- James Tully (politician)
James (Jim) Tully (18 September 1915—20 May 1992) was a prominent Irish
trade union ist, politician and Deputy Leader of the Irish Labour Party who served as a minister in a series ofFine Gael -Labour Irish coalition governments.A native of Carlanstown, near Kells in
County Meath , Tully was educated in Carlanstown schools and in St. Patrick's Classical School inNavan . He served as a member ofDáil Éireann (TD) for Meath from 1954 to 1957 and from 1961 to 1982. When Labour entered into a coalition government with Fine Gael in 1973, he was appointed Minister for Local Government. While serving in that post he gained prominence for a massive increase in the building of public housing, and notoriety for an attempt togerrymander Irish constituencies to ensure the re-election of the National Coalition in the 1977 general election. His electoral reorganization effort, which came to be called a Tullymander, backfired spectacularly and helped engineer a landslide for the opposition.Tully was appointed Deputy Leader of Labour under Michael O'Leary in 1981, and Minister for Defence in the shortlived 1981-82 Fine Gael-Labour government. In that capacity he traveled to
Cairo in 1981 as Ireland's representative inEgypt 's annual 6 October military victory parade. While in the reviewing stand, next to PresidentAnwar Sadat , he suffered ashrapnel injury to his face when Sadat was assassinated by members ofEgyptian Islamic Jihad who had infiltrated theEgyptian Army .In 1982, a few months after the event, James Tully retired from politics. He died ten years later at the age of 76.
External links
* [http://www.electionsireland.org/candidate.cfm?ID=2443 James Tully's electoral history at ElectionsIreland.org]
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