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Charlie McConalogue
Irish politician (born 1977) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Charles McConalogue (born 29 October 1977) is an Irish Fianna Fáil politician who has served as Minister of State at the Department of Culture, Communications and Sport since January 2025. He previously served as Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine from September 2020 to January 2025 and Minister of State at the Department of Justice from July 2020 to September 2020. He has been a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Donegal constituency since the 2016 general election, and previously from 2011 to 2016 for the Donegal North-East constituency.[2]
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Early life
McConalogue has a degree in economics, politics and history from University College Dublin (UCD), which he completed after a year as Education Officer in the UCD Students' Union. After graduation, he worked as a political organiser at the Fianna Fáil HQ in Dublin. Upon the death of his father, he returned home to manage the family farm near Carndonagh in the north of Inishowen, County Donegal.[3]
He was raised near Gleneely,[4] a village in the north of Inishowen, and was in Australia before returning to the farm. He is married with two sons.[5]
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Political career
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McConalogue was elected to Donegal County Council at the 2009 local elections to represent the Inishowen local electoral area.[6]
After Jim McDaid's retirement and Niall Blaney's decision to step down from politics for personal reasons, Fianna Fáil had no sitting TD in Donegal North-East to contest the 2011 general election. The party chose McConalogue as Fianna Fáil's sole candidate for the constituency.
In the election, he won 17.4% of the first-preference vote and was elected on the 9th count to fill the third and final seat, behind Sinn Féin's Pádraig Mac Lochlainn and Fine Gael's Joe McHugh.[7] He was the Fianna Fáil spokesperson on Children from April 2011 to July 2012. In July 2012, he was appointed as party spokesperson on Education and Skills.
In the 2016 general election, after a redrawing of constituency boundaries, McConalogue ran alongside Pat "the Cope" Gallagher as one of two Fianna Fáil candidates in the new five-seater Donegal constituency. McConalogue topped the poll and was elected on the first count.[8]
He represented Fianna Fáil in talks on government formation in 2016.[9]
On 1 July 2020, McConalogue was appointed as a Minister of State at the Department of Justice with responsibility for law reform.[10] On 2 September that year, he was appointed as Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine, with the vacancy having arisen following the Oireachtas Golf Society scandal.[11]
It emerged in December 2020 that McConalogue had tested positive for COVID-19 after returning from Brussels on 17 December, prompting all ministers in the Government to restrict their movements. The initial result was negative. He went shopping in Dublin hours ahead of a scheduled five-day follow-up COVID-19 test which led to the positive result he received on 23 December. He displayed no symptoms and isolated in his native Donegal.[12][13]
McConalogue had been due to travel to Canada for St Patrick's Day in March 2022. However, he later confirmed that a positive COVID-19 test had prevented him from doing so. His period of isolation elapsed in time for him to sit on the "VIP lorry" at the parade in Buncrana.[14]
On 17 December 2022, he was re-appointed to the same position following Leo Varadkar's appointment as Taoiseach.[15]
At the 2024 general election, McConalogue was re-elected to the Dáil. He was not re-appointed as a senior cabinet minister in January 2025. On 29 January 2025, he was appointed as Minister of State at the Department of Culture, Communications and Sport with special responsibility for sport and postal policy.
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References
External links
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