- Ógra Fianna Fáil
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Ógra Fianna Fáil Chairperson Thomas Byrne Vice-Chairperson Joe O'Neill Founded 1975 Headquarters 65–66 Lower Mount Street,
Dublin 2Ideology Irish republicanism,
ConservatismMother party Fianna Fáil European affiliation none Website www.ogra.ie Ógra Fianna Fáil[1] is the youth wing of Fianna Fáil, a political party in Ireland. Within Fianna Fáil it is simply called Ógra (Irish for youth). It was founded in 1975 by party leader Jack Lynch under the guidance of party general secretary, Séamus Brennan. In the Republic, it is active in some major Third Level Institutes and in some Dáil constituencies. It began recruiting members in Northern Ireland, beginning on 25 September 2007 in Derry at Magee College of the University of Ulster, and proceeding to Queen's University Belfast the following day.
Contents
Organisation
Ógra is a full member of Fianna Fáil itself. The national leadership of Ógra is the National Youth Committee, which is elected at the National Youth Conference which takes place every year to 18 months.
Six members of the Youth Committee are on the Ard Comhairle (the national governing body) of Fianna Fáil. This also includes the Leas-Cathaoirleach who is elected by all the members, one representative from third-level institution branches, and one from each four regions Munster, Leinster, Connacht-Ulster and Dublin.
There are sixteen further members of the Youth Committee: three from each region and three from the third level sector. Ógra Fianna Fáil recently expanded into Northern Ireland and has since added the position of Northern Representative to the committee.
Cathaoirleach Ógra
The Cathaoirleach (chair) is independent of election and is appointed by the President of Fianna Fáil. The Cathaoirelach is normally a member of the Dáil or Seanad but not usually a minister. This has recently changed, with the appointment of Dara Calleary as Minister of State (with special responsibility for Labour Affairs) in 2008. The purpose of having a member of the parliamentary party as Cathaoirleach is to provide a direct link for policy purposes.
Thomas Byrne was appointed as Cathaoirleach Ógra at the National Youth Conference which took place in Bundoran in November 2009.
Leas-Chathaoirleach Ógra
The Leas-Chathaoirleach (vice chairperson) is the highest elected position within Ógra Fianna Fáil. The Leas Cathaoirleach is elected at the National Youth Conference every year. The Cathaoirleach ("chairperson") of Ógra is always a member of the parliamentary party - this is an honorary position and it is the Leas Cathaoirleach who acts as the main spokesperson and representative of Ógra Fianna Fáil. The current Leas Cathaoirleach is Joe O'Neill from Galway East.
Kevin Barry Cumann – UCD
The Kevin Barry Cumann is the branch of the Fianna Fáil political party in University College Dublin (UCD). The society, or cumann predates the founding of Ogra Fianna Fáil which was established in 1974 and has records of being active dating to as early as 1948 when Seán Lemass addressed the cumann.[2] The cumann formally dates to 1957 when led by Gerry Collins, then a student organiser in UCD and later Minister for Foreign Affairs and an MEP. The Cumann is named after Kevin Barry (1902–1920), a former medical student of the University who fought and was executed during the Irish War of Independence. It is the largest cumann in Fianna Fáil with recruitment occurring mainly throughout freshers week.
Members
Prominent Fianna Fáil members who were members of the Cumann include former European Commissioner Charlie McCreevy, previous Irish government ministers Dick Roche and Mary Coughlan, Clare TD Timmy Dooley and RTÉ presenter Ryan Tubridy. The author and former political lobbyist Frank Dunlop was a member. The Cumann is run by an officer board elected by members annually at its annual general meeting. In 2011, KBC lost its place as the largest political organisation on campus for the first time to UCD Young Fine Gael.
National Youth Committee
Members of the National Youth Committee for Ógra Fianna Fáil were elected in November 2009 in Bundoran, County Donegal at the National Youth Conference. Members of the committee also sit on the Ard Comhairle, the National Executive of Fianna Fáil.
Other Third Level branches
- Dublin City University – Patrick Pearse Cumann
- National University of Ireland, Galway – Cumann De Barra
- National University of Ireland, Maynooth – Seán Lemass Cumann
- Queen's University Belfast – William Drennan Cumann
- Trinity College, Dublin – Wolfe Tone Cumann
- University College Cork – Donogh O'Malley Cumann
- University of Limerick – Conn Colbert Cumann
- University of Ulster
- Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology
References
- ^ In the Irish language, the initial letter of a proper noun in the genitive, as in [Youth of] Fianna Fáil, is lenited, and therefore the grammatically correct spelling is Ógra Fhianna Fáil.
- ^ Tom Garvin, Preventing The Future: Why was Ireland so poor for so long? (Gill & Macmillan, Dublin, 2004) paperback. pp.225 ISBN 0-7171-3970-0
External links
- Ógra Online – Official website
- Fianna Fáil website
- Queens University Belfast Ógra Cumann website
- Kevin Barry Cumann
Political youth organisations in Ireland All Ireland Connolly Youth Movement · Ógra Fianna Fáil · Ógra Shinn Féin · Republican Socialist Youth Movement · Socialist Youth · Young Greens
Republic of Ireland Northern Ireland Alliance Youth · Conservative Future · Democratic Unionist Association · SDLP Youth · Young Labour · Young Unionists
Fianna Fáil Leader Éamon de Valera (1926–59) · Seán Lemass (1959–66) · Jack Lynch (1966–79) · Charles Haughey (1979–92) · Albert Reynolds (1992–94) · Bertie Ahern (1994–2008) · Brian Cowen (2008–11) · Micheál Martin (2011–)Deputy leader Joe Brennan (1973–77) · George Colley (1977–82) · Ray MacSharry (1982–83) · Brian Lenihan, Snr (1983–90) · John P. Wilson (1990–92) · Bertie Ahern (1992–94) · Mary O'Rourke (1994–2002) · Brian Cowen (2002–08) · Mary Coughlan (2008–11) · Mary Hanafin (2011) · Brian Lenihan, Jnr (2011) · Éamon Ó Cuív (2011–)Leadership elections 1959 (Lemass) · 1966 (Lynch) · 1979 (Haughey) · 1992 (Reynolds) · 1994 (Ahern) · 2008 (Cowen) · 2011 (Martin)Presidential candidates
(winners in bold)Seán T. O'Kelly (1945) · Éamon de Valera (1959, 1966) · Erskine H. Childers (1973) · Brian Lenihan (1990) · Mary McAleese (1997)Unopposed presidential candidates
with Fianna Fáil supportRelated topics Categories:- Fianna Fáil
- Youth wings of political parties in Ireland
- Organizations established in 1975
- Entities with Irish names
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