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*A publication of the sayings of Ahern, ''De Little Book of Bertie'' was published in 2007.<ref>ISBN-13: 978-1903582107</ref>
*A publication of the sayings of Ahern, ''De Little Book of Bertie'' was published in 2007.<ref>ISBN-13: 978-1903582107</ref>
* Ahern is the only Taoiseach whose name in Irish-Language TV and radio programmes is stated as ''An Taoiseach, Bertie Ahern'' because it is said Irish people would not recognise Partholan O hEachthairn the literal translation. This has angered many people in Ireland whose Christian name, in everyday speech, is ''Partholan'' or "Bartholomew/Bertie/Bart" in English.
* Ahern is the only Taoiseach whose name in Irish-Language TV and radio programmes is stated as ''An Taoiseach, Bertie Ahern'' because it is said Irish people would not recognise Partholan O hEachthairn the literal translation. This has angered many people in Ireland whose Christian name, in everyday speech, is ''Partholan'' or "Bartholomew/Bertie/Bart" in English.
* He is a massive [[Manchester United]] supporter.


==Quotes ==
==Quotes ==

Revision as of 18:28, 17 May 2007

Bertie Ahern
10th Taoiseach of Ireland
Assumed office
26 June, 1997
DeputyMary Harney (1997–2006)
Michael McDowell (2006–)
Preceded byJohn Bruton
ConstituencyDublin Central
Personal details
Born (1951-09-12) September 12, 1951 (age 73)
Cork
Political partyFianna Fáil
SpouseMiriam Kelly (separated)

Patrick Bartholomew Ahern (known as Bertie Ahern, Irish: Pádraig Partholán Ó hEachthairn; born 12 September, 1951 in Dublin) is an Irish politician. Since 26 June, 1997, he has served as the tenth Taoiseach of Ireland leading a Fianna Fáil-Progressive Democrats coalition.

Ahern has been a Teachta Dála (Member of Parliament) since 1977 and represents the constituency of Dublin Central. He served in the governments of Charles Haughey and Albert Reynolds as Minister for Labour (1987–1991) and Minister for Finance (1991–1994). He also served briefly as acting Tánaiste after the break-up of Albert Reynolds' coalition government. In 1994 he was elected sixth leader of Fianna Fáil.

Early and private life

Ahern was born in Drumcondra, Dublin. This is an area within his Dublin Central constituency where he has lived all his life. His father Con, a native of County Cork, fought in the War of Independence and in the Civil War. Ahern's father was a supporter of Éamon de Valera and the Anti-Treaty IRA. His mother, Julia, was also a native of County Cork. His Father was a supporter of the 'Old IRA' for decades after the War of Independence. Ahern claims he can remember guns being hidden around the house, and the Garda Síochána coming to question his father when he was a child. Ahern was educated at St. Patrick's National School in Drumcondra, St. Aidan's Christian Brothers in Whitehall, and Dublin Institute of Technology. He has also claimed, or it was claimed by others on his behalf in circulated biographies, that he was educated at University College Dublin and the London School of Economics. Neither university has any records that show Ahern was ever one of their students.[1] He worked in the Accounts Department of the Mater Hospital, Dublin, from where he is still technically on a career break[citation needed]. He has often been described, and has referred to himself, as an accountant. As there is currently no legal definition in Ireland of the term accountant this is technically correct. But he is not a qualified chartered, certified or public accountant. On the 8 October, 2006 the Irish News of the World described him as 'an accounts clerk.'[3].

By 1972 Ahern had met his future wife, Miriam Kelly, a bank official who lived near to the Aherns. Ahern and Kelly got married in 1975. Ahern has two daughters from his marriage: Georgina and Cecelia. The former is the wife of Westlife member Nicky Byrne and the latter a best-selling author of romance novels. The pressure of being Lord Mayor of Dublin in 1986 allied to the stresses involved with holding a Cabinet position contributed to the separation of Ahern and his wife in 1992. They remain on good terms despite a protracted court battle on the terms of separation. Until 2003, Ahern maintained a relationship with Celia Larkin, a Fianna Fáil activist whom he met in the 1980s. His daughter Georgina's marriage to Westlife's Nicky Byrne stimulated controversy by the decision by the couple to marry in France instead of Ireland. The show-business aspect of the wedding included the selling of the wedding pictures to the magazine Hello!, which was controversial. As of April 20th 2007 Ahern became a grandfather to unidentical twins Rocco Bertie and Jay Nicholas Byrne, sons of Georgina and Nicky Byrne.

Ahern is a practicing Roman Catholic. He visited Lourdes twice with his late mother and attends Mass every Saturday evening[citation needed] in St. Mary's Pro-Cathedral in Dublin. However, he was publicly criticised by the then Archbishop of Dublin Desmond Cardinal Connell for the public nature of his relationship with Celia Larkin. In the Archbishop's view, a separated father living with a mistress was a bad example to young people aspiring to a leadership position. Larkin was appointed to the board of the National Consumer Agency in July 2005, on the recommendation of Ahern's department.

Ahern is an avid sports fan. He is a keen supporter of Dublin GAA teams and Manchester United football club. He attends matches at Croke Park, Old Trafford and rugby matches at Lansdowne Road regularly.

His brothers Noel Ahern and Maurice Ahern are also active in politics.

Early political career

Ahern first became involved in a Fianna Fáil by-election campaign in 1965, climbing lamp posts to hang election posters in Drumcondra. During the campaign, Ahern met his political mentor and future Taoiseach, Charles Haughey. Ahern became a member of Fianna Fáil at the age of 17, and in the 1969 General Election he helped in the election campaign in his constituency.

Ahern's first run for elected office was during the landslide 1977 General Election, when Fianna Fáil formed the last single-party government with a 20-seat Dáil majority, the largest ever. Ahern received 4,000 first preference votes and was elected with transfers from other candidates. In subsequent elections Ahern became one of the highest vote-getters in the country.

During his first years as a Teachta Dála (TD), Ahern was an anonymous backbencher, but did display ambition. In 1979 when Charles Haughey and George Colley, both constituency colleagues, fought a divisive battle for the position of party leader and Taoiseach, Ahern is believed to have backed Haughey. Ahern had served on a health committee with Haughey in the mid-1970s. Following Haughey's victory, Ahern was appointed Assistant-Government Chief Whip.

In 1980, due to the illness of the actual Chief Whip, Seán Moore, he was effectively running the office. Ahern increased his personal vote in all three general elections of 1981 and 1982, even out-polling[2] his running mate, George Colley, previously a candidate for Taoiseach. In the short-lived Fianna Fáil government of 1982 Ahern served as Government Chief Whip. Fianna Fáil were then consigned to the opposition benches for five years. During this period Ahern became Fianna Fáil Spokesperson on Labour and, in 1986, Lord Mayor of Dublin.

Cabinet career

Minister for Labour

In 1987 Fianna Fáil returned to power as a minority government. Ahern became Minister for Labour, not considered an important portfolio. In the following years, however, the department was important in stimulating Ireland's ailing economy. Haughey, Albert Reynolds and Ray MacSharry were involved in negotiating with trade unions and in making a national economic agreement. Although MacSharry and Reynolds were members of the Party's hierarchy, it was Ahern who was seen as the key player.

In 1989 Haughey called an early general election in the hope of achieving the elusive overall majority which had evaded him so far. However, Fianna Fáil, while increasing its share of the vote, actually lost seats. Fianna Fáil was forced into coalition government to retain power. The Progressive Democrats seemed the most likely partners and negotiations were led by Albert Reynolds and Ahern. Coalition was abhorrent to some members of Fianna Fáil and the negotiations were criticised. This prompted Ahern to quote John F. Kennedy: "We will not negotiate through fear, but we will never fear to negotiate." A coalition was formed with Ahern returning as Minister for Labour again.

Presidential election 1990

In 1990 Ahern was campaign manager for the presidential bid of his cabinet colleague, Brian Lenihan. It proved to be Ahern's least successful campaign as the apparently unbeatable Lenihan lost to the Labour Party's Mary Robinson.

Controversy surrounded the revelation that Lenihan's public version of an incident involving the outgoing President contradicted the version told earlier to a journalist. Ahern's revelation, whether deliberate or accidental, that the journalist was Jim Duffy, lead to the reluctant release of a portion of the original interview. In the aftermath, Lenihan was sacked from the Cabinet and lost the election. Ahern was damaged in the short term by being seen as the first Fianna Fáil presidential election campaign manager to lose a presidential election.

In 1991 the Fianna Fáil/Progressive Democrats programme for government was reviewed. Ahern was a key player in these talks yet again. When all hope had faded of a return to government Ahern pulled off a master stroke and the coalition was back on track. This prompted Haughey to remark of Ahern, "He's the most clever, the most cunning, the most devious of them all".[3]

Minister for Finance

In November 1991, Reynolds, then Minister for Finance, launched a leadership challenge to Haughey. Ahern publicly backed Haughey, privately knowing[citation needed] that Haughey planned to retire[4] The challenge failed and Reynolds and his supporters were dismissed from the Cabinet. In the reshuffle that followed Ahern became Minister for Finance.

Reynolds succeeds

In early 1992 Charles Haughey resigned. Ahern was encouraged by Haughey and others to bid for the position. He was apprehensive, however, and remained out of the contest, allowing Reynolds to become party leader and Taoiseach. It is believed that Reynolds and Ahern struck a deal in which Ahern would withdraw and thus remain in the Cabinet, to succeed subsequently. Ahern and Dr. Michael Woods were the only two senior members to remain in the new Reynolds Cabinet, with Ahern retaining his Finance portfolio.

Following the 1992 General Election Fianna Fáil formed a coalition government with the Labour Party. This lasted until 1994 when Labour withdrew from government due to unhappiness with Reynolds's proposed candidate for President of the High Court. Ahern briefly succeeded Labour leader Dick Spring as acting Tánaiste. However the government fell and Reynolds resigned as Taoiseach and Fianna Fáil leader.

During 1993, while he was Finance Minister, Ahern accepted payments of IR £39,000 from various businessmen: see below for details. These payments did not become public knowledge until 2006.

He is also under scrutiny from the Mahon Tribunal for this cash payment and subsequent revelations in May 2007 of cash received from businessman Micheál Wall.

Leader of Fianna Fáil

Ahern succeeded Reynolds as leader; the first unopposed candidate since Seán Lemass in 1959.[5] Ahern was elected as the sixth leader of Fianna Fáil on November 17, 1994.

Negotiations for a resumption of Government with the Labour Party began immediately. It was expected that the coalition would continue and that Ahern would become Taoiseach. However, due to new revelations[citation needed], the Labour leader withdrew from coalition and Ahern found himself as Leader of the Opposition. His Dáil performance in opposition was often inferior to that of Mary Harney, leader of the Progressive Democrats.

In the 1997 general election Fianna Fáil's campaign centered on Ahern's personal popularity. The party gained seats and formed a coalition government with the Progressive Democrats, with the support of four Independent TDs. On 26 June, 1997, aged 45, Ahern became youngest ever Taoiseach.

Taoiseach 1997–2002

Early issues

Ahern's first government saw some teething problems during its first six months.

Firstly, Ahern tried to nominate David Andrews as Minister for Defence and as Junior Minister at the Department of Foreign Affairs. This was unconstitutional as one minister cannot be subordinate to another. Ahern was forced to retreat.

Secondly, in July, Charles Haughey gave evidence to the McCracken Tribunal on corruption confirming that he had received IR£1.3 million (€1.7 million) in gifts from businessman Ben Dunne, which he had previously denied. This damaged Haughey's reputation more than the Government's.

Thirdly, earlier allegations resurfaced about Ahern's Foreign Minister, Ray Burke. Burke eventually admitted to receiving IR£30,000 (€38,000) in a corrupt payment and was forced to resign. Arising from those two matters, the government established the Moriarty Tribunal and the Flood Tribunal.[6] One of the high points of the first six months was the renewal of the Provisional IRA ceasefire, which paved the way for resumed negotiations in Northern Ireland.

Presidential election 1997

Another controversy during Ahern's first term in office was the selection of the Fianna Fáil candidate to contest the Presidential elections of 1997. A strong candidate was needed to defeat the ground-breaking Robinson presidency. Also, the party was still sensitive[citation needed] to the loss of the 1990 election. Former Taoiseach Reynolds, seen as having made[citation needed] significant contributions to the establishment of the Northern Ireland peace process, and former Foreign Minister Michael O'Kennedy both showed interest in the nomination. Ahern, it is alleged [citation needed], had promised Reynolds his support if Reynolds first ran in the 1997 General Election. However a relatively unknown party activist, Mary McAleese, also sought the nomination. In a meeting of ministers, Ahern gave an ambiguous speech[citation needed] which seemed to encourage his Cabinet to support McAleese. McAleese was selected by Fianna Fáil and subsequently elected as the eighth President of Ireland. Reynolds was humiliated.[citation needed]

Peace process

A significant achievement of Ahern's first term was his part in the negotiation of the Belfast Agreement, commonly called the Good Friday Agreement, in which the British and Irish Governments and most Northern Irish political parties established an "exclusively peaceful and democratic" framework for power-sharing in Northern Ireland. The agreement was signed on April 10, 1998. It was seen as something special because not only was it endorsed by the political parties, it was endorsed also by the British and Irish governments and the people of the Republic and Northern Ireland.

Though the agreement has yet to be implemented in full, the ceasefires and political structures it created have encouraged peace. The negotiations also led to his friendship with the British Prime Minister, Tony Blair. On November 26, 1998 Blair became the first Prime Minister of the United Kingdom to address Dáil Éireann.

Economy

Many claim[citation needed] that Ahern's management of the economy during his first term in office, allied to the free market policies of his coalition partners, the Progressive Democrats, helped ignite[citation needed] the Celtic Tiger. Increased prosperity and a better standard of living were the main results of the Celtic Tiger economy. The good economic conditions allowed his Minister for Finance, Charlie McCreevy, to deliver several generous budgets.

Another achievement was Ireland's vigilant and swift reaction to the 2001 Foot & Mouth Disease Crisis. Only a handful of cases were discovered in Ireland and the government was generally praised[citation needed] for their intervention. A major outbreak could have led to the collapse of Ireland's agriculture industry.

General Election 2002

The 28th Dáil served its full term becoming the 2nd longest Dáil to complete a full term. The coalition of Fianna Fáil and Progressive Democrats was re-elected with an increased majority in the 2002 General Election on May 17. Fianna Fáil had hoped for a majority, but remained three seats short of the 84 required. The coalition Government returned to power, the first time a Government had been re-elected since Jack Lynch's in 1969. Additionally, the opposition Fine Gael party suffered substantial losses. The significant election victory was seen[citation needed] as a vote of confidence in the Government and its policies.

Taoiseach 2002–Present

File:BushBlairAhern.jpg
US President George W. Bush, UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, and Ahern at Hillsborough Castle in Northern Ireland on April 8, 2003.

Controversy arose when it was announced shortly afterwards that financial cutbacks were needed due to the drop in the international and Irish economies. This contradicted Fianna Fáil's promise during the election campaign when Finance Minister McCreevy was quoted[citation needed] several times saying that "no cutbacks, secret or otherwise, were planned". The government was accused of lying to the public, particularly concerning the war in Iraq (see below), and Ahern was booed at several public events, including a Croke Park GAA match and at the opening of the 2003 Special Olympics. The Government's rating fell badly in opinion polls and Ahern's popularity dropped to its minimum.[citation needed]

In 2003, the government created more controversy when it became public that US military aircraft, carrying large numbers of troops, were refueling at Shannon Airport, despite opposition to the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. Ireland's policy since the foundation of the State has been to be a neutral party in any conflict. The Government had maintained that troops had not used Shannon[citation needed] but when this was disproved, it then claimed that such permission had been available for 50 years.

When America invaded Iraq, there was speculation[citation needed] that American President Bush had negotiated this concession during Ahern's presentation of a bowl of shamrock to Bush, during the St Patrick's Day celebration in Washington. After Ahern's return, the Dáil allowed the Government to sanction the fuelling, an act that caused outcry from anti-war protesters and opposition TDs, and resulted in a six hour blockade of the Dáil[citation needed]. The use of the riot squad outside Parliament buildings was a first as was the arrest of scores of protesters, including some Dáil deputies.[citation needed]

The drop in opinion poll ratings for Ahern and his government after the 2002 election was followed in 2004 by Fianna Fáil's worst local election results[citation needed] in 80 years. Despite speculation[citation needed], no leadership challenge occurred and Ahern recovered in the polls. His reputation for inaction in changing Cabinet ministers ended with his long-heralded 2004 Cabinet reshuffle which earned him the nickname[citation needed], "the Tipp-Ex Taoiseach" after his failed attempt to sack Séamus Brennan from the Cabinet. The reshuffle was not as extensive as some had hoped as only three new members entered government.

File:Bertie ahern with bush.jpg
President George W. Bush accepts a bowl of shamrock from Taoiseach Bertie Ahern during a ceremony celebrating St. Patrick's Day in 2005.

The unpopular phase seemed short-lived as the government rearranged its priorities and as the economy grew. A notable law enacted by this government was the ban on smoking in workplaces and enclosed areas in March 2004. Improvements have been made in the transport infrastructure with the launch of the Luas light rail system in Dublin, many new motorways being built and the break-up of Aer Rianta, the state-owned Airport Management company. But, after the demotion of the Minister for Transport,[citation needed] road deaths increased and the penalty-points system for traffic offences yielded disappointing results.[citation needed]

Plans for a new terminal at Dublin Airport were so delayed that a third terminal is being planned before work on the second has started.[citation needed] A much-anticipated national spatial plan launched in 2003 has so-far failed[citation needed] to deliver any changes to the imbalance of development on the east coast, and the long-delayed decentralisation of government departments to the regions has also been attacked (as has the decentralisation plan itself, for ignoring the spatial strategy and the surprise manner in which it was announced).

In November 2004, Ahern celebrated ten years as leader of Fianna Fáil. In April 2006, he became the second longest serving Taoiseach, after Éamon de Valera.

In 2005, American use of Shannon Airport returned to haunt Ahern. The government learned the previous year that US plane N379P, which transported prisoners from Sweden to Egypt for torture, was spotted at Shannon on numerous occasions.[citation needed] Ahern refused to investigate despite several eye-witness accounts by anti-war protesters and statements from individual deputies and senators demanding an inspection of such planes on Irish soil.

By the end of the year, the media joined in the calls for inspection; the US ambassador was called to appear before a Dáil committee (he refused) and a Seanad committee to investigate the matter was discussed. Government senators subsequently blocked the establishment of the committee, citing fears of offending a friendly state.[citation needed]

One of Ahern's achievements in 2004 was his Presidency of the European Council [4]

EU leaders agreed a European Constitution, there was recovery in EU-US relations, the EU formally admitted 10 new members, and selected José Manuel Durão Barroso as next President of the European Commission. Briefly, it appeared[citation needed] as if Ahern himself might become President of the Commission, however, he declined in favour of domestic politics. The treaty was subsequently defeated in referendum in the Netherlands and France.

Among other criticisms of Ahern's term of office were Ireland's entry into NATO's Partnership for Peace without a referendum, ratification of the Nice Treaty by the holding of a second referendum when it had been rejected in an earlier one, and the curtailment of the Freedom of Information Act after the war in Iraq had begun.

Ahern's government has spent €52 million on an infamous Nedap Electronic Voting system. This was later proved to be insecure and could have been tampered with in order to change results.[7]

By March 2006 there were further numerous revelations[citation needed] of undeclared payments made to Government ministers, deputies and councillors by building lobbyists. The health service, under Tánaiste Mary Harney's control, was in worsening crisis.[citation needed]

The Moriarty Tribunal [5] reporting in December 2006, criticised Ahern for having signed blank cheques for the then party leader Charles Haughey, who misappropriated taxpayers' funds for personal use. The disbursement of funds to Fianna Fáil and their investigation by the tribunal have raised questions of the involvement of Ahern in the administration of these funds. FF money trail leaves many questions unanswered

In May 2007 he became the first Irish leader to address a joint session of the UK Parliament [6]

Admission of undeclared payments

Ahern was criticised by the Moriarty Tribunal for signing blank state cheques for the then Taoiseach Charles Haughey, without asking what those cheques were for. Ahern told the tribunal that a policy of signing blank cheques was used on the Fianna Fáil party leader's account for reasons of "administrative convenience".[8] In September 2006 The Irish Times printed claims allegedly leaked[9] from The Mahon Tribunal that Ahern had received money from a millionaire businessman while Minister for Finance in 1993.

The editor of The Irish Times defended the publication as being in the public interest at a hearing of the tribunal, saying that it was not a party to the Supreme Court case which restrained the Sunday Business Post from publishing leaked documents. This order was directed against the Sunday Business Post but its interim order purported to restrain all media outlets from publishing confidential material from the inquiry.

Ahern has admitted that he did receive money but said on being interviewed that:

What I got personally in my life, to be frank with you is none of your business. If I got something from somebody as a present or something like that I can use it.

What Ahern said in 1996, while in opposition:

The public are entitled to have an absolute guarantee of the financial probity and integrity of their elected representatives, their officials and above all of Ministers. They need to know that they are under financial obligations to nobody. (Dáil Éireann transcript, December 1996)

This contradiction has been criticised in editorials in both the Irish Independent [7] and The Irish Times[8]

Six days after the payments were publicised Ahern admitted in a soft[10] television interview[11] that he had received two payments totalling IR£39,000 (€50,000) in 1993 and 1994. Ahern regarded the money as a loan, but he conceded that no repayments had at that time (September 2006) been made and no interest has been paid. He said that he had attempted to repay it, but that his friends would not accept repayment. He claimed that he had broken no codes - ethical, tax, legal or otherwise. A previous Taoiseach Charles Haughey who was in receipt of money from friends and businessmen paid tax and penalties on gifts received while in office.

In the same interview, he also admitted to receiving a payment of £8,000 from a group of 25 businessmen in Manchester on one occasion. He claimed that this money was again unsolicited, that it was a gift and therefore not subject to tax as it had been received when abroad, and that it was paid to him after he gave an after-dinner speech at an ad hoc function. He claimed that the money was given to him as a private citizen, not to him in his then role as Minister for Finance, and that no other payments were received by him after speaking at other similar functions. The Irish Times reported on 30 September, 2006 that part of this payment was actually a cheque drawn on NCB Stockbrokers, a large Irish company. A number of his benefactors have received appointments as directors of State boards.[12] Insisting that no favours had been offered or received, Ahern said:

I might have appointed somebody but I appointed them because they were friends, not because of anything they had given me.

Under the Standards in Public Office Commission's rules,

State appointments should be made on the basis of merit, taking into account the skills, qualifications and experience of the person to be appointed.

Members of Dáil Éireann must conduct themselves;[9]

in accordance with the provisions and spirit of the Code of Conduct and ensure that their conduct does not bring the integrity of their office or the Dáil into serious disrepute.

In the face of negative publicity, Ahern has repaid the monies advanced to him, with 5% interest totaling €90,000.[13]

On October 3, 2006 Ahern made a 15 minute statement in Dail Eireann defending his actions in taking loans totalling IR£39,000 (€50,000) from friends in Ireland and £8,000 (€11,800) as a gift from businessmen in Manchester in 1993 and 1994.[14][15][16] In his statement he apologised for the distress his actions had brought saying:

The bewilderment caused to the public about recent revelations has been deeply upsetting for me and others near and dear to me. To them, to the Irish people and to this house, I offer my apologies.

Further questions were raised about IR£50,000 (€63,300) which he had lodged to his bank account in 1994. He claimed this was money he had saved over a substantial period of time (1987–1994) when he had had no active bank account. During this period he was Minister for Labour and subsequently Minister for Finance. He was asked by the leader of the Labour party, Pat Rabbitte whether, in the absence of a bank account, he had kept the money in a sock in the hot-press and by Joe Higgins, the leader of the Socialist Party if he had kept the money in a shoe-box. Ahern replied that he had kept the money in his own possession.

On October 5, 2006 further information emerged[17] in the Dáil that Ahern had bought his house in Dublin from Manchester based Irish businessman, Micheál Wall, who was at an event in Manchester in 1994 where the Taoiseach received a payment of £8,000 (€11,800). This caused further tensions within the Government coalition parties.

On October 10, 2006 the Taoiseach[18] again told the Dáil that it was an error of judgment for him to accept loans and gifts for personal purposes in the early 1990s. Ahern expanded on his apology to the Dáil of the previous week, which he described as unqualified. Ahern said there would now be a change in the ethics law requiring office holders offered a gift from friends to consult the Standards in Public Office Commission[10] and to accept their ruling.

Allegations had been made that he had taken IR£50,000 (€63,300) from a property developer, Owen O'Callaghan, in return for favours at this time. Ahern won a libel action against a Cork businessman, "Starry" O'Brien, defending himself against this allegation.

In March 2007, it was revealed that one of Ahern's Manchester benefactors, Paddy 'The Plasterer', is organising an election campaign in the Taoiseach's constituency.[19]

In April 2007, it emerged[20] from a statement by his former official driver, that Ahern in 1994, while Minister for Finance, took a briefcase full of cash to Manchester. This has been denied by Ahern.

The emergence of payment details has damaged Ahern's standing and continues to do so. In April 2007, an opinion poll found that nearly half of voters believe Taoiseach Bertie Ahern still has questions to answer over the payments controversy.[21]

In May 2007, it emerged that Ahern received £30,000 from a businessman that was channelled through Ahern's then partner Celia Larkin. Explaining this is causing difficulties for Ahern. Questions for Bertie.[22]

The future

File:Martin Ahern.jpg
Then Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin with Taoiseach Bertie Ahern in 2005.

Ahern's reputation has been damaged by the revelation of cash gifts received that have transmuted to loans from businessmen. His reputation as the Teflon Taoiseach (no allegation of unethical behaviour has stuck to him until September 2006) has been damaged. He has been criticised in the foreign press as well as in the Irish media.[23]

Last week Bertie Ahern was at his most eloquent, speaking through gritted teeth on a subject that threatens to jettison his reputation as the Teflon Taoiseach.

His coalition partners in Government, the Progressive Democrats, said that he has questions to answer as details of an £8,000 (€11,800) payment for speaking engagements, in Manchester in 1994, emerge. The continuing appearance of details of his appearances in Manchester and the names of those who were present at functions threatened to destabilise his Coalition Government, especially so when it transpired that one of the businessmen Micheál Wall subsequently sold a house to Ahern. The strains in the coalition eased after Ahern apologised for a second time in the Dáil and agreed to tighten up on ethics legislation.[18]

To the surprise of many observers however, polls taken during and after the crisis indicated a sharp rise in support for the Ahern government and a corresponding fall in support for the Opposition parties. While 55-64% of the public believed that he was wrong to accept the payments, support for his party rose to 39-42%, while support for the main Opposition parties Fine Gael and Labour fell to 20-26% and 10-11%. Two-thirds believed he should not have resigned. The polls provoked complaint from the media.[24][25] The Irish Times commented they were a "poor reflection of ourselves". Some commentators however, maintained that they showed the Irish people drew a distinction between the Ahern affair and previous financial scandals involving Irish politicians, both on the basis of sums received and the fact that the Taoiseach had used them to repay loans, rather than for self-enrichment, unlike former Taoiseach Charles Haughey for example.

Ahern wants to win a third general election in 2007 while opinion polls, in April 2007, suggest that this is improbable. [11] FF/PDs to fall short by 10 seats, FG gains. Alternative coalition moves ahead of Government parties. [26]

Polls in April 2007 showed his coalition of Fianna Fáil and the Progressive Democrats at 35% and 3% respectively against [27] the Fine Gael / Labour alternative government figure of 38%. A further poll published April 27 2007, [28] shows Fianna Fáil and Progressive Democrats at 34% and 3% respectively compared to Fine Gael and Labour at 31% and 10%. A promise by Labour, at their February 2007 party conference of a cut in the basic rate of income tax, paid by 80% of workers, from 20% to 18% created some excitement in political and media circles. Income tax cuts by the FF/PD government had concentrated on the top rate of tax and Labour were able to portray their proposal as progressive to the discomfiture of Fianna Fáil.

Governments

Trivia

  • Ahern's difficulties over his acceptance of money from friends, while Minister for Finance has become known[29] in the press as "Bertigate" [12].
  • In 2004, Joe Higgins TD described Ahern's response to questions as "like playing handball against a hay stack. You hear a dull thud but the ball never comes back to you".[30]
  • Ahern has been described by disgraced former Taoiseach Charles Haughey as the best, the most skillful, the most devious and the most cunning of them all.[3]
  • Sport is one of Ahern's passions. He appeared as a pundit on RTÉ Two's The Premiership programme in 2001 [13].
  • As of May 2007, Ahern is the 3rd longest-serving political leader among the 25 European Union member states.[31]
  • Ahern is one of the main characters portrayed in the spoof radio comic strip Gift Grub
  • Bertie Ahern is a Member of the Comite d'Honneur of the Institute of European Affairs in Dublin.
  • The fortnightly magazine The Phoenix features "De Diary of a Nortsoide Taoiseach", a satirical column written from Ahern's point of view in a phonetic transliteration of his broad north Dublin accent.[32] (subscription required)
  • Ahern has been satirised in a purported spoof publication Bertie's little book of ethics.[14] (free registration required)
  • Ahern is the first Taoiseach to have had a legal separation from his wife.[33]
  • A publication of the sayings of Ahern, De Little Book of Bertie was published in 2007.[34]
  • Ahern is the only Taoiseach whose name in Irish-Language TV and radio programmes is stated as An Taoiseach, Bertie Ahern because it is said Irish people would not recognise Partholan O hEachthairn the literal translation. This has angered many people in Ireland whose Christian name, in everyday speech, is Partholan or "Bartholomew/Bertie/Bart" in English.
  • He is a massive Manchester United supporter.

Quotes

  • 'The reason it's on the rise is because probably the boom times are getting even more boomer.' (commenting on rising inflation in the Irish economy)[35]
  • 'I've looked up every tree in north Dublin.' (speaking of his investigations into Ray Burke's past)
  • 'This is a day we should treasure - a day when agreement and accommodation have replaced days of difference and division.' (April 11, 1998 - the day the Good Friday Agreement was signed)
  • 'We are not going to apologise for any small role we may have played in helping to remove a dictator who made his people suffer for 20 years, carried out horrific acts and didn't care about democracy. He is gone now, and thank God for that.' (May 2003 - speaking of the war in Iraq and the use of Shannon Airport for US military stopovers)
  • 'We were always dead against the war.' (December 2003)
  • 'To the people of Europe who are joining us today in the European Union I extend the hand of friendship...Today marks the triumph of your determination and perseverance over the legacy of history. For Europe, today marks the closure of one chapter and the opening of another new and exciting chapter in its long history.' (May 1, 2004 - European Union enlargement)
  • 'What they were up to in those days were kept for the future. I'm not sure I know how legal it was...but anyway...ha ha ha.' (March 15, 2005 - Visiting the Tipperary Hill Irish neighbourhood in Syracuse, New York)
  • 'Throwing white elephants and red herrings at each other.' (a warning he used in the Dáil once).
  • 'I never condemn wrongdoing in any area.' (22 February, 2006 in the Dáil)
  • 'I think that's so ridiculous I'm not going to e-even dignify that with an answer!'
  • 'I think that people should be given a fair chance, but if they did something wrong to me I probably w-wouldn't forgive them'
  • 'I never condone wrongdoing in any area' (22 February, 2006 in the Dáil) (Mr Ahern corrected his slip, above, during the same dialogue.[15]
  • Speaking on Ray Burke[36] on his resignation;

    I always found him to be a proud honourable man, loyal and true, persevering and principled, caring and committed but tough and a person who often lost friends very easily. On behalf of the Government and particularly on behalf of the Fianna Fáil Party, I thank him for his distinguished years in the service of his constituents and his country.[37]

  • 'The public are entitled to have an absolute guarantee of the financial probity and integrity of their elected representatives, their officials and above all of Ministers. They need to know that they are under financial obligations to nobody.' (Dáil Éireann transcript, December 1996)
  • 'It is quite unacceptable that a member of Dáil Éireann and in particular a Cabinet Minister and Taoiseach, should be supported in his personal lifestyle by gifts made to him personally.' (Dáil Éireann transcript, September 1997)
  • 'I'm not answering what I got for my Holy Communion money, my Confirmation money, what I got for my birthday, what I got for anything else, I'm not into that.' (21 September, 2006 responding to questions relating to a leak from The Mahon Tribunal that they would investigate payments he received in 1993.)

References

  1. ^ "...his attendance at both UCD and the LSE have never been proven and there is no documentary record of any qualifications from either institution." Lies, damned lies... and CVsIrish Independent newspaper article 19 October, 2006.
  2. ^ http://www.electionsireland.org/result.cfm?election=1981&cons=85
  3. ^ a b Profile: Bertie AhernBBC News profile, 2 October, 2006.
  4. ^ Haughey was forced to retire in 1992 by revelations, of his complicity in phone tappings of journalists made by Seán Doherty.
  5. ^ Former Justice Minister Máire Geoghegan-Quinn briefly sought candidature.
  6. ^ The culture of potentially corrupt payments to politicians has continued from that era. In September 2006, details of financial support provided to Ahern by businessmen in 1993 and 1994, both in Ireland and England, emerged leading to strains in the coalition Government. Taoiseach details payments of IR£39,000
  7. ^ It was later withdrawn and a Commission on Electronic Voting was appointed to examine its design and implementation and operation. This commission in July 2006 said that it could not approve[1] the proposed vote counting software.
  8. ^ Ahern rapped over blank chequesSunday Independent newspaper article, 20 August, 2006.
  9. ^ The Irish Times said its sources are independent of the tribunal.
  10. ^ Crying game...Dobbo's your uncle
  11. ^ Taoiseach details payments of IR£39,000
  12. ^ Ahern to face Dáil questions over €50,000 loan not repaid
  13. ^ Ahern repays €90,000The Sunday Times newspaper article, October 1, 2006.
  14. ^ Ahern, Trying to End Irish Crisis, Acknowledges Error
  15. ^ Taoiseach apologises for taking cash donations
  16. ^ Taoiseach says sorry for taking cash donations
  17. ^ Taoiseach says he paid full market value for Dublin home
  18. ^ a b Taoiseach expands upon apology in Dáil
  19. ^ TAOISEACH Bertie Ahern has appointed Paddy 'The Plasterer' Reilly to a key general ... www.unison.ie/irish_independent/stories.php3?ca=9&si=1796802&issue_id=15389 -
  20. ^ [2] Sunday Independent, Free registration required.
  21. ^ Payments to Ahern: the questions remain Free registration required]
  22. ^ Ireland's Ahern Urged to Disclose Finances in Full
  23. ^ Tarnished TeflonThe Sunday Times newspaper article, September 24, 2006.
  24. ^ Coalition regains lead over alternative govt.RTÉ website article, October 13, 2006.
  25. ^ Second poll shows big rise in Ahern's supportRTÉ website article, October 15, 2006.
  26. ^ If re-elected Taoiseach, he would be the second person to hold that office three times in succession. He has stated[citation needed] that he hopes to remain in politics until he is 60, whether as Taoiseach, backbencher or otherwise.
  27. ^ Surge for FG as election race hots up
  28. ^ Alternative coalition moves ahead of Government parties
  29. ^ The original phrase Watergate was the downfall of former U.S. President Richard Nixon
  30. ^ Higgins feels the new thud of Ahern response
  31. ^ For EU leadership seniority ranking, see list in European Council. The two more senior are Jean-Claude Juncker (1995-next election June 2009) and Tony Blair (1997-retirement 24 June 2007)
  32. ^ The Phoenix, 8 September, 2006 and passim.
  33. ^ Ahern had a relationship with Cecilia Larkin for several years. A previous Fianna Fáil Taoiseach, Charles Haughey had a mistress, Terry Keane - A very public affair.
  34. ^ ISBN-13: 978-1903582107
  35. ^ Economic growth shows little sign of letting upThe Irish Times newspaper article, 14 July, 2006.
  36. ^ Burke was jailed for six months for tax evasion.
  37. ^ Dáil Éireann transcript pre online version.

Political career

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Oireachtas

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Political offices

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Preceded by Minister for Labour
1987–1991
Succeeded by
Preceded by Tánaiste
Nov. 1994–Dec. 1994
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Arts, Culture & the Gaeltacht
Nov. 1994–Dec. 1994
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the European Council
First Half-Year 2004
Succeeded by