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Niall Blaney

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Irish politician (born 1974)
Not to be confused withNeal Blaney orNeil Blaney.

Niall Blaney
Blaney in 2023
Senator
Assumed office
29 June 2020
ConstituencyAgricultural Panel
Teachta Dála
In office
May 2002 – February 2011
ConstituencyDonegal North-East
Personal details
Born (1974-01-29)29 January 1974 (age 51)
County Donegal, Ireland
Political partyFianna Fáil(2006–present)
Other political
affiliations
Independent Fianna Fáil
(until 2006)
Spouse
Rosaleen Shovelin
(m. 2002, separated)
Children3
Parent
Relatives
Alma materLetterkenny Institute of Technology

Niall Blaney (born 29 January 1974) is an Irish politician who has been asenator for theAgricultural Panel since April 2020.

Niall Blaney is the son ofHarry Blaney, grandson ofNeal Blaney, and nephew ofNeil Blaney, all former TDs. A member ofIndependent Fianna Fáil until he joinedFianna Fáil in 2006, he served onDonegal County Council from 1999 to 2002 and then as aTeachta Dála (TD) for theDonegal North-East constituency from 2002 to 2011.[1] He chose not to contest the2011 general election and unsuccessfully contested the 2016 Seanad election before securing a Seanad seat in 2020. He ran as one of three Fianna Fáil candidates in theMidlands–North-West constituency for the2024 European Parliament elections, but failed to win a seat.

Early life and family

[edit]

Niall Blaney comes from a political family. His grandfather Neal Blaney, his uncle Neil Blaney, and his father Harry Blaney all preceded him as TDs.

Born inLetterkenny,County Donegal in 1974, he graduated fromLetterkenny Institute of Technology with a diploma in civil engineering. He married Rosaleen Shovelin in August 2002 after a five-year relationship and the couple had three children together. In January 2011, at a political meeting at the Silver Tassie Hotel in Letterkenny, Blaney disclosed that he and his wife had agreed to separate amicably. He revealed that he had moved out of the family home in Rosnakill,Fanad.[2]

Local and national politics

[edit]

Blaney first held public office when he was elected to Donegal County Council in1999. Three years later, in the2002 general election, he won election to Dáil Éireann, capturing the third seat in the Donegal North-East constituency after Fianna Fáil'sJim McDaid andCecilia Keaveney.[3]

Blaney started his political career as a member of Independent Fianna Fáil, a splinter group created by his uncle Neil T. Blaney when he was expelled from Fianna Fáil over theArms Crisis of 1969–1970. As a supporter of the Fianna Fáil–led coalition government upon his election to the Dáil, Blaney was widely anticipated to join Fianna Fáil and stand as a candidate for that party at the2007 general election. Although some members of the Blaney family opposed the move, Niall Blaney announced in July 2006 that he had joined the Fianna Fáil party, a move that marked the effective end of Independent Fianna Fáil.

At the 2007 general election, Blaney again won the third seat in the constituency, after Fine Gael'sJoe McHugh and Fianna Fáil's Jim McDaid. He was elected on the eighth count after a closely fought struggle withSinn Féin councillorPádraig Mac Lochlainn.

Dáil retirement and Seanad campaigns

[edit]

In a surprise statement on 30 January 2011, just hours before a Fianna Fáil selection convention for his constituency, Blaney announced that he would not be contesting the2011 general election. He cited "personal reasons" for his decision.[4] It was the first time in 84 years that a member of the Blaney family had not contested a general election.[2]

Blaney was an unsuccessful candidate for theIndustrial and Commercial Panel ofSeanad Éireann in the 2016 election. He was also an unsuccessful candidate at the Seanad by-election in April 2018.[5]

Senator

[edit]

With the support of game shoot bodies regulator the National Association of Regional Game Councils (NARGC), Blaney was a candidate for theAgricultural Panel in the March2020 Seanad election.[6] The move set him up against incumbent SenatorBrian Ó Domhnaill (also with a history in Fianna Fáil).[6] With only eleven seats available, Ó Domhnaill expressed surprise at Blaney's campaign, particularly as it was on a different panel than the one to which he sought admission in 2016.[6] In March 2020, Blaney was elected to the Seanad, while Ó Domhnaill lost his seat.

Following his involvement in theOireachtas Golf Society scandal in August 2020, Blaney was one of six senators who lost theparty whip as punishment for their actions.[7] He is the Fianna Fáil Seanad spokesperson on Northern Ireland.

2024 European Parliament campaign

[edit]

At the 5 February 2024 selection convention in Mullingar, Blaney was one of three candidates—along withLaois–Offaly TDBarry Cowen and senatorLisa Chambers from Mayo—seeking the Fianna Fáil nomination for the2024 European Parliament election in theMidlands–North-West constituency. With 2,267 Fianna Fáil members voting, Cowen received 894 votes on the first count while Blaney received 803 and Chambers 570. After Chambers was eliminated and her votes distributed, Cowen defeated Blaney by 70 votes, 1,140 to 1,070.[8] However, on 29 February, Fianna Fáil added both Blaney and Chambers to its election ticket for Midlands–North-West, in addition to Cowen. This was described as a "surprise move" by the party,[9] which had not had an MEP in the constituency sincePat "the Cope" Gallagher lost his seat at the2014 European Parliament election.[10]

Hours before the launch of Fianna Fáil's European election manifesto on 24 May, Blaney issued a press release alleging that the party had gone into "panic mode" over its three-candidate strategy and claimed it was "intent on throwing two of them overboard and settling for one seat."[11] At a press conference to launch the manifesto, Blaney publicly criticised Fianna Fáil leaderMicheál Martin over an alleged lack of support for his campaign, claiming that he was receiving fewer media opportunities and less canvassing support than the party's other MEP candidates. Martin disputed that the party had given Blaney less support but said: "I'm not going to have a public discussion on the logistics of a campaign at a press conference."[12] Blaney later said he had a "robust" private discussion with Martin following the press conference but continued to accuse the party of showing favouritism to Cowen and Chambers, claiming that Fianna Fáil was "giving up on Connaught and the border counties where we need representation most".[13]

Blaney received 30,387 (4.5%) first-preference votes and did not win a seat. He stated that he had driven 135,000 km in his car while campaigning.[14] Chambers also failed to win a seat, although Cowen was elected as an MEP.[15]

Blaney was Director of elections for Fianna Fáil in Donegal for the2024 general election. The party returned two Dáil seats, and retained Blaney his Seanad seat at the2025 Seanad election.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Niall Blaney".Oireachtas Members Database. Retrieved31 August 2009.
  2. ^abGuidera, Anita (1 February 2011)."How Blaney dropped bombshell weeks after marriage break-up".Irish Independent. Retrieved24 May 2024.
  3. ^"Niall Blaney".ElectionsIreland.org. Retrieved31 August 2009.
  4. ^"O'Flynn & Blaney not running in election".RTÉ News. 30 January 2011. Retrieved30 January 2011.
  5. ^"Former Deputy Niall Blaney a front runner for Seanad seat".Donegal Democrat. 23 April 2018.
  6. ^abcWalsh, Harry (2 March 2020)."Two FF Seanad hopefuls set on collision course".Donegal News.
  7. ^McDermott, Stephen (21 August 2020)."Golfgate: Who were the public figures at this week's controversial Oireachtas Golf Society dinner?". Retrieved22 August 2020.
  8. ^"Barry Cowen narrowly selected as Fianna Fáil European election candidate in keenly contested convention".The Irish Times. Retrieved10 February 2024.
  9. ^O'Connell, Hugh (29 February 2024)."Fianna Fáil to run two senators with Barry Cowen in shock Euro elections move".Irish Independent. Retrieved29 February 2024.
  10. ^Finn, Christina (1 March 2024)."'No point whinging': Cowen 'accepts' surprise decision to add two candidates to his election ticket".TheJournal.ie. Retrieved24 May 2024.
  11. ^Molony, Senan (24 May 2024)."Fianna Fáil Euro candidate Niall Blaney angrily criticises party leader at campaign launch".Irish Independent. Retrieved24 May 2024.
  12. ^McQuinn, Cormac (24 May 2024)."Row erupts between candidate Niall Blaney and Tánaiste at Fianna Fáil European election launch".The Irish Times. Retrieved24 May 2024.
  13. ^Ryan, Philip (25 May 2024)."Candidate Niall Blaney accuses Fianna Fáil of 'damaging' his European election hopes in Midlands-North West".Irish Independent. Retrieved26 May 2024.
  14. ^Meehan, Dionne (13 June 2024)."'I threw everything at it' - Niall Blaney is gracious despite defeat in European elections".Donegal News. Retrieved15 June 2024.
  15. ^"European election results: All Irish MEPs elected as final four seats decided in Midlands-North-West".The Irish Times. Retrieved15 June 2024.

External links

[edit]
Teachtaí Dála (TDs) for theDonegal North-East constituency
DáilElectionDeputy
(Party)
Deputy
(Party)
Deputy
(Party)
17th1961Liam Cunningham
(FF)
Neil Blaney
(IFF)
Paddy Harte
(FG)
18th1965
19th1969
20th1973
1976 by-electionPaddy Keaveney
(IFF)
21st1977Constituency abolished. SeeDonegal
22nd1981Hugh Conaghan
(FF)
Neil Blaney
(IFF)
Paddy Harte
(FG)
23rd1982 (Feb)
24th1982 (Nov)
25th1987
26th1989Jim McDaid
(FF)
27th1992
1996 by-electionCecilia Keaveney
(FF)
28th1997Harry Blaney
(IFF)
29th2002Niall Blaney
(IFF)
30th2007Joe McHugh
(FG)
Niall Blaney
(FF)
31st2011Charlie McConalogue
(FF)
Pádraig Mac Lochlainn
(SF)
32nd2016Constituency abolished. SeeDonegal
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