John O'Connell (Dublin politician)

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Early life

O'Connell was born on 20 January 1927 in the Liberties in Dublin and grew up in Drumcondra in grinding poverty.<ref name="IT Obit">Template:Cite news</ref> He was the fifth child of six, including three sons and three daughters, to John O'Connell, a First World War veteran who had lost an eye, and Mary (née Smith), who was in poor health, unable to read, and had one leg distended by illness.<ref name="IT Obit"/> O'Connell's family experienced several early losses: his eldest brother died in 1931 from heart failure caused by rheumatic fever, a sister died of tuberculosis at age fifteen, and another brother died on active service with the Royal Air Force during the Second World War.<ref name=dib>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

O'Connell attended St Patrick's National School in Drumcondra and the Christian Brothers' secondary school attached to St Vincent's Orphanage, Glasnevin. His mother obtained fee exemptions by ensuring her children performed at the top of their classes. Determined to become a doctor, O'Connell faced initial resistance: his local GP refused to provide a college application reference, claiming that medicine was not a career for the poor. He financed his education through a succession of menial jobs while studying at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland.<ref name="IT Obit"/><ref name=dib/>

After qualifying as a doctor in 1955, O'Connell married Elizabeth (Lillian) Gunning from Drimnagh, and moved to the United States, where he practised at a Catholic hospital in Ohio for three years. Returning to Dublin, he briefly worked as a registrar at the Mater Hospital before establishing a highly successful general practice near the South Circular Road in 1958.<ref name="IT Obit"/> In his early practice, he focused on social medicine, providing treatment for patients affected by overcrowding, poverty, and unemployment, which he later cited as a motivating factor for entering politics.<ref name=dib/>

In 1960, O'Connell founded the pharmaceutical directory Monthly Index of Medical Specialities (MIMS), inspired by the need for accessible prescribing information he had observed in the United States. MIMS became widely used by doctors and developed into a successful international brand. He also established the Irish Medical Times in January 1967, serving as titular editor alongside Dr Robert Towers (1927–2010). In 1972, he sold a stake in Irish Medical Publications (IMP) to Haymarket Publishing Group but retained editorial control. He later profited from subsequent sales of IMP to Jefferson Smurfit in 1988 and Reed Elsevier in 2000. By 1972, O'Connell had acquired a Victorian mansion in Inchicore, Dublin.<ref name=dib/>

Political career

Labour

He began his political career when he was elected to Dáil Éireann as a Labour Party TD for Dublin South-West at the 1965 general election.<ref name=elecs_irl>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He held a seat for the party in the constituency until a revision of constituencies in 1977, when he was elected for Dublin Ballyfermot. At the first direct elections in 1979 to the European Parliament, he was elected with his running mate Michael O'Leary to the Dublin constituency.

In 1963, O'Connell joined the Labour Party in response to chronic unemployment and poverty, and published and edited the party paper Labour News with Proinsias Mac Aonghusa.<ref name=dib/> Using his medical practice as a platform, he financed a personal political organisation based on paid canvassers and private opinion polls while generally refusing political donations. In the 1965 general election, he was elected as a Labour TD for Dublin South-West.<ref name=elecs_irl/> His constituency became largely associated with him, challenged only briefly by Labour TD Seán Dunne in the 1969 Irish general election. He was elected to the Dáil nine times amid several constituency boundary revisions, representing Dublin South-West (1965–77), Dublin Ballyfermot (1977–81), and Dublin South-Central (1981–87 and 1989–93). He also served as an MEP for Dublin (1979–81) and as a member of Dublin Corporation, attributing his limited attendance at the European Parliament to a fear of flying and eventually resigning his seat there.<ref name=dib/>

Although widely supported by his constituents, O'Connell's volatility and emphasis on problem-solving over party coherence led to distrust among colleagues. He was highly active in the Dáil and drew media attention by sending a telegram to the Pope regarding homeless constituents living in Griffith Barracks.<ref name=dib/> His advocacy contributed to securing compensation for Irish children born with deformities after their mothers received thalidomide during pregnancy. His election as a Labour TD coincided with the party’s shift from conservative Catholic labourism toward a more secular and professional social democracy. He was a frequent critic of the Irish Catholic hierarchy and consistently supported the legalisation of contraception, both as a TD and as owner-editor of the Irish Medical Times.<ref name="IT Obit"/><ref name=dib/><ref name="RTÉ Brief Obit">Template:Cite news</ref>

O'Connell engaged in labour dispute resolution, mediating between CIÉ and the breakaway National Busmen's Union, and was the only Labour TD to oppose the expulsion of Senator Jack McQuillan over a trade union split. After 1969, he undertook private peace initiatives in Northern Ireland, meeting with representatives from both sides during the Troubles. Although an Irish republican, he expressed respect for the forthrightness of the Ulster Defence Association leadership and Ian Paisley. In 1972, he arranged meetings between British opposition leader Harold Wilson and Provisional IRA representatives (Dáithí Ó Conaill and Seán Mac Stíofáin) in Dublin (March) and Luton (July), actions which attracted criticism from some public figures concerned about encouraging paramilitary activity.<ref name="IT Obit"/><ref name=dib/><ref name="Indo 10 April 2022"/> That October, he attempted to counter Conor Cruise O'Brien's criticism of SDLP policy.

As Labour spokesman on social welfare, O'Connell played a role in shifting the party toward coalition government in May–June 1972. When the Fine Gael–Labour alliance won the 1973 Irish general election, he was not appointed Minister for Health; the portfolio was retained by party leader Brendan Corish. O'Connell declined an offer to become Corish's special adviser. He was among the few Labour TDs to oppose disciplining David Thornley for attending a Sinn Féin demonstration and criticised coalition security legislation.<ref name=dib/> From 1977–79, he served as Labour spokesman for health, criticising Charles Haughey as Minister for Health over legislation regulating prescription-only access to contraception for married couples, although by the mid-1970s a friendship developed between O'Connell and Haughey, leading some within Labour to suggest he moderated his criticism.<ref name=dib/>

File:Frank Cluskey, 1981 01 (cropped).jpg
O'Connell clashed with new Labour leader Frank Cluskey in 1981 over constituency changes, ultimately leading to O'Connell leaving the party

O'Connell’s Labour Party career ended following constituency boundary changes. Party leader Frank Cluskey moved into Dublin South-Central and expected O'Connell to contest Dublin West, but O'Connell argued that, as a sitting TD, he should choose his constituency, claiming his personal support could secure two seats. After being refused one of three nominations in South-Central, he became an Independent TD.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Independent

During the 1981 Irish hunger strike, he visited Bobby Sands, reinforcing his republican credentials. At the 1981 Irish general election, O'Connell topped the poll in Dublin South-Central, while Cluskey was defeated, with O'Connell's transfers dividing evenly among parties, indicating a strong personal electoral base.<ref name=dib/>

When the 22nd Dáil met in June 1981, O'Connell was elected as Ceann Comhairle of Dáil Éireann.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He resigned from the European Parliament to assume the position. In March 1982, at the beginning of the 23rd Dáil, he was again elected Ceann Comhairle.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> However, in December 1982, with the meeting of the 24th Dáil, his nomination to the position was unsuccessful, being defeated by Fine Gael TD Tom Fitzpatrick.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> As outgoing Ceann Comhairle, O'Connell was returned automatically in the two elections of 1982.<ref name=dib/>

During this period, he engaged in negotiations with Charles Haughey regarding potential support for a Fianna Fáil minority government, reportedly attempting to secure the health ministry. He was ultimately elected Ceann Comhairle by the incoming Fine Gael–Labour coalition following discussions with Labour. His approach, described as erratic, caused both amusement and frustration across parties. After the February 1982 Irish general election, he was re-elected Ceann Comhairle, contrary to the expectations of Fine Gael and Labour, who had hoped his resignation would reduce Fianna Fáil’s parliamentary voting strength. Fine Gael and Labour subsequently criticised him for perceived pro-Fianna Fáil bias, citing his casting votes in favour of the 1982 government’s finance bill and his procedural decisions, while O'Connell maintained that his votes followed the convention of supporting the government. Both Fianna Fáil and Independent TDs acknowledged his accessibility to deputies, his willingness to advise on parliamentary procedure, and his generally lenient interpretation of the rules.<ref name=dib/>

Following the November 1982 general election, which returned a Fine Gael–Labour coalition, O'Connell attempted to remain as Ceann Comhairle but was unsuccessful, stating that Labour remained "his first love". He was largely absent from the Dáil for eighteen months, prompting the Workers' Party to call on him to resign in July 1984.<ref name=dib/>

Fianna Fáil

File:Charles Haughey, 1990.jpg
O'Connell became entangled with Charles Haughey in the final years of his career

Between 1980 and 1982 O'Connell sponsored applications for Irish citizenship on behalf of several relatives of the Saudi-based businessman Mahmoud Fustuq, and he later assisted with another naturalisation in 1990.<ref name=dib/> In February 1985, shortly after joining Fianna Fáil, he acted as an intermediary between Fustuq and Charles Haughey.<ref name="Indo 10 April 2022"/> In return for the provision of 15 Irish passports under the "passports for investment" scheme, Haughey received IR£50,000 channelled through O'Connell's bank account. Haughey later claimed this represented the sale of a horse from his Abbeville Stud, an explanation rejected by the Moriarty Tribunal.<ref name="IT Obit"/><ref name=dib/><ref name="Indo 10 April 2022"/> In March 1985, at Haughey's request, O'Connell also subscribed £5,000 to Celtic Helicopters, a company associated with Haughey's son.<ref name=dib/>

At the 1987 general election O'Connell lost his Dáil seat, and was subsequently nominated to the 18th Seanad by Taoiseach Charles Haughey, serving until he regained his seat at the 1989 general election.<ref name=dib/> During his time in the Seanad, he addressed public meetings on shortcomings in the health service and the need for tax reform, but also attracted criticism. He was ridiculed for claiming that hospital patients on trolleys did not reflect a shortage of beds, since trolleys were "beds with wheels", and irritated colleagues by lamenting that he had been banished to the political margins.<ref name=dib/> In 1988 he published his memoir, Doctor John: Crusading doctor and politician, which combined a moving account of his early life with anecdotal score-settling. Critics described it as disorganised.<ref name="IT Obit"/><ref name=dib/>

By late 1991 and early 1992, O'Connell aligned with Albert Reynolds and is reported to have been among those who pressed Haughey to agree to retire; Haughey subsequently resigned.<ref name=dib/><ref name="RTÉ Brief Obit"/> On Haughey's last day in office, he agreed to buy back O'Connell's shareholding in Celtic Helicopters for £15,000.<ref name=dib/><ref name="Indo 10 April 2022"/>

On 13 February 1992, O'Connell was appointed Minister for Health by Taoiseach Albert Reynolds.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> His tenure included measures on family planning and patient information, as well as controversy over the allocation of discretionary grants and several public gaffes; a Dáil Public Accounts Committee inquiry in 1993 examined grants of lottery money awarded to community groups shortly before the November 1992 general election, and O'Connell accepted responsibility for breaches of standard procedures.<ref name="IT Obit"/><ref name=dib/>

Following ill-health, O'Connell retired from cabinet and resigned his Dáil seat on 24 February 1993.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

O'Connell gave evidence to the Moriarty Tribunal in 1999 and again in 2006 regarding the Fustuq payments and related matters. The tribunal found in 2006 that a £50,000 payment from Fustuq had been channelled through O'Connell's bank account to Haughey and that the payment was made "in a secretive and clandestine manner" and "did not relate" to a commercial transaction over a horse but was connected to securing Irish passports for Fustuq's relatives; the tribunal concluded that Haughey and O'Connell had acted inappropriately.<ref name=dib/><ref name="Indo 10 April 2022">Template:Cite news</ref>

References

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