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Ray MacSharry - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ray MacSharry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ray MacSharry
Ray MacSharry

In office
9 March 1982 – 14 December 1982
Preceded by Michael O'Leary
Succeeded by Dick Spring

Born 29 April 1938 (1938-04-29) (age 70)
Sligo, Ireland
Political party Fianna Fáil

Raymond (Ray) MacSharry (Irish: Reamon Mac Searraigh; born April 29, 1938) is a former Irish politician. He served as a Fianna Fáil Teachta Dála for Sligo-Leitrim between 1969 and 1988, during which time he briefly served as Tánaiste (Deputy Taoiseach).

Contents

[edit] Ministerial career

Ray MacSharry was born in County Sligo. He was educated locally (including spending some time in Summerhill College) and became a haulier and a small business executive. He became involved in local politics and was first elected to Dáil Éireann at the 1969 general election for the Sligo-Leitrim constituency. In 1979 he was appointed Minister for State at the Departments of Finance and Public Works, the lower rank of Irish governmental posts below cabinet rank, often called Junior Ministers. In December 1979 he nominated Charles Haughey for the leadership of Fianna Fáil. He was later rewarded for this loyalty by becoming Minister for Agriculture in Haughey's first government. In the short-lived Fianna Fáil government of 1982 MacSharry was appointed Tánaiste and Minister for Finance.

[edit] Bugging Scandal in 1983

In 1983 he resigned from the Fianna Fáil front bench due to a telephone-tapping controversy, when it was revealed that as Tánaiste and Minister for Finance, he had borrowed police tape recorders to secretly record conversations with a cabinet colleague. MacSharry defended his action by saying that rumours were sweeping the party that he could be 'bought' (bribed) to support efforts to depose Haughey; he claimed he used the equipment to record any attempts made to offer bribes. The scandal was however primarily focused on the decision by the Minister for Justice, Seán Doherty, to bug the phones of two leading political journalists to discover their anti-Haughey sources. MacSharry was a secondary but high profile casualty of the scandal, as the equipment he had used had been supplied by Doherty, who had requested it from Assistant Garda (Police) Commissioner Joseph Ainsworth. Ainsworth was also forced to resign when the scandal reached the headlines.

[edit] EU Commissioner

In 1984, MacSharry's rehabilitation began when he was elected to the European Parliament. In 1987 Haughey returned to power and MacSharry was appointed to the most senior cabinet post, that of Minister for Finance. He committed himself to bringing order to the public finances and the poor economic situation. His ruthless cutting of state spending earned him the nickname Mack the Knife. MacSharry was subsequently rewarded by Haughey with the appointment to be Ireland's EC Commissioner (now known as EU Commissioner).

MacSharry is well known as the first commissioner of agriculture to be able to work out a meaningful compromise on reform of the Common Agricultural Policy in 1992. The MacSharry reforms as they are known, mark the turning point between the "old" CAP policy, and the "new", although many other reforms followed his.

[edit] Ray, Charles and Diana

As Commissioner he famously became caught up in the rows between Britain's warring Prince and Princess of Wales, when the Prince, on behalf of Britain, attended a public function with MacSharry, rather than rush to hospital to see his young son, Prince William of Wales, who had been injured in an accident. (MacSharry subsequently rubbished Princess Diana's claim that the event showed Prince Charles to be an uncaring father, revealing that Charles had spent the entire function in minute by minute contact with the hospital.)

[edit] Business career

Ray MacSharry was widely tipped to be a future leader of Fianna Fáil but indicated that he had no such ambition. Following the completion of his term as Commissioner, MacSharry retired from politics to pursue business interests. MacSharry is currently a director on the boards of a variety of companies including Bank of Ireland and Ryanair Holdings. In 1999 he was appointed chairman of Eircom plc. He is also a member of the Comite d'Honneur of the Institute of European Affairs.

His son Marc MacSharry is a current member of Seanad Éireann, while his nephew Tom MacSharry is a Councillor on Sligo Borough Council and served as Mayor in 2006/07.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Political career

Oireachtas
Preceded by
Eugene Gilbride
(Fianna Fáil)
Fianna Fáil Teachta Dála for Sligo-Leitrim
1969–1989
Succeeded by
Gerry Reynolds
(Fine Gael)
Political offices
Preceded by
Jim Gibbons
Minister for Agriculture
1979–1981
Succeeded by
Alan Dukes
Preceded by
Michael O'Leary
Tánaiste
1982
Succeeded by
Dick Spring
Preceded by
John Bruton
Minister for Finance
1982
Succeeded by
Alan Dukes
Minister for Finance
1987–1988
Succeeded by
Albert Reynolds
Minister for the Public Service
1987
Succeeded by
John Wilson
as Minister for Tourism & Transport
Preceded by
Peter Sutherland
Irish European Commissioner
1989–1993
Succeeded by
Pádraig Flynn
Preceded by
Frans Andriessen
European Commissioner for Agriculture & Rural Development
1989–1992
Succeeded by
René Steichen


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