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Charles Haughey

Charles J. Haughey (b. 16 September, 1925) was the sixth Taoiseach of the Republic of Ireland (1979-1981, 1982, and 1987-1992), and the fourth leader of Fianna Fáil. He has served as a TD since 1957 and Minister at the Departments of Justice, Agriculture, Finance and Health. Haughey is remembered for being dismissed from the Cabinet in 1970 for allegedly attempting to import arms for use in Northern Ireland. He is also credited with reforming the economy in the late eighties and early nineties. However, allegations about financial dealings and corruption have weakened his popularity in recent years.

An Taoiseach Charles J. Haughey, T.D
Rank:6th
Terms in Office:December 11, 1979 - June 30, 1981
March 9, 1982 - December 14, 1982
March 10 1987 - February 11 1992
Predecessors:Jack Lynch
Garret FitzGerald
Successors:Garret FitzGerald
Albert Reynolds
Date of Birth:September 16, 1925
Place of Birth:Mayo, Ireland
Profession:Accountant
Political Party:Fianna Fáil

Early Life

Charles J. Haughey was born on September 16 1925 in Castlebar, County Mayo. Haughey was educated at St Joseph's, Marino in Dublin. He qualified as an accountant from University College Dublin and went on for further studies at King's Inns. Both Haughey's parents, Seán and Sarah, were both from Derry and were active during the War of Independence. When Charles was born his father was serving in the army, however, he developed multiple sclerosis and had to retire. The family then moved to Dublin. Before Haughey was elected to Dáil Éireann he was employed in the accountancy firm Haughey, Boland.

Minister for Justice

Haughey was one of the most controversial of Irish politicians. He started his political career with an embarrassing defeat in a by-election. However, in the Irish General Election, 1957 he was elected to Dáil Éireann. His first ministerial post was Parliamentary Secretary (junior minister) to the Minister for Justice, Oscar Traynor. Though Haughey was the son-in-law of then-party-leader and Taoiseach, Sean Lemass, Lemass urged Haughey to decline the offer, which was made by the cabinet. Haughey took the post anyway, ultimately replacing Traynor as Justice Minister, with a seat in cabinet in 1961.

Haughey proved to be perhaps the best Minister for Justice in Irish history, initiating a scale of legislative reform that was unparalleled, before or since. In 1964, when the Minister of Agriculture, Paddy Smith, resigned in a major row, Lemass moved Haughey to that department. His period as Agriculture Minister was less successful, however. He served as President Eamon de Valera's director of elections in the Irish presidential election, 1966. He convinced Telifís Éireann not to cover the campaign of the rival candidate, Fine Gael's Tom O'Higgins, on the basis that as de Valera wasn't campaigning, to cover O'Higgins would be unfair. However de Valera then got a high public profile as President and as the last survivor of the senior leaders of the Easter Rising during the 1966 Rising's fiftieth commemoration. However his campaign went badly wrong, with de Valera only scraping re-election by ten thousand votes out of a total poll of nearly one million. De Valera developed a negative view of Haughey, whom he distrusted and whom he told another minister some years later would destroy Fianna Fáil.

Backed out of 1966 leadership bid

In 1966, Lemass resigned as Taoiseach. Fianna Fáil seemed destined to have the first contested battle for the leadership, with possible candidates including Haughey, Neil Blaney, Paddy Hillery and George Colley. Hillery however wasn't interested, while Lemass talked most of the others out of contesting, proposing the Minister for Finance, Jack Lynch, as the compromise leader. Colley however declined to withdraw. Lynch was overewhelmingly elected leader. He appointed Haughey to his old post as Minister for Finance.

Arms Crisis, 1970

Again, Haughey showed a radical, reforming streak. Small scale initiatives caught the public imagination; free travel for Old Age Pensioners on public transport, tax-free status for artists. The late 1960s saw the appearance of violence on the streets of Northern Ireland. Nationalists were coming under attack from Loyalists and the security forces. Haughey was sympathetic towards their cause. In 1970 he was accused, along with Neil Blaney, of illegally importing arms with the purpose of supplying them to Nationalists. The Taoiseach, Jack Lynch, dismissed both ministers for not complying with party policy. In May 1970 Haughey was arrested for conspiring to import arms illegally. In the 'Arms Trial' which followed, both Haughey and Neil Blaney were acquitted.

Taoiseach

In 1975 Fianna Fáil was in opposition. Haughey was appointed as the party's spokesman on Health. After the landslide victory in the Irish General Election, 1977 Haughey was appointed Minister for Health. In 1979 Jack Lynch retired as Taoiseach and Fianna Fáil leader. George Colley and Haughey were the two candidates in the leadership contest. Haughey was elected leader and was appointed Taoiseach by the Dáil. His first government failed to tackle the economic crisis in the country at the time. In 1981 an election was called and a Fine Gael-Labour coalition came to power. This lasted until 1982 when Haughey returned as Taoiseach. However in November 1982 another election was called and the coalition came to power again.

In the Irish General Election, 1987 Haughey became Taoiseach in a minority Fianna Fáil government. His administration made serious progress regarding the restoration of the balance in the public finances. In 1989 another election was called however Fianna Fáil lost seats in the Dáil. A coalition government was formed between Fianna Fáil and the Progressive Democrats, headed by Desmond O'Malley. In 1991 Haughey and the Ministe rfor Foreign Affairs, Gerard Collins, officially signed in Ireland as members of the single European currency - the Euro. In November 1991 Albert Reynolds challenged Haughey for the position of Fianna Fáil leader. He was unsuccessful in his bid and resigned as Minister for Finance.

Resignation following accusations

In February 1992 former Minister for Justice, Seán Doherty, stated in a television interview that Haughey had been aware of the telephone tappings of two political journalists in 1982. Haughey denied this but was forced to resign as Taoiseach. Albert Reynolds became Taoiseach and Fianna Fáil leader.

Haughey cancer

Media reports in May 2003 suggested that Haughey, who had been diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer in 1995 had suffered a major sudden decline in health. His son, Sean Haughey, TD flew back from abroad to join his family at Haughey's bedside in a Dublin hospital. However Haughey recovered. However on 13 August 2003 it was revealed that Haughey, facing demands to pay millions of euro in back taxes on undeclared income, had to sell his large georgian residence and estate in Kinsealy in north County Dublin. It was reported that the deal would net Haughey 35 million euro before tax. Haughey will however continue to own his own private island, Innisvickalaun, one of the famed Blasket Islands.

Preceded by:
Oscar Traynor
Minister for Justice
(1961-1964)
Followed by:
Brian Lenihan
Preceded by:
Patrick Smith
Minister for Agriculture
(1964-1966)
Followed by:
Neil Blaney
Preceded by:
Jack Lynch
Minister for Finance
(1966-1970)
Followed by:
George Colley
Preceded by:
Brendan Corish
Minister for Health & Social Welfare
(1977-1979)
Followed by:
Michael Woods
Preceded by:
Jack Lynch
Taoiseach
(1979-1981)
Followed by:
Garret FitzGerald
Preceded by:
Garret FitzGerald
Taoiseach
(1982)
Followed by:
Garret FitzGerald
Preceded by:
Garret FitzGerald
Taoiseach
(1987-1992)
Followed by:
Albert Reynolds

Referenced By

1925 | 1970 | 1970s | 1979 | 1980's | 1980s | 1987 Irish General Election | 1989 Irish General Election | 1990s | Albert Reynolds | Bertie Ahern | Brendan Corish | Brian Lenihan | Charlie McCreevy | David Andrews | Dermot Ahern | Desmond O'Malley | Famous Irish people | Fianna Fail | Fianna Fáil | Garret FitzGerald | George Colley | Gerard Collins | Gerry Adams | Government of the 17th Dáil | Government of the 18th Dáil | Government of the 19th Dáil | Government of the 21st Dáil | Government of the 21th Dáil | History of Ireland | Ireland/History | Ireland in the 20th Century | Irish General Election, 1987 | Irish General Election, 1989 | Jack Lynch | Jim Duffy | Joe Walsh (Irish politician) | John Bruton | Kevin Boland | List of Irish Agriculture Ministers | List of Irish Defence Ministers | List of Irish Finance Ministers | List of Irish Health Ministers | List of Irish Political Parties | List of Irish people | List of famous Irish people | List of people by name: Hau-Hav | Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland | Lord Lieutenant of Ireland | Lord Mayor of Dublin | Martin O'Donoghue | Mary Harney | Mary Robinson | Michael O'Kennedy | Michael Woods | Motion of Confidence | Máire Geoghegan-Quinn | National University of Ireland, Dublin | Neil Blaney | Noel Dempsey | Padraig Flynn | Provisional IRA | Provisional Irish Republican Army | Pádraig Flynn | Ray MacSharry | Rory O'Hanlon | Sean Doherty | Sean F. Lemass | Sean Lemass | Seán Doherty | Stalking horse | Séamus Brennan | University College, Dublin | University College Dublin | Viceroy of Ireland | Vote of confidence

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Charles Haughey".

 

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