock (2020) regardingpuberty blockers.
In 2015, she was criticised byTraveller advocacy groupPavee Point and theIrish Council for Civil Liberties for a column that accused Travellers of "beating their own cousins in family rows" and "torturing and murdering old folk and causing mayhem on school playgrounds".[11] She was interviewed by thegardaí, but theDirector of Public Prosecutions declined to pursue legal action, a result Power claimed was a victory for free speech. She compared herself toCharlie Hebdo.[12]
Her views on Muslim immigration to Europe, which Power claims will reduce the freedoms of Western women, drew criticism from a number of prominent members of Ireland's Muslim community, includingUmar Al-Qadri.[13] Additionally she has voiced strong opposition to proposals aimed at accommodating Muslim students in primary and secondary schools[14]