Tag: Seanad

  • “The whole climate and nature crisis, to me, is the reason I’m in politics.” Senator Malcolm Noonan on his political career

    “The whole climate and nature crisis, to me, is the reason I’m in politics.” Senator Malcolm Noonan on his political career

    Malcolm Noonan is someone who is well-known around Kilkenny. He was a member of Kilkenny County Council for almost 15 years and served as Mayor of Kilkenny between 2009 and 2010.  

    He was then elected to the Dáil in 2020, and served as a minister, before becoming a Senator this year. 

    From his office in Leinster House, I sat down to speak with Malcolm about life as a public servant, his experience in the world of politics, and the challenges that politicians face. 

    Politics wasn’t always Malcolm’s calling. Enviromental activism has always been a key tenet of his life. From a young age he was engaging with his local community and the world around him. “I was just interested in nature and the environment,” he said. 

    But politics came knocking when he was approached by the Green Party to run for Kilkenny County Council in the 2004 local elections. “They said, “would you be interested in running?” and I said, “I’m not so sure.” So, I gave it a bit of thought, and then I said, “Sure, what will be the worst thing to happen?” and then the worse thing happened. I got elected.” 

    Malcolm topped the polls in that election, a feeling he describes as “amazing.” Very soon, he began to realise the possibilities of the role, beyond his ideological goals. “It’s funny, when you get elected you actually realise, I can make a difference in people’s lives. I can get a disabled persons grant, I can help someone get a house.” 

    His entry into politics was certainly accidental, least of all did he think he would still be involved in it some 20 years later. Malcolm was very aware of the precarious nature of being an elected official. He studied for a Rural Development degree so that he would have something to fall back on. “When I stood in 2009, the party was in government, and we lost most of our council seats. That made me realise how vulnerable this could be.” 

    In his time on Kilkenny County Council, he was heavily involved in many community initiatives, including forming and chairing the Heritage Forum in Kilkenny, and establishing Kilkenny’s first Integration Forum. “These are refugees brought in by the state from refugee camps in Uganda and South Sudan. They were amazing families.” 

    Integration is something that Malcolm feels is still important today, especially with all of the discussion around immigration online. 

    After 15 years on the council, Malcolm contested the 2020 general election for the Green Party and won a seat for Carlow-Kilkenny, something he didn’t expect. “We went to the count centre, and I looked like I was dead and buried, and lo and behold I got a huge dump of transfers.” 

    As was well documented, the months after the general election were chaotic. The three big parties, Fianna Fáil, Sinn Féin, and Fine Gael were neck-and-neck. And then, just a few weeks after the vote, the pandemic hit. Malcolm initially thought that he would be spending the next five years in opposition, now he felt that his party couldn’t sit on the fence. 

    “The Greens will always go into government,” he said. “We feel we have a duty; we’re a policy driven party, and we should step-up where we’re needed.” 

    Noonan describes his appointment as a Minister with great enthusiasm. 

    “He [Eamon Ryan] called me down to his office and I recall it being like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.” He was given the portfolio ‘Heritage and Electoral Reform’ (which later became ‘Nature, Heritage and Electoral Reform’), which entailed the National Parks and Wildlife Service, National Monument Service, and all of the biodiversity policy. “My immediate reaction was I skipped up the corridor, clicking my heels. I was delighted with myself. I’ll never forget the day I was appointed.” 

    The term of a government is both very short and very busy. “My legacy from that time was giving a huge uplift to the heritage sector, [and] the biodiversity sector.” 

    But all good things must come to an end, and the 2024 election was looking gloomy for the Green Party. Having lost many of their councillors in the local elections earlier in the year, the mood closer to election day was more sombre. 

    I asked Malcolm whether he felt that his colleagues in the other coalition parties had turned on the Greens, and I was surprised by the honesty of his response. 

    “There was a narrative emerging over time. Some of it was built around Eamon Ryan. It suited some in the media to attack Eamon. It suited some in a ‘business as usual’ agenda to target us. And then, perhaps, there’s an element of our colleagues who say, “all that bad stuff, carbon tax, that’s the Greens.” 

    But he doesn’t put all the blame solely on outside actors, he admits that there were failings in how the Green Party put itself across. 

    “I do feel that we spend so much time delivering, and I don’t think we did a good job of communicating why we were doing this stuff. Behavioural change is really hard.” 

    Malcolm is proud of the things that his party achieved in government, such as cutting public transport fares, expanding the LocalLink bus network, and installing free solar panels on schools, But as someone living in rural Ireland, I could see that the Greens were failing at advertising those achievements to the public. 

    Malcolm said, “I remember a man giving out to me. I was out at an event in a rural village and he was giving out yards about Eamon Ryan, and next thing the 891 (a LocalLink bus in county Kilkenny) passed and he said, “God, isn’t that great!” and I said, “That’s Eamon Ryan for you.” 

    When election day came, and in the days afterwards, it was clear that it was not looking good for the Greens, and Malcolm was knocked out at the 8th count. “You have to dust yourself off and say, “people have voted, that’s the way it is.”” 

    But opportunity came knocking again during the Seanad Elections this year, where Noonan was elected to the Agriculture Panel. Now Malcolm is a Senator, still roaming the halls of Leinster House.  

    I touch upon a serious topic, about the increase in hostility towards politicians, both online and in-person. It is quite shocking.  

    “I’ve had death threats, both in writing and on the street.” he said. “I’ve been physically assaulted; you get verbal abuse.” He says it doesn’t happen often, but it does make him question why he does the job, and why anyone, particularly young people, would want to get involved. “No other workplace would accept the level of abuse that politicians receive,” Noonan said. 

    Away from the politics, Malcolm Noonan is an artist. He paints, he draws, and he plays in a band. Like most people, there is the family side to it all. “Dad taxi”, as he calls it, to football matches. He admits that being in government kept him away from his family, so he’s enjoying having more time with them these days. 

    To finish up, I ask Malcolm what he is most concerned about, and optimistic about, in the future. 

    What he is most concerned about is what he is also most optimistic about: the climate. 

    “The whole climate and nature crisis, to me, is the reason I’m in politics. Every year there’s a COP, and every year they walk away with some kind of agreement on something. At the root of it all is our financial and economic system. I fundamentally believe that we need to move away from our reliance on economic growth as a measure of our progress as a nation.” 

    But it is young people who make him feel optimistic about the climate. The likes of Greta Thunberg, whom he is a big fan of. In a school in Urlingford, County Kilkenny, he tells me that the pupils received a handwritten letter from Sir David Attenborough, telling them to keep going with their Green Schools initiative. 
    “If David Attenborough, the most famous naturalist broadcaster in the world, can take time to handwrite a letter and handwrite an envelope, and send it to a school in Urlingford, County Kilkenny, well, there has to be hope.” 

  • ‘The new Government must respect their rights’ – Calls for a permanent place in the Seanad for members of the Traveller community

    ‘The new Government must respect their rights’ – Calls for a permanent place in the Seanad for members of the Traveller community

    Photo: Oireachtas.ie

    As the main political parties in Ireland scramble to form a coalition, members of the Traveller community are urging the new government not to forget Traveller rights and to follow through on a long-awaited promise to reserve seats in the Seanad for members of the Traveller community.

    By Kim O’Leary

    As a new Government starts to take shape in Ireland following the 2020 General Election, fresh calls have been made for a place in the Seanad to be reserved for members of the Traveller community.

    A new Seanad report released in January 2020 recommended a quota system to be installed in both Houses of the Oireachtas to ensure Traveller participation in politics, the report says. 

    The report of the Seanad Committee, which is made up of 10 senators from across the political spectrum, examined Travellers’ experience of life in Ireland following recognition of their ethnic minority status three years ago. A total of 34 recommendations were made.

    These include: 
    ● Reserving a seat in the Seanad for Travellers (Taoiseach’s nominee) and introducing Traveller quota system across the Oireachtas, in local democracy, in other decision-making for and within the civil and public service.
    ● Setting targets for Traveller women in mainstream gender quotas, party political gender quotas and State agencies’ quotas.
    ● Introducing a paid internship scheme for Travellers in the civil and public service.
    ● Protecting and increasing resources for independent national and local Traveller organisations in respect of their work to support Traveller participation and towards broader social inclusion.

    The Irish Traveller Movement, Pavee Point, the National Traveller Women’s Forum, Mincéir Whiden and the Traveller Counselling Service gave unanimous support to the report at the launch and called on the next government to prioritise the recommendations.

    Brendan Joyce of the Irish Traveller Movement told TheCity.ie that last month’s report is the first report of its kind and has brought the issues in terms of Traveller equality “right into the government building”.

    In particular, Joyce highlighted the lack of Traveller participation in political life in Ireland, and the levels of inequality still experienced by Travellers today.

    Testimonials by members of the Traveller community were given as part of the report – there were 34 recommendations in total made in the report that were partly informed by the testimonials.

    Some of those recommendations refer to the lack of political representation for Travellers:

    “Since the formation of the State, there hasn’t been a Traveller [politician] within the Seanad or Dáil Éireann. Hopefully now that a new government is on its way in after the General Election this might change,” said Joyce.

    The newly released report calls for a seat to be reserved in the Seanad for a Traveller representative on a permanent basis, which would be important to the 40,000 Travellers who live in Ireland.

    Joyce noted that for Traveller inclusion in Irish politics to really work, there is also the need for training in anti-racism and anti-Traveller prejudice to be carried out across all government agencies, something which all parties should sign up for.

    He also noted the current discussion around the pension age in Ireland, saying that while this is going on, half of Irish Travellers won’t live until the age of 38 according to the 2010 Traveller Health Plan. “A new Traveller health action plan should be published as a matter of urgency by this new government, the last action plan in 2010 really needs to be updated
    because we’re in a very different time now socially and economically,” Joyce said.

    Meanwhile, Kildare Travellers are calling for the new government to do more to include Travellers both locally and nationally.

    Speaking to TheCity.ie, Sylvia Walsh, a settled traveller living in Newbridge, said that inclusion for all should be the new government’s priority.

    Seanad Éireann. Photo: Eolas

    “I think the Travellers are very misunderstood in Ireland, we’re got Kildare Pavee Point trying its best to support us in everything from family planning to mental health, but we’re still not seen in society,” Sylvia said.

    “A representation in the Seanad would do wonders for us, to be seen on a very public platform with other members of the government, the government must respect travellers’ rights.”

    “This past year has been tough on us especially after cuts to primary care centres in Newbridge, so a bit of representation in the Seanad for our chosen representatives would be great so that our concerns over issues such as mental health and education are heard and respected,” Walsh continued. “This new government coming in, whether it’s Sinn Fein or Fianna Fail or whoever, they need to step up and hear us out.”

    Read the full Seanad Public Consultation Committee Report on Travellers Towards a More Equitable Ireland here.